Wednesday, July 12, 2023

Stacey Kent - Songs From Other Places

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:55
Size: 94,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:28) 1. I Wish I Could Go Travelling Again
(4:12) 2. Bonita
(5:12) 3. Craigie Burn
(3:09) 4. Les Voyages
(4:10) 5. American Tune
(5:13) 6. Tango In Macao
(4:19) 7. Blackbird
(4:09) 8. My Ship
(2:03) 9. Imagina
(3:56) 10. Landslide

Stacey Kent is a jazz singer in the mould of the greats, with a legion of fans worldwide, a host of honours and awards including a Grammy nomination, album sales in excess of 2 Million, Gold, Double-Gold and Platinum-selling albums that have reached a series of No. 1 chart positions during the span of her career. An interpreter of The Great American Song Book and beyond, Kent's music and influences span multiple genres, a testament to her "wandering, restless spirit" as an artist. Her long time songwriting collaborator is Nobel Prize winning author Kazuo Ishiguro.

In the spring of 2020, "I Wish I Could Go Travelling Again" was the song that was most talked about and requested by Stacey Kent's Fans when they reached out on social media. It was clear, even early on during the Covid crisis, that in lockdown, people were relying on music and imagination to transport them and to find a sense of connection with the world beyond their own four walls. Like many of us, Kent spent the last year online, looking for ways not to lose touch with the world outside. In an effort to stay connected she landed on the idea of a collection of songs that gives expression to our collective desire to roam the world once again through the medium of music. Accompanied on piano by Art Hirahara, 'Songs From Other Places' includes interpretations of songs by Stevie Nicks (Landslide), Paul Simon (American Tune), Lennon & McCartney (Blackbird), Gershwin, Weil, Jobim as well as two new songs written with Nobel Prize winning author Kazuo Ishiguro. https://www.propermusic.com/ccd30032-songs-from-other-places.html

Personnel: Art Hirahara - Piano; Stacey Kent - Vocal

Songs From Other Places

Tuesday, July 11, 2023

Blossom Dearie - The Diva Series

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:50
Size: 120,9 MB
Art: Front

(2:49) 1. I'm Hip
(3:12) 2. Our Love Is Here To Stay
(4:13) 3. I Walk A Little Faster
(2:58) 4. Dance Only With Me
(2:15) 5. You For Me
(2:13) 6. Rhode Island Is Famous For You
(3:11) 7. Blossom's Blues
(4:19) 8. It Amazes Me
(5:59) 9. Someone To Watch Over Me
(3:45) 10. They Say It's Spring
(2:50) 11. It's Love
(2:51) 12. Always True To You In My Fashion
(2:27) 13. Between The Devil And The Deep Blue Sea
(2:45) 14. Once Upon A Summertime
(2:31) 15. Plus Je T'Embrasse
(3:25) 16. When In Rome

Blossom Dearie's time spent with Verve during the late '50s resulted in several albums of great music, and her entry in the label's 2003 The Diva Series is one of the better single-disc wrap-ups of her career. This one is much longer than Verve's previous attempts; it also does a good job of compiling most of her best moments, including "I'm Hip," "Blossom's Blues," and "Always True to You in My Fashion."

It certainly isn't perfect, though; notable exclusions like "'Deed I Do," "I Won't Dance," "It Might as Well Be Spring," and "Give Him the Ooh-La-La" make this a tough one to recommend for beginners. (It may well have been intentional, in order to give more space for a focus on her Verve material that has remained unissued on CD.) By John Bush
https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-diva-mw0000595314

The Diva Series

Mark Colby - Speaking of Stan: A Tribute to Stan Getz

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:32
Size: 152,6 MB
Art: Front

(6:34) 1. When It Matters
(6:24) 2. Only Trust Your Heart
(6:50) 3. How Deep Is the Ocean
(6:30) 4. Sometime Ago
(4:56) 5. What Is a Buddha?
(9:26) 6. Sea Journey
(6:43) 7. Out of Focus
(6:45) 8. Give and Take
(4:44) 9. Blue Getz Blues
(4:39) 10. Goodbye
(2:55) 11. Speaking of Stan

Almost fifteen years after the death of tenor saxophonist Stanley Gayetzky, aka Stan Getz, the sheer breadth of his musical accomplishments still boggles the mind. Thus it was with some skepticism that I began to listen to Speaking of Stan, tenor man Mark Colby's tribute to the man about whom Trane said, "Let's face it. We would all play like him, if we could. Colby, however, succeeds masterfully in capturing a good bit of the essence of Getz, due in no small part to his own superb tone, providing an intimate take on his friend and mentor.

Over twenty other musicians aid Colby in presenting his paean. He has chosen well, and although a sax/guitar pairing akin to Getz' famous collaborations is lacking, much else is here. "Blue Getz Blues is an awesomely cooking big band reprise of a swinger from Getz's early days with Woody Herman (Early Autumn, Capitol, 1949) and the string arrangements of Focus (Verve, 1961) are tenderly reminisced through the newly penned compositions "When It Matters and "Give and Take.

Former Getz pianist Jim McNeely appears on four cuts, soulfully dueting with Colby on a stunningly sincere rendering of a tender "Goodbye, coolly swinging on "How Deep is the Ocean and "Sometime Ago and, yes, adding to the bop festivities of Colby's own "What is a Buddha? . Vibraphonist Dick Sisto assists in bringing bossa/samba to the fore with a breezy interpretation of Benny Carter's "Only Trust Your Heart and a hot construction of Chick Corea's "Sea Journey by way of Eric Hochberg's bass and Bob Rummage's drums, while Gary Burton's "Out of Focus injects a more modern edge into the proceedings. Colby's spoken outro adds a finishing touch to this highly personal portrait. By Elliott Simon
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/speaking-of-stan-mark-colby-hallway-records-review-by-elliott-simon

Personnel: Mark Colby: tenor saxophone; Tracks 1,8: Jim Trompeter: piano; Eric Hochberg: bass; Bob Rummage: drums; Peter LaBella, Kevin Case, Teresa Fream, Mike Shelton: violin; Terri Van Valkinburgh: viola; Pete Szczepanek: cello; Tracks 2,6,7: Dick Sisto: vibraphone; Eric Hochberg: bass; Bob Rummage: drums; Tracks 3-5: Jim McNeely: piano; Kelly Sill: bass; Joel Spencer: drums; Track 9: Rob Parton, Scott Wagstaff, Kirk Garrison, Mike McGrath: trumpet; Bob Frankich, Bob Rzeszutko, Brian Budzik, Ted Hogarth: reeds; Tom Garling, Brian Jacobi, Andy Baker: trombone; Tom Matta: bass trombone; Don Stille: piano; Tim Fox: bass; Bob Rummage: drums; Track 10: Jim McNeely: piano.

Speaking of Stan: A Tribute to Stan Getz

Kurt Rosenwinkel Standards Trio - Reflections

Styles:  Straight-ahead/Mainstream, Guitar Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:22
Size: 115,5 MB
Art: Front

(9:08)  1. Reflections
(3:33)  2. You Go To My Head
(4:00)  3. Fall
(9:49)  4. East Coast Love Affair
(5:20)  5. Ask Me Now
(6:23)  6. Ana Maria
(8:55)  7. More Than You Know
(3:11)  8. You've Changed

Like an Ian McEwan short story, guitarist Kurt Rosenwinkel can say more in a few lines than most guitarists manage over the course of an entire recording. On Standard Trio: Reflections he inscribes his signature sound on a set of ballads all classic tunes except for one original. His trio of bassist Eric Revis and drummer Eric Harland are perfect companions on a collection where less is truly more; they eschew the pyrotechnics for a steady accompanying swing. Harland a member of the SFJAZZ Collective who has also played with Charles Lloyd has worked with Rosenwinkel before, accompanying the guitarist on his last disc, The Remedy (Artist Share, 2007), a burning display of technique and soloing from an engagement at the Village Vanguard with saxophonist Mark Turner and pianist Aaron Goldberg. Gone is the exhilaration of that live set, replaced here with the robustness of a confident player settling down to tell a more intimate story. 

Rosenwinkel's listeners are his confidants as he negotiates two tracks by Thelonious Monkand two by Wayne Shorter. He soars over the bossa nova laid down behind Shorter's "Ana Maria" and nudges against the bright urban beat of "Fall." Rosenwinkel slyly reworks both Monk tunes. As Harland skips and Revis bounces the beat on "Ask Me Now," Rosenwinkel cradles the melody, rocking back-and-forth. Likewise, he forces the title track, Monk's "Reflections," to be reconsidered not with nostalgia for the past, but a blues-inspired hopefulness for the future. Elsewhere, the classic tracks "More Than You'll Know," "You Go To My Head," and "You've Changed" exude a luxuriousness, not of affluence but delight. Rosenwinkel, Harland, and Revis bypass the circuitous here for a direct and transparent take on some beautiful music. By Mark Corroto http://www.allaboutjazz.com/reflections-kurt-rosenwinkel-wommusic-review-by-mark-corroto.php

Personnel: Kurt Rosenwinkel: guitar; Eric Revis: bass; Eric Harland: drums.

Dutch Swing College Band - At The North Sea Jazz Festival

Styles: Swing
Year: 1988
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:33
Size: 148,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:56) 1. Coal black shine
(2:46) 2. Heebie jeebies
(4:41) 3. Back home again in indiana
(4:50) 4. Canal street blues
(8:45) 5. Moten swing
(7:53) 6. Basin street blues
(5:58) 7. Stealing apples
(4:44) 8. Just sqeeze me
(5:25) 9. Someday you'll be sorry
(9:25) 10. Mood indigo
(6:06) 11. Swing that music

The Dutch Swing College Band "DSCB" is a traditional dixieland band founded on 5 May 1945 by bandleader and clarinettist/saxophonist Peter Schilperoort.

Highly successful in their native home of The Netherlands, the band quickly found an international following. It has featured such musicians as Huub Janssen (drums), Henk Bosch van Drakestein (double bass), Kees van Dorser (trumpet), Dim Kesber (saxes), Jan Morks (clarinet), Wout Steenhuis (guitar), Arie Ligthart (banjo/guitar), Jaap van Kempen (banjo/guitar), Oscar Klein (trumpet), Dick Kaart (trombone), Ray Kaart (trumpet), Bert de Kort (cornet), Bert Boeren (trombone), Rod Mason, Rob Agerbeek (piano) among many others.

The band provided the interval act for the Eurovision Song Contest 1976 presented live from Den Haag.

The band continues to tour extensively, mainly in Europe and Scandinavia, and record directed by Bob Kaper, himself a member since 1967, following the former leader, Peter Schilperoort's death on 17 November 1990. Schilperoort had led the band for more than 45 years, albeit with a five-year sabbatical from 13 September 1955, when he left to pursue an engineering career before returning to lead the band again officially on 1 January 1960. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dutch_Swing_College_Band

At The North Sea Jazz Festival

Monday, July 10, 2023

Billie Holiday - The Diva Series

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:12
Size: 135,6 MB
Art: Front

(2:50) 1. Them There Eyes
(2:45) 2. Gimme A Pigfoot And A Bottle Of Bear
(3:12) 3. Easy Living
(3:24) 4. Don't Explain
(3:09) 5. Billie's Blues
(2:36) 6. Love Me Or Leave Me
(5:32) 7. Just One Of Those Things
(3:30) 8. Good Morning Heartache
(4:27) 9. Speak Low
(5:41) 10. All Or Nothing At All
(3:13) 11. Strange Fruit
(4:00) 12. God Bless The Child
(3:27) 13. I Wished On The Moon
(3:13) 14. What A Little Moonlight Can Do
(3:19) 15. Fine And Mellow
(3:46) 16. Lady Sings The Blues

Part of Verve's Diva Series of compilations, this Billie Holiday collection is by no means the definitive account of her career Columbia's Lady Day: The Best of Billie Holiday takes that honor. That said, it is still a great introduction to the vocalist's singular and influential style. There is a timely flow to the track listing on most of the Diva Series albums, and this collection is no exception.

Included are such landmark recordings as "Don't Explain," "God Bless the Child," and Holiday's haunting signature tune, "Strange Fruit." Longtime Holiday fanatics will most likely already have these recordings, but for newly interested listeners, at over 14 tracks, this competes well with other similar single-disc collections. by Matt Collar
https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-diva-mw0000026452

The Diva Series

Sant Andreu Jazz Band - Jazzing 10 Vol.3

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:31
Size: 149,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:19) 1. Gracy Waltz
(3:25) 2. De Conversa Em Conversa
(4:07) 3. Walkin' Shoes
(2:38) 4. Blues My Naughty Sweetie Gives to Me
(5:05) 5. Joao e Maria
(4:20) 6. Day Dream
(4:29) 7. Catalonian Nights
(4:27) 8. Aguas de Marco
(3:21) 9. Sophisticated Lady
(3:29) 10. Happy Talk
(5:11) 11. Sonho Meu
(5:41) 12. Star Eyes
(5:14) 13. Uma Estrela
(2:45) 14. Prom to Prom
(4:53) 15. Foolin' Myself

I don't know to what extent the number 10 is significant, but it is a round number and reaching this number of Jazzings (CDs of the Sant Andreu Jazz Band) for me is, at least, a great joy.

Jazzing 10, but 18 CDs, actually, since several of them are double or triple, as is the case of this last one, which consists of three volumes.

The first of them (VOL. 1), dedicated to the music of Clifford Brown, with special arrangements for the occasion, of songs that were either originals by Clifford himself or songs that he used to perform.

The other two volumes (VOL. 2 and 3) are also a sample of the different recordings we have made during this 2019, both with the entire Sant Andreu Jazz Band, or in smaller formats, and in two different spaces such as the JAZZ HOUSE (home of the young orchestra) and the JAMBOREE, a regular venue during all these years, where we have also played and recorded on many occasions.
https://santandreujazzband.bandcamp.com/album/jazzing-10-vol-3

Jazzing 10 Vol.3

Thana Alexa, Nicole Zuraitis, Julia Adamy - Sonica

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:23
Size: 72,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:37) 1. Doyenne
(3:18) 2. Where Ya Gonna Go
(5:14) 3. Michicant
(4:22) 4. Come A Long Way
(4:51) 5. Love's In Need Of Love
(4:51) 6. Change It
(4:08) 7. Danny Boy

Powered by engrossing female harmonies and the dynamism of the female spirit, Sonica creates anthems for peace, love, and change. Largely an extension of vocalist, producer, and composer Thana Alexa’s ONA project, Sonica combines Alexa’s skills and vision with those of charismatic vocalist Nicole Zuraitis and bassist Julia Adamy.

Over the album’s brief 30 minutes, the trio combines jazz eclecticism with elements of pop, folk, and soul music, creating a kind of 21st-century hybrid Staple Singers built on intricate harmonies, hopeful messages, and mind-blowing drumming courtesy of Antonio Sánchez, Dan Pugach, and Ross Pederson.

Recorded and produced at Alexa’s home studio in New York, Sonica commences with “Doyenne,” which includes a spoken-word excerpt from women’s-rights activist and abolitionist Sojourner Truth’s 1851 speech “Ain’t I a Woman,” bookended with snippets of Gloria Steinem and Pakistani activist Malala Yousafzai.

Consciously fashionable, the trio follows contemporary production throughout, as on a cover of Bon Iver’s “Michicant,” Zuraitis’ plaintive arrangement and performance a melancholic muse. A Zuraitis original, “Come a Long Way,” continues the somber tone, but with a wonderful sense of ebb and flow pushing and prodding the song’s central theme of mental-health advocacy.

A thoughtful, harmony-infused reading of Stevie Wonder’s “Love’s in Need of Love Today” precedes the album’s centerpiece, “Change It,” which crushes climate-change deniers with such pointed lyrics as “Watch the seas rise because we won’t compromise” and “Science isn’t a game/we must listen and admit we are to blame” over a heaving, body-jolting arrangement.

The album closes with a sentimental Irish favorite, “Danny Boy.” Notwithstanding that odd misstep in an album of bold activism, Sonica makes protest music hipsters, millennials, and even cave dwellers can embrace. By Ken Micallef
https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/sonica-sonica-outside-in/

Sonica

Conte Candoli - Powerhouse Trumpet

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:07
Size: 79,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:26)  1. Toots Sweet
(4:12)  2. Jazz City Blues
(5:43)  3. My Old Flame
(6:25)  4. Full Count
(3:09)  5. I'm Getting Sentimental Over You
(3:58)  6. Four
(5:11)  7. Groovin' Higher

Powerhouse Trumpet, which was also previously issued under the title Groovin' Higher, is an immaculately performed set of straight-ahead bop finding trumpeter Conte Candoli in fine form. 

The 1999 Rhino reissue has been digitally remastered from the original tapes.~ Steve Suey https://www.allmusic.com/album/powerhouse-trumpet-mw0000255948

Personnel:  Conte Candoli - trumpet;  Lou Levy - piano;  Bill Holman - tenor saxophone;  Leroy Vinnegar - bass;  Lawrence Marable - drums

Powerhouse Trumpet

Sunday, July 9, 2023

Astrud Gilberto - The Diva Series

Styles: Vocal, Bossa Nova
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:39
Size: 139,7 MB
Art: Front

(2:19) 1. Agua de Beber
(1:51) 2. Bim Bom
(3:39) 3. Tu Mi Delirio
(5:24) 4. The Girl From Ipanema
(2:42) 5. On My Mind
(2:38) 6. Misty Roses
(1:56) 7. Manha de Carnival
(2:25) 8. Non-Stop To Brazil
(2:55) 9. I Haven't Got Anything Better To Do
(4:14) 10. Corcovado (Quiet Nights Of Quiet Stars)
(2:26) 11. Eu e Voce (Me And You)
(2:24) 12. The Gentle Rain
(2:39) 13. So Nice (Summer Samba)
(2:24) 14. Berimbau
(3:05) 15. Once Upon A Summertime
(3:12) 16. All That's Left Is To Say Goodbye
(2:42) 17. Dindi
(2:41) 18. Stay
(1:34) 19. Canoeiro
(3:09) 20. A Certain Sadness
(3:06) 21. Canto de Ossanha (Let Go)

Astrud Gilberto, the Brazilian canary with the voice like honey and diction that defied belief, has been compiled many times on Verve, but rarely as well as on her entry in 2003's The Diva Series.

A 21-track of her prime decade, the '60s, this one includes all of the classics associated with her: "The Girl From Ipanema," "Agua de Beber," "Corcovado (Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars)," "So Nice (Summer Samba)," and "Dindi." Not all of her LPs have been reissued on CD (in the States), so the compilers also added tracks that may surprise a few Gilberto fans, like "Eu e Voce" and "Canto de Ossanha (Let Go)." By John Bush https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-diva-mw0000595313

The Diva Series

Sant Andreu Jazz Band - Jazzing 9 Vol.3

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:42
Size: 166,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:12) 1. Nobody Else But Me
(5:01) 2. Portrait of Jenny
(4:25) 3. Louisiana Fayry Tale
(3:35) 4. Dizzy Atmosphere
(6:39) 5. Insensatez
(5:45) 6. Peggy's Blue Skylight
(4:14) 7. Crescendo Date
(3:05) 8. The Preacher
(5:39) 9. Billie’s Bounce
(5:14) 10. Round About Midnight
(2:59) 11. Cute
(3:07) 12. Deeper
(3:59) 13. What's New
(5:38) 14. I Could Write a Book
(7:03) 15. Rejoice

We are celebrating the 13th anniversary of the Sant Andreu Jazz Band, through which around 60 musicians (currently 24) have passed, with this new jazzing, the ninth, in three volumes. Jazzing 9 (vol.3) (Temps Record, 2020).

At the same time we continue with the Joan Chamorro presents series, of which we have just published the 11th by Alba Armengou and the 12th by Carla Motis, and of which we are currently recording for the following ones, by Jan Domenech and Joana Casanova, and we already have others in mind.

I never imagined that we would be here, but here we are, with more enthusiasm than ever, with more happiness than ever, seeing how our way of working, our methodology and our philosophy is admired and required from all parts of the world.

Something as simple as falling in love with music through listening to it, feeling like musicians from the first moment, giving us the opportunity to enjoy from the first day, singing melodies that are inside us and incorporating new ones based on listening to the greats like Johnny Hodges, Duke Ellington, Sarah Vaughan, Ella Fitzgerald, Ben Webster, Charlie Parker, and a long etcetera.

Jazz is universal and has no frontiers, no ages, nor is it one for a few. Jazz belongs to everyone, it's popular, and if young people are given the opportunity to get to know it and are told "You can also play and enjoy", the rest will come. To improvise is to create, it is to feel that you can develop your own voice, and nowadays that has an incalculable value, in a society that tends to the unification of ideas and thoughts.

The members of the SAJB are unique individuals, as we all are, and that is important when facing education.Thank you, Nicolás, once again, for teaching me so much in such a short time.
https://discmedi.com/en/disco_new/10733/sant-andreu-jazz-band/jazzing-9---vol.-3

Jazzing 9 Vol.3

String Of Pearls - Gems

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:13
Size: 117.3 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals, Vocalese
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[2:44] 1. It's Sand, Man
[3:12] 2. Forty Second Street
[2:40] 3. Girl Talk
[2:36] 4. Professor Bop
[3:25] 5. It Don't Mean A Thing
[3:25] 6. One Note Samba
[2:46] 7. Nice Work If You Can Get It
[2:48] 8. Straighten Up And Fly Right
[4:39] 9. I Hear Music
[2:41] 10. A String Of Pearls
[2:41] 11. Crazy People
[2:59] 12. Smack Dab In The Middle
[3:44] 13. Teach Me Tonight
[2:33] 14. South American Way
[2:50] 15. Sermonette
[2:38] 16. Glow Worm
[2:44] 17. Sentimental Gentleman From Georgia

STRING OF PEARLS is a female jazz vocal trio that performs vintage "girl group" music and modern vocal jazz with style, sass, and superb musicality. The group’s repertoire ranges from the 1930s sounds of the Boswell Sisters and Andrews Sisters to Brazilian, bebop, and pop music. String of Pearls has performed at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., Avery Fisher Hall, Town Hall, the JVC Jazz Festival, the Cape Cod Jazz Festival, the Provincetown Jazz Festival, and in clubs and concert halls in France, Germany, and Japan. In the New York area, the “Pearls” have recently been on the bill at The Metropolitan Room, Sweet Rhythm, The Blue Note, and many other clubs and festivals.

String of Pearls is comprised of singers Susan Halloran, Jeanne O’Connor, and Holli Ross. Sue, Jeanne, and Holli were all working as professional solo singers in New York when they were brought together to perform a 20-minute set at a nostalgia-oriented concert. The singers immediately loved their special “blend” and began to expand their repertoire. They created authentic transcriptions of tunes by the likes of the Boswell and Andrews Sisters, and began to commission and create original arrangements. And, Jeanne and Holli both began to contribute lyrics to songs by contemporary jazz composers for the groups to sing, plus new lyrics to older standards like “Girl Talk” and Glen Miller’s “String of Pearls.”

The “Pearls" have delighted audiences and critics with their superb musicality, sophisticated arrangements, swing, and charming stage show. Says legendary jazz singer Jon Hendricks, “I am often asked what the future of vocalese will be. Right now, it is resting comfortably in the hands of three lovely girls – String of Pearls. String of Pearls has produced a version of vocalese that is, to me, breathtaking in its beauty, startling in its simplicity and overpowering in its swing, without which, as friend Edward Ellington so aptly says, ‘It Don’t Mean a Thing.’" And Michael Bourne, jazz DJ and host of the popular “Singers Unlimited” at WBGO-FM in Newark, says, "String of Pearls shows an authentic and affectionate spirit with an extraordinary kaleidoscope of group singing styles, from the Boswells to the bossas. They sound good. They look good. Pearls of great price indeed."

Gems

The Brothers Candoli Sextet - 2 For The Money

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1959
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:23
Size: 80,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:41) 1. Splanky
(2:59) 2. Soak Yo' Sally
(3:43) 3. Ah-Lue-Cha
(2:37) 4. Riffs For Rosie
(4:42) 5. Caravan
(2:34) 6. Take The ''A'' Train
(3:18) 7. Doodlin'
(4:32) 8. Willow Weep For Me
(3:09) 9. Blueing Boogie
(3:04) 10. Richard Diamond's Blues

One of the harder to find 50s sessions from LA jazz brothers Pete & Conte Candoli a twin-trumpet album with rhythm from Jimmy Rowles on piano, Howard Roberts on guitar, Max Bennett on bass, and Frank Capp on drums! The tracks are a clean extension of mid 50s LA cool jazz blown with a bit more edge, and perhaps a looser feel than some of the brothers' earlier work and nicely swinging overall.

Titles include "Splanky", "Riffs For Rosie", "Doodlin", "Blueing Boogie", and "Richard Diamond's Blues". © 1996-2023, Dusty Groove, Inc.
https://www.dustygroove.com/item/365385/Brothers-Candoli-Pete-Conte-Candoli-:2-For-The-Money?filterfield=veryrecent&sort_order=date_added

Personnel: Trumpet – Conte Candoli, Pete Candoli; Bass – Max Bennett; Drums – Frank Capp; Guitar – Howard Roberts; Piano – Jimmy Rowles

2 For The Money

Friday, July 7, 2023

Anita O'Day - The Diva Series

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:33
Size: 131,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:32) 1. What Is This Thing Called Love?
(2:16) 2. Ten Cents A Dance
(3:21) 3. Waiter, Make Mine Blues
(4:19) 4. Bewitched, Bothered, And Bewildered
(3:49) 5. Tea For Two
(3:14) 6. Honeysuckle Rose
(2:34) 7. Love Me Or Leave Me
(3:01) 8. It Shouldn't Happen To A Dream
(4:02) 9. Miss Brown To You
(2:23) 10. I Get I Kick Out Of You
(3:15) 11. Let's Face The Music And Dance
(3:05) 12. Peel Me A Grape
(3:39) 13. Angel Eyes
(3:26) 14. Crazy He Calls Me
(2:56) 15. Whisper Not
(2:46) 16. Senor Blues
(3:32) 17. Sing, Sing, Sing
(2:14) 18. Avalon

One of the best pairings of an artist with a label since Frank Sinatra swung into the Capitol offices, Anita O'Day's time under the Verve umbrella (also including Clef and Norgran) resulted in some of the best pop music of her era.

O'Day's entry in 2003's The Diva Series is one of the better single-disc wrap-ups of her time on Verve, though the scarcity of hits while she was there and the near-uniform excellence of her '50s LPs still preclude anyone from recommending a compilation to any but newcomers.

Still, this one is much longer than Verve's previous attempts; it also balances songs from her rarer early-'60s dates with her '50s prime, and ably compiles some of her best-known material ("What Is This Thing Called Love," "Honeysuckle Rose," "Tea for Two") as well as a few of her hardest-swingers ("Love Me or Leave Me," "I Get a Kick out of You," "Let's Face the Music and Dance").

Much better than Compact Jazz, but nowhere near as revelatory as her late-'50s classics Anita Sings the Most or Anita O'Day Swings Cole Porter With Billy May. By John Bush
https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-diva-mw0000595312

The Diva Series

Michael Blake - The World Awakes: A Tribute To Lucky Thompson

Styles: Saxophone, Clarinet Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:21
Size: 133,7MB
Art: Front

(8:39) 1. Lucky Charm
(8:40) 2. Reminiscent
(9:13) 3. The World Awakes
(5:00) 4. Little Tenderfoot
(8:21) 5. Scratch
(7:15) 6. Mumba Neua
(5:08) 7. To You Dear One
(2:26) 8. Little Tenderfoot (Reprise)
(3:35) 9. Single Petal of a Rose

Paying affectionate homage to bygone greats is a tricky business, especially when it comes to an artist in the line of jazz duty who rolled with stylistic changes and abided by the dictum that jazz is inherently a progressive music, but with firm traditional roots. Michael Blake’s nod to saxophonist-deserving-wider-recognition “Lucky” Thompson, with a bold and sensitive group of Danish players, is a fine role model of how to do the right thing. Thompson (1924-2005) spanned the eras of swing, bebop and beyond, was self-exiled from what he found a racist music business for years, and generally is an artist waiting for history to catch up to him.

For his tribute record, Blake plays tenor, clarinet and also soprano sax, the tool which Thompson mastered, inspiring Coltrane to pick up the instrument. Blake wrote the vintage-waxing opening tune, “Lucky Charms” (“charms” as both verb and noun) and also the funk-lined but intuitively smart “Scratch,” including a smattering of Thompson’s own words re: the sorry fate of the artist.

Thompson’s own tunes, making up the bulk of the set here, are deceptively clean and simple. On this selected sampling, the Thompson touch ranges from the friendly swinging sashay of “Reminiscent” to the querulous title track (here warmed over by a small string ensemble and a slow-meets-fast, suite-like arrangement), to the lush ballad “To You Dear One.” Thompson’s sinuous boppish tune “Little Tenderfoot” is heard in two versions: in the first, Blake’s tenor works out over bass, before the added horns thicken the harmonic plot; in the second, Thompson’s transcribed solo makes a once-removed reincarnation through Blake’s horn. Duke Ellington’s “Single Petal of a Rose,” with strings and an attitude of elegance, closes the set on an urbanely graceful note. Overall, Blake does right here by a musical hero, one whom jazz history needs to readdress. By Josef Woodard
https://jazztimes.com/archives/michael-blake-the-world-awakes-a-tribute-to-eli-lucky-thompson/

Personnel: Michael Blake (tenor sax, soprano sax, clarinet); Soren Kjaergaard (keys); Jonas Westergaard (bass); Kresten Osgood (drums); Peter Fuglsang (bass clarinet, clarinet); Kasper Tranberg (trumpet); Lars Bjornkjaer (violin); Henrik Dam Thomsen (cello); Teddy Kumpel (guitar); ob Jost (flugelhorn)

The World Awakes: A Tribute To Lucky Thompson

Donny McCaslin - I Want More

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:01
Size: 100,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:37) 1. Stria
(4:23) 2. Fly My Space Ship
(4:31) 3. Hold Me Tight
(5:48) 4. Body Blow
(4:11) 5. Big Screen
(5:55) 6. Turbo
(5:10) 7. Landsdown
(7:22) 8. I Want More

Saxophonist, composer and bandleader Donny McCaslin has taken modernist directions in music that allowed him to carve out a niche of faithful devotees. His new album, I Want More, is an eclectic blowout, all tracked to blazing saxophone solos, oozy synth layers, and trance-like, sometimes even hard-hitting beats and rhythms. McCaslin’s extraordinary ensemble features keyboardist Jason Lindner, bassist Tim Lefebvre and drummer Mark Guiliana. All four had an important role in the outcome of David Bowie’s last album, Blackstar(ISO Records,2016).

“Stria” exposes an immediate catchy sound, with delayed saxophone riffs over a weave of synth lines that, together with bass and drums, build dynamic texture. Over time, it falls into a dance-pop/rock line that sustains an outgoing saxophone solo. It all sparks epic emotions. Like the aforementioned opener, “Fly My Spaceship” has Lindner’s hand in the electronic production. This particular piece blends the diverting glitch-hop vibe of Flying Lotus and the dub incursions of Jah Wobble and The Orb.

The energetic “Turbo” and the rousing “Landsdown” are rhythmic machines; the former is redolent of Nine Inch Nails’s industrial precision; while the latter, written by McCaslin and Lefebvre, alternates krautrock-infused electronic music with gentler string passages. Strings also appear on “Big Screen”, which is propelled by this big round backbeat outlined by Guiliana.

McCaslin ranges all the way through a concoction of genres. The pop/rock accessibility of “Hold Me Tight” provides strong bass lines that guide us through the harmony, and a breathtaking tenor statement with all that jazz. Co-penned by McCaslin and Lindner, “Body Blow” is a rich stew of progressive jungle-leaning EDM, funky breaks, and anthemic punk-rock. The riffery is powerful, the pulse gains trippy effects, the sound is dark and robust, and there’s an electronica-laden section that is both playful and explosive.

Wildly original, with a defiant and confident attitude, I Want More closes with the title track a spectacular funkified exercise with a soulful melody à-la Kamasi Washington that pushes genre boundaries as it maintains an abrasive dance mode alive but with cool tones.

McCaslin’s compact work worths its weight in artistry as well as in sound. The future of jazz? A valid current for sure, one that hits the spot thanks to its aural kaleidoscopic phenomena.
https://jazztrail.net/blog/donny-mccaslin-i-want-more-album-review

Personnel: Donny McCaslin: tenor saxophone; Jason Lindner: synths, wurlitzer; Tim Lefebvre: electric bass; Mark Guiliana: drums

I Want More

Tuesday, July 4, 2023

Mark Colby - Reflections

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:33
Size: 130,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:59) 1. Close Enough For Love
(4:22) 2. Myth Mary's Blues
(6:13) 3. Reflections
(5:40) 4. Desafinado
(5:22) 5. Like Someone in Love
(6:11) 6. Blues Connotation
(6:26) 7. So in Love
(4:24) 8. Caroline's Romp
(5:45) 9. Somewhere Over the Rainbow
(5:08) 10. Squires Parlor

Reflections, the eighth CD as leader or co-leader by one of the Chicago area's most undervalued treasures, tenor saxophonist Mark Colby, is a tribute, he writes, to "the things that shaped and moved me when I was just a kid," as well as to friends, family and artists who nourished his growth and served as a catalyst for his becoming a musician. The studio date is dedicated to Colby's father, "who started me on my journey at age eight," and to one of Colby's earliest role models, tenor saxophonist Johnny Griffin, who died on July 25, 2008.

"Desafinado" is addressed to another of Colby's original mentors, Stan Getz, who befriended a teenage Colby and helped shape his young friend's approach to the tenor while introducing him to Brazilian music. To this day, Colby's abstractions display an unmistakable Getzian character even though the sound is pure Colby. Besides Colby, the first-rank quartet on "Desafinado" consists of guitarist Mike Pinto, bassist Eric Hochberg and drummer Bob Rummage.

Elsewhere, Colby uses pianist Jeremy Kahn to round out the group, is accompanied only by Hochberg and Rummage on "Myth Mary's Blues," Johnny Burke/Jimmy van Heusen's "Like Someone in Love" and Harold Arlen/E.Y Harburg's "Over the Rainbow." Three special guests alto saxophonist Phil Woods, trumpeter Bob Lark and pianist Ron Perillo help brighten the easygoing finale, Woods's "Squires Parlor."

Besides "Myth Mary," written for his wife, Colby composed "Reflections" and "Caroline's Romp," the last presumably for a daughter (or granddaughter). Completing the program are Johnny Mandel's "Close Enough for Love," Ornette Coleman's capricious "Blues Connotation" and Cole Porter's enchanting ballad from the Broadway musical Kiss Me, Kate, "So in Love" (a second dedication to Colby's wife).

Kahn solos earnestly on "Reflections," "So in Love" and "Caroline's Romp," Pinto on "Desafinado" and "Blues Connotation" but none more so than Colby, who makes every note and phrase shimmer like sunlight on water. While he remains more or less unknown beyond his Chicago base, sooner or later the word on Colby is bound to spread, and that word is brilliant. By Jack Bowers
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/reflections-mark-colby-origin-records-review-by-jack-bowers

Personnel: Mark Colby: tenor sax; Jeremy Kahn: piano (1, 3, 7, 8); Ron Perillo: piano (10); Mike Pinto: guitar: (4, 6); Eric Hochberg: bass; Bob Rummage: drums; Bob Lark: flugelhorn (10); Phil Woods: alto sax (10).

Reflections

Terri Lyne Carrington - New Standards Vol. 1

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:37
Size: 139,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:27) 1. Wind Flower
(6:01) 2. Circling
(6:46) 3. Uplifted Heart
(4:40) 4. Moments
(4:48) 5. Continental Cliff
(5:50) 6. Throw It Away
(5:28) 7. Respected Destroyer
(4:41) 8. Two Hearts (Lawns)
(4:19) 9. Unchanged
(5:29) 10. Ima
(8:02) 11. Rounds (Live)

Inter-disciplinary artist, activist and educator Terri Lyne Carrington has worked tirelessly over the last decade to advocate for inclusivity and raise the voice of women, trans and non-binary people in jazz.

New Standards, her ambitious new endeavour, was created to shine a light on women composers in historic new ways. New Standards will arrive this fall in the form of a groundbreaking lead sheet book of jazz compositions dedicated entirely to women composers, a newly recorded album of 11 selections from the songbook featuring an all-star band and superb line-up of special guests, and a dynamic multi-media exhibition at Detroit’s Carr Center.

On September 16th Carrington will release "new STANDARDS vol. 1" on the relaunched Candid Records label, featuring recordings of 11 selections from the New Standards lead sheets book (see below for more info).

Carrington on drums is joined by a core band of Kris Davis (piano), Linda May Han Oh (bass), Nicholas Payton (trumpet), and Matthew Stevens (guitar and co-producer) and welcomes special guests Ambrose Akinmusire, Melanie Charles, Ravi Coltrane, Val Jeanty, Samara Joy, Julian Lage, Michael Mayo, Elena Pinderhughes, Dianne Reeves, Negah Santos and Somi. The selections include harpist Brandee Younger’s 'Respected Destroyer,' clarinetist Anat Cohen’s 'Ima,' vocalist Abbey Lincoln’s 'Throw It Away'as well as pieces by Gretchen Parlato, Carla Bley and more. The recordings - which range from vocal ballads to contemporary creative music are inspired and adventurous and explore the limitless universe of jazz.https://www.frontview-magazine.be/en/news/terri-lyne-carrington-to-release-album-new-standards-vol-1-shining-bright-light-on-women

New Standards Vol. 1

Barb Jungr - My Marquee

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:05
Size: 105,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:21) 1. Immigrant Song
(6:29) 2. Sunshine of Your Love
(6:40) 3. Yardbirds Medley (Heart Full of Soul/Shapes of Things/For Your Love)
(4:33) 4. Paper Sun
(3:51) 5. Sparrow
(6:57) 6. Medley (Flowers in the Rain/Hole in My Shoe/Itchycoo Park)
(5:07) 7. Substitute
(6:05) 8. No Regrets

It’s an old chestnut that if you can remember the Sixties, you weren’t there, man. I can remember the sounds of the Sixties extremely well, and right enough, I wasn’t really there until the very end. I completely missed out on the Summer of Love in 1967, though I was desperate to try the marijuana and LSD that everyone was talking about. Barb Jungr confessed to a similar experience of not quite being there, not at first anyway, in her introduction to Paper Sun by Traffic. But having an almost total recall of the words and the music that got inside my head during that far distant era certainly enhanced my appreciation of the wonderful music I heard at the well-known cabaret venue of Crazy Coqs last night.

Not being a regular on the cabaret scene, I had not actually heard of Barb Jungr, and was not expecting anything special, except a drubbing of the ears when I found myself seated in front of the drum kit. How wrong I was! This was a very special show, and I really enjoyed the drumming as much as anything else. Barb’s wide vocal range has the backing of a superb Trio comprising piano, bass and drums while her comments and anecdotes between the songs establish a great rapport with the audience.

The show is based upon an album due out in August entitled My Marquee, after the famous music club in Soho through which so many bands passed in the Sixties on their way to stardom. Miss Jungr has selected some of their best numbers and reinterpreted them in a jazz style. Really to appreciate what she has done, it helps to be familiar with the originals. Generation Z, I fear, would not have that advantage, and indeed I didn’t spot any of that generation among the audience. The clarity of Miss Jungr’s diction enabled me to catch some of the words for the first time, which I didn’t get when listening to the records, e.g. Jethro Tull’s Living in the Past. But for anyone at all familiar with the originals, comparing and contrasting the two versions would have given pleasure throughout the show.

There were some surprises. Miss Jungr kicked off with Led Zeppelin’s The Immigrant’s Song, and turned out to be a good substitute for Robert Plant. In Substitute by The Who, Barb sounded much angrier than Roger Daltry, explaining that the song was a scathing attack on the English class system. I actually learned quite a lot about the songs. For another example, I didn’t know that This Wheel’s On Fire was written by Bob Dylan. Psychedelia was well represented by acid-fuelled numbers like Flowers in the Rain, Hole in my Shoe and Itchycoo Park. But hey, I mustn’t turn this review into a discography. Let’s just say that it was “all too beautiful …”!

There are sure to be further performances based on the My Marquee album this summer. Be sure to catch one!
https://playstosee.com/my-marquee-barb-jungr-and-her-trio/

My Marquee

Frank Zappa - Funky Nothingness Disc 1, Disc 2, Disc 3

Album: Funky Nothingness Disc 1
Styles: Jazz Funk
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:56
Size: 174,5 MB
Art: Front

( 1:48) 1. Funky Nothingness
( 0:44) 2. Tommy/Vincent Duo I
( 2:46) 3. Love Will Make Your Mind Go Wild
(12:19) 4. I'm a Rollin' Stone
( 9:21) 5. Chunga's Revenge (Basement Version)
( 6:27) 6. Basement Jam
( 2:48) 7. Work with Me Annie / Annie Had a Baby
( 6:41) 8. Tommy/Vincent Duo II
(12:14) 9. Sharleena (1970 Record Plant Mix)
( 8:08) 10. Khaki Sack
(11:34) 11. Twinkle Tits

Album: Funky Nothingness Disc 2
Time: 70:58
Size: 164,4 MB

(16:15) 1. Chunga's Revenge (Take 5)
( 3:16) 2. Love Will Make Your Mind Go Wild (Take 4)
(18:12) 3. Transylvania Boogie (Unedited Master)
(14:55) 4. Sharleena (Unedited Master)
( 4:28) 5. Work with Me Annie / Annie Had a Baby (Alternate Edit)
( 0:47) 6. Twinkle Tits (Take 1, False Start)
(13:00) 7. Twinkle Tits (Take 2)

Album: Funky Nothingness Disc 3
Time: 64:57
Size: 150,6 MB

(11:28) 1. The Clap (Unedited Master - Pt. I)
( 4:37) 2. The Clap (Unedited Master - Pt. II)
(21:52) 3. Tommy/Vincent Duo
(19:47) 4. Chunga's Revenge (Take 8)
( 3:02) 5. Halos and Arrows
( 3:22) 6. Moldred (Take 8)
( 0:45) 7. Fast Funky Nothingness

Long after his death at the age of 52 in December 1993, Frank Zappa remains one of the most fascinating musicians and composers of his generation. Zappa was a rare individual who was equally skilled playing and writing in a number of different genres and styles, Funky Nothingness represents the brief era of a band which deserved to last longer than it did. Early on, Zappa realized the importance of recording whenever possible, as an impromptu studio jam or concert highlight might otherwise be lost for good.

Especially after he dissolved his original Mothers of Invention band in 1969, Zappa sought out the best musicians possible. By the time of his death he had amassed a sizable library of unissued studio and concert performances. With the time Zappa spent composing, rehearsing bands and going on the road, it is little wonder that there was insufficient time for him to go through his entire archive to locate hidden treasures for release.

Posthumous releases of Zappa's music have been a mixed bag, ranging from band rehearsals with less than high fidelity sound, expanded reissues which include works in progress prior to overdubbing and editing, expanded versions of previously issued albums and CDs or CD sets of completely unreleased (or mostly so) music. This collection falls into the latter category and is a release which long-time Zappa fans have dreamed of being discovered.

With the success of his 1969 LP Hot Rats, Zappa continued to explore mostly instrumental blues, utilizing a core band which appeared on that LP, including keyboardist, multi-reed player and rhythm guitarist Ian Underwood, violinist, organist and vocalist Don "Sugar Cane" Harris, Wrecking Crew bassist Max Bennett and drummer Aynsley Dunbar. Aside from the title track, which is heard in two versions with other musicians recorded in 1967 during the making of Uncle Meat, this is the group heard throughout the rest of the 3CD set, although the 2 LP edition simultaneously released with it omit some of the tracks found in this set.

It is difficult to tell how long this band was rehearsing and recording, though at least two concerts took place, one in the San Diego Sports Arena on February 8th, then another on March 7th at the Grand Olympic Auditorium in Los Angeles, part of which appeared on the bootleg Hot Rats -Live at the Olympic, an audience recording. The studio sessions took place in early 1970, but the band clearly had a grip on Zappa's new compositions and arrangements, playing them with the intensity of a live set of regular repertoire. In this period of his career, Zappa enjoyed leading extended jams in the studio, even if the final result was too long to release on LP. He was a creative tape editor who could distill the best segments from a long performance into an effective shorter track.

The two 1967 tracks are miniatures entitled "Funky Nothingness," a slow blues with acoustic guitar, bass and a mostly wordless vocal, along with the electric "Fast Funky Nothingness," which is somewhat reminiscent of Zappa's composition "Speed Freak Boogie," though it is quickly faded out.

Among Zappa's many interests were vintage R&B songs from the '50s. The playful medley of two hits by Hank Ballard. "Work With Me Annie" and "Annie Had A Baby" features Harris' strong vocal and intense violin, with Zappa's unique guitar as seasoning. "Love Will Make Your Mind Go Wild" is another terrific Harris vocal feature, although the introduction is reminiscent of an unissued version of Zappa's "My Guitar Wants To Kill Your Mama" which ended up on bootleg LPs in the early '70s. A huge surprise is Zappa's lead vocal in an extended workout of bluesman Lightnin' Slim's "I'm A Rollin' Stone," this twelve-plus-minute workout never loses steam with Zappa's guitar taking center stage, though Harris and Underwood (on organ) shine, with the playing of Bennett and Dunbar adding the perfect backdrop.

There are no fewer than three versions of "Chunga's Revenge," the first being a nine-plus minute basement jam from his Laurel Canyon home which sounds like an early rehearsal with slightly less fidelity than the two studio takes. Both Take 5 and Take 8 feature Ian Underwood playing electric alto saxophone with a wah-wah pedal and "Sugar Cane" Harris on organ, with superb support from Bennett and Dunbar. Underwood simulates an electric guitar with his brilliant, intricate solos, though in both takes, strong solos by Zappa, Harris and Dunbar are featured as well.

Zappa's "The Clap" was a percussion solo he played on the album Chunga's Revenge, though the two versions here reveal his fascination with polyrhythms and finding unique effects. Part I is over eleven minutes, while Part II is just over four minutes, both considerably longer than the originally issued track which was edited down from them. It isn't surprising to hear Zappa on drums, since he first played them before switching to guitar and he joined Ruth Underwood on stage to play percussion during early '70s concerts. However, the biggest treasure is the discovery of two complete takes, plus a false start, of the little known composition "Twinkle Tits," an outstanding instrumental jam which fuses several different genres into a explosive force.

Take 5 is sixteen minutes long and the best of the three, with terrific solos all around, with its exotic Middle Eastern-influenced introduction which includes a bit of honky-tonk piano, acoustic bass, marimba and a guitar which could only be Zappa. Yet, as the tempo increases, the bluesy element takes prominence, while Harris shares solo honors with Zappa for his high energy. Take 8 is nearly twenty minutes long and features a blistering Zappa guitar solo, though the overall take doesn't quite reach the heights of the shorter version.

The false start of under a minute is included for historic interest, as Zappa usually bypassed including partial takes unless he found them amusing. Another find is an eighteen-minute unedited master of Zappa's masterpiece, "Transylvania Boogie," which sounds quite different from the version issued on the album Chunga's Revenge, though the last five-and-a-half minutes of it sound like this segment was used for the basic track on the original LP. Zappa steals the show with his lengthy improvisation, while the rhythm section keeps the fire going throughout the jam, with Underwood's sublime, bluesy organ solo adding to its value.

The two versions of "Sharleena" contrast with the performance heard on Chunga's Revenge, as Harris had left Zappa by the time it was recorded and bassist Jeff Simmons joined Zappa for the lead vocals with backing vocals by Howard Kaylan and Mark Volman. These two takes feature Harris with Zappa on lead vocals, buoyed by Harris' bluesy violin and Zappa's piercing guitar, both of which are far more interesting than the issued version. Bonus discoveries include "Halos And Arrows," a fascinating instrumental with two separate guitars, rhythm guitar and bass, along with the breezy, soulful instrumental "Khaki Sack."

Not long after these Hot Rats sessions were completed, Zappa's focus turned to completing his orchestral work "200 Motels," which was premiered with Zubin Mehta and the Los Angeles Philharmonic at UCLA's Pauley Pavilion on May 15, 1970, with a newly assembled group of Mothers, including Underwood and Dunbar. The suite was rewritten prior to making the film and soundtrack the following year. It is unclear whether Zappa disbanding Hot Rats or the departure of "Sugar Cane" Harris to record as a solo artist resulted in the demise of the band. Vocalists Howard Kaylan and Mark Volman attended his UCLA concert and Zappa soon after launched a new edition of The Mothers which included them, creating a new repertoire of works which were a hybrid of comedy, skits and suggestive lyrics, with the occasional instrumental. As Zappa said in a 1989 phone interview, "It wasn't really a great band, but we had a lot of laughs."

This release is available as a 2 LP set, though the best option, which is also the most complete, is the expanded 3 CD set, which also contains a 28 page booklet with session photoswhile the download also includes all tracks. Disc 1 of the 3 CD deluxe set contains the material which Zappa selected and put together, while discs 2 and 3 in the expanded set have the alternate takes and edits and other unissued material. Both vintage Zappa mixes and recent mixes by Craig Parker Adams are utilized, with top notch mastering by John Polito.

This historic discovery of unissued studio performances by Frank Zappa will be on many critics' top ten lists for 2023 and it is highly recommended for anyone who owns Zappa's landmark Hot Rats album. The uncovering of more treasures is eagerly awaited, especially if the vault meisters can uncover a soundboard recording of the 1970 bootleg LP by Zappa & Hot Rats. By Ken Dryden
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/funky-nothingness-frank-zappa-zappa-records

Personnel: Frank Zappa: guitar, electric; Don "Sugarcane" Harris: violin; Ian Underwood: organ, Hammond B3; Max Bennett: bass; Aynsley Dunbar: drums.

Additional Instrumentation: Frank Zappa: vocals, drums, percussion; Sugarcane Harris: organ, vocals; Ian Underwood: woodwinds, piano, rhythm guitar.

Funky Nothingness Disc1, Disc 2, Disc 3