Sunday, September 1, 2013

Kevin Mahogany - Old New Borrowed And The Blues

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 47:11
Size: 108.0 MB
Label: Mahogany Jazz
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[6:26] 1. I'm Still Swinging
[3:52] 2. Autumn Leaves
[5:14] 3. I'm Walkin'
[5:02] 4. Tony Bennett
[2:00] 5. You Better Know It
[4:56] 6. The Big Rubout
[3:58] 7. Serenade In Blue
[6:17] 8. When I Fall In Love
[4:32] 9. I'd Rather Drink Muddy Water
[4:49] 10. His Eye On The Sparrow

Whether you are looking for a CD to add to your collection or Introduce a friend to listening to jazz you will not want to miss ' OLD, NEW, BORROWED AND THE BLUES". Just like it says it is a combination of tunes you have heard before and some you have not. New tunes, and old tunes..... and don't forget the BLUES ! Kevin Mahogany gives you a collection of tunes that will be a perfect addition to your collection or a intro to jazz for the younger listener.

Old New Borrowed And The Blues

Carmen Lundy - Moment To Moment

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 44:20
Size: 101.5 MB
Label: Arabesque
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 1991
Art: Front

[6:20] 1. Invitation
[4:56] 2. Don't You Worry Your Head About It
[4:47] 3. You'll Always Have A Part Of Me
[4:34] 4. Samba De Laplaya
[3:24] 5. As One
[4:25] 6. A Time For Love
[9:54] 7. Big Girls
[5:57] 8. Moment To Moment

Carmen Lundy began her professional career as a jazz vocalist and composer when there were very few young, gifted and aspiring jazz vocalists on the horizon. Three decades later, Ms. Lundy is celebrated throughout the world for her vocal artistry and is highly regarded for her jazz innovation. Her contribution of over 80 self-penned published compositions now comprises the New Jazz Songbook.

Having recorded more than twelve albums as a leader, Carmen has also performed and recorded with such musicians as brother and bassist Curtis Lundy, Ray Barretto, Kenny Barron, Bruce Hornsby, Mulgrew Miller, Terri Lyne Carrington, Kip Hanrahan, Courtney Pine, Roy Hargrove, Jimmy Cobb, Ron Carter, Marian McPartland, Regina Carter, Steve Turre, Geri Allen, Robert Glasper and the late Kenny Kirkland. Ms. Lundy's 2005 release, the critically acclaimed “Jazz and The New Songbook-Live at The Madrid”, features some of the jazz world's best known musicians paying tribute to Ms. Lundy.

Carmen Lundy's work as a vocalist and composer has been critically acclaimed by The New York Times, The Village Voice, The Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, as well as numerous foreign publications. As a composer, Ms. Lundy's catalogue numbers over eighty published songs, one of the few jazz vocalists in history to accomplish such a distinction, and has led to the first publication of the Carmen Lundy Songbook (2007). Her songs have been recorded by such artists as Kenny Barron ("Quiet Times"), Ernie Watts ("At The End Of My Rope"), and Straight Ahead ("Never Gonna Let You Go").

Carmen Lundy (vocals); Kevin Eubanks (guitar); Chico Freeman (tenor saxophone); Onaje Allan Gumbs (piano, keyboards); Kenny Davis (acoustic bass, electric bass); Buddy Williams (drums); Mayra Casales (percussion).

Recording information: Sorcerer Sound Recording Studios, New York, NY (04/10/1991-04/18/1991); Sorcerer SOund, New York, NY (04/10/1991-04/18/1991).

Moment To Moment

The Spitfire Band - Big Band Swing Things

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 39:17
Size: 90.0 MB
Label: Alanna
Styles: Big Band
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[2:58] 1. Skyliner
[3:03] 2. It Happened In Monterey
[3:04] 3. Thou Swell
[3:00] 4. Days Of Wine And Roses
[2:47] 5. Caravan
[3:03] 6. Softly, As In A Morning Sunrise
[3:46] 7. If I Were A Bell
[2:53] 8. Marie
[2:49] 9. Brazil
[3:02] 10. One
[3:07] 11. Something's Gotta Give
[3:06] 12. Chattanooga Choo Choo
[2:32] 13. By Myself

This is a partial reissue of a disc the Canadian-based Spitfire Band did for Columbia several years ago called In Flight; it's a partial reissue because not all the tunes from the original session have been included, thus providing a meager 40 minutes of music. It's a bit misleading not to include this information on the back cover of the album so that prospective purchasers are aware they are in a sense buying a used car. The good news is that Alanna Records has remastered the album, as it has done for other Spitfire Band releases. As a result, the sound is wonderfully clear and crisp, just right for big band music. And the arrangements are all familiar. Charlie Barnet is honored with "Skyliner," Xavier Cugat with "Brazil," and Tommy Dorsey with "Marie," although the trombone solo here is not nearly as smooth as Dorsey's. There is also a vocal solo, with the band helping out, as they did when Jack Leonard sang the original. And the train still pulls out of the station like it did on Glenn Miller's "Chattanooga Choo Choo," which was number one on the pop charts in 1941. But there's no Tex Beneke and Modernaires' vocal like there was way back then. The Laurie Bell Singers do a credible job on "If I Were a Bell." Not all cuts are from the 1940s big band era. The Count Basie Orchestra's 1966 arrangement of "Days of Wine and Roses" is given a reworking. The Spitfire Band is made up of excellent musicians, several of whom are also part of Rob McConnell's Boss Brass aggregation. This is a great album to play in the car while on a trip and you need something to keep the adrenaline flowing so you don't fall asleep (or to drown out the kids). ~ Dave Nathan

Big Band Swing Things

Fleetwood Mac - Then Play On

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 53:55
Size: 123.4 MB
Label: Reprise
Styles: Rock
Year: 1969/1990
Art: Front

[3:47] 1. Coming Your Way
[4:54] 2. Closing My Eyes
[3:52] 3. Showbiz Blues
[3:30] 4. My Dream
[2:50] 5. Underway
[8:59] 6. Oh Well
[2:24] 7. Although The Sun Is Shining
[3:30] 8. Rattlesnake Shake
[6:58] 9. Searching For Madge
[2:47] 10. Fighting For Madge
[4:31] 11. When You Say
[2:21] 12. Like Crying Like Dying
[3:25] 13. Before The Beginning

There were 2 different versions of this LP, each with slightly different tracks. The CD contains all tracks from both versions. Led by singer-guitarist Peter Green, the first version of Fleetwood Mac was one of England's premier bands and possibly the greatest white blues band ever to emerge from the '60s blues revival.1969's THEN PLAY ON is their best album and Green's pinnacle achievement. Heavily influenced by Otis Rush, Green had an unusually lyrical style for a blues musician, able to draw on flamenco, folk, even classical guitar--all of which make an appearance in the ambitious instrumental coda to his major opus, "Oh Well." Despite the inclusion of superior modern blues songs like "Rattlesnake Shake" and "Show-Biz Blues," THEN PLAY ON is notable for its instrumentals. Standout cuts range from the dream-like voyages "My Dream" and "Underway" to virtuosic three-guitar jams like "Searching For Madge" and "Fighting For Madge," both of which feature Green's inspired guitar work.

Peter Green, Jeremy Spencer, Danny Kirwin (vocals, guitar); John McVie (bass); Mick Fleetwood (drums); Christine Perfect (background vocals).

Then Play On

Irene Nachreiner & Her Latin Jazz Band - A Song of You

Styles: Latin Jazz, Brazilian Jazz
Label: Self Released
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:16
Size: 112,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:45)  1. Dance With Me
(3:23)  2. The Waiting Song
(3:56)  3. A Song Of You
(3:49)  4. Triste
(3:34)  5. TinTim For TinTim
(3:19)  6. Change The World
(3:22)  7. South Seas Samba
(3:52)  8. S'Wonderful
(3:29)  9. Fragillidad
(3:59) 10. Like A Lover
(3:08) 11. It's Too Darn Hot
(4:00) 12. Quiet Nights Of Quiet Stars
(2:20) 13. Bim Bom
(3:15) 14. La Foule

Irene, a daughter of Russian and Irish immigrants raised in Los Angeles, came to singing Brazilian music through a trip to the South Sea Islands. That's quite a cultural mix-up, so maybe it's not surprising that her vocal approach is so deliberate and matter of fact; she still seems to be a dutiful student of the form, not wanting to make any mistakes. She doesn't, but neither does she swing. In fact, although she makes a point of using the word "jazz" in the name of her backup band, this isn't jazz singing at all, or rather, it is only jazz in the very broad sense that categorizes nearly all non-rock/pop aimed at adults as "jazz." On the other hand, Irene's Latin Jazz Band does earn its name, even if it might be called "Her Bossa Nova Band" more accurately. 

Core members Marco Tulio (acoustic guitar) and Cristiano Novelli (drums/percussion) actually are Brazilian, as is pianist Rique Pantoja, called a "special guest" in the album's press release although he plays on 12 of the 14 tracks, and bassist Daniel Groisman is from Argentina. Together, they play samba and bossa nova arrangements with the appropriate feel, and do some authentic jazz soloing, along with reed player Scott Martin. The selections include covers of Antonio Carlos Jobim and João Gilberto, plus some Latinized versions of Gershwin and Porter show tunes and a few adequate originals. Irene makes a pleasant and unassuming frontwoman, able to switch languages easily and keep up with her musicians, even if she never seems to relax with music that should be relaxing. 

This is the second self-released album by an artist likely to be encountered in Los Angeles clubs or at vacation spots, where listeners can pick up her CDs as souvenirs of an enjoyable night out, and for that they should satisfy. This isn't Getz/Gilberto, but it's not bad. ~William Ruhlmann  
http://www.allmusic.com/album/a-song-of-you-mw0000818844

Holly Near - With A Song In My Heart

Styles: Folk
Label: Calico Tracks Music
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:14
Size: 101,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:18)  1. Love Is Here to Stay
(3:08)  2. The Best Is Yet to Come
(2:34)  3. Just in Time
(4:21)  4. Isn't This A Lovely Day
(4:24)  5. The Nearness Of You / My Romance
(2:30)  6. I'm Beginning To See The Light
(2:19)  7. Where Or When
(2:23)  8. When Somebody Thinks You're Wonderful
(4:04)  9. What Are You Doing New Year's Eve?
(2:30) 10. The Very Thought Of You
(1:52) 11. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To/ Easy To Love
(3:38) 12. I've Got The World On A String
(2:41) 13. Old Devil Moon
(2:39) 14. With A Song In My Heart
(0:44) 15. Reprise: When Somebody Thinks You're Wonderful

Despite her excellent voice and interpretive ability, Holly Near would not seem like the best candidate to record an album of classic pop standards, if only because the underlying social attitudes of such songs are at such variance from her own, a point driven home in 1983 when she put together a medley of standards on the Lifeline album and questioned the "unhappy together" line in "Come Rain or Come Shine." 

Her sleeve note on this album indicates that she remains ambivalent and still doesn't really approve of the material, apologetically stating that one reason to sing these songs is "to keep some sweet innocence in our revolution." Lorenz Hart, Cole Porter, and their contemporaries were rarely sweet and never innocent. Still, Near has chosen some of their more straightforwardly romantic songs, and her very skepticism lends her an interpretive distance that accentuates the sophistication of the lyrics; many cabaret singers work hard to achieve the same effect. Whether she knows it or not, it's okay that Near doesn't believe that "Love Is Here to Stay" or that "The Best Is Yet to Come": Ira Gershwin and Carolyn Leigh didn't, either.~William Ruhlmann
http://www.allmusic.com/album/with-a-song-in-my-heart-mw0000036716.

Jay Leonhart - Sensitive To The Touch

Styles: Jazz

Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:54
Size: 227,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:06)  1. Ding Dong The Wicked Witch Is Dead
(7:52)  2. Accentuate The Positive
(8:21)  3. Come Rain Or Come Shine
(8:50)  4. My Shining Hour
(5:44)  5. Let's Fall In Love
(5:15)  6. Devil & The Deep Blue Sea
(4:35)  7. Get Happy
(7:43)  8. I've Got The World On A String
(5:34)  9. Ill WInd
(8:53) 10. If I Only Had A Brain
(3:57) 11. As Long As I Live

Feeling very much at home in a swing setting, Jay Leonhart takes on Harold Arlen, making Arlen's hits zip to new life on Sensitive to the Touch. From the clarinet, bass, drum opening of "Ding Dong the Wicked Witch Is Dead" to the sax, bass, vocalizing of the last tune, "As Long as I Live," this band swings hard. 

Leonhart and clarinetist/saxophonist Ken Peplowski have such obvious synchronicity, while pianist Ted Rosenthal and drummer Grady Tate don't hesitate to jump right into the fray. ~Sunsh Stein
http://jazztimes.com/articles/10849-sensitive-to-the-touch-the-music-of-harold-arlen-jay-leonhart .

Sensitive To The Touch

Saturday, August 31, 2013

Jeff Lynne - Long Wave

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 24:28
Size: 56.0 MB
Label: Frontier Records
Styles: Pop/rock
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[2:19] 1. If I Loved You
[2:30] 2. So Sad
[2:51] 3. Mercy, Mercy
[2:14] 4. Running Scared
[2:18] 5. Bewitched, Bothered And Bewildered
[2:30] 6. Smile
[2:32] 7. At Last
[2:29] 8. Love Is A Many Splendored Thing
[1:49] 9. Let It Rock
[2:52] 10. Beyond The Sea

When Jeff Lynne was growing up, he listened to music on longwave radio, soaking up all the sounds coming through the big radio in the living room. His 2012 tribute to these days, appropriately called Long Wave, is a far-reaching salute to the glory days of pop in the years before the Beatles. It's too easy to peg this as a standards album, a designation that isn't quite accurate. Lynne may cover many show tunes along with '50s favorites of big-band vocalists but he spends nearly as much time with rock & roll, and not just the operatic pop of his fellow Traveling Wilbury Roy Orbison, either. He cranks through Chuck Berry's "Let It Rock," slides into the silken harmonies of the Everly Brothers on "So Sad," and grooves through Don Covay's "Mercy, Mercy." These are the cuts that stick the closest to the original hit recordings. When Lynne tackles Rodgers & Hammerstein ("If I Loved You"), Rodgers & Hart ("Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered"), Fain & Webster ("Love Is a Many Splendored Thing"), and Chaplin ("Smile"), he breaks the song down to its melodic basics then builds up candied, layered arrangements that are distinctly his own, suggesting the gorgeous cascades of sound that were the signature of prime ELO. Indeed, when these sweet reinterpretations are combined with the straight-ahead rockers, Long Wave adds up to a blueprint in reverse for Lynne; by going to back to his beginnings, he winds up figuring out why he went in the direction he did. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Jeff Lynne (vocals, guitar, piano, keyboards, vibraphone, drums, background vocals); Marc Mann (strings); Steve Jay (shaker, tambourine).

Long Wave

Tom Rust & The Malcolm Edmonstone Trio - Are We There Yet?

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 44:09
Size: 101.1 MB
Label: Swing Out
Styles: Contemporary jazz vocal, Easy Listening
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[4:41] 1. Tv Blues
[3:04] 2. The Coffee Song
[4:50] 3. Learning The Blues
[5:12] 4. Saturday Night
[3:12] 5. Witchcraft
[3:45] 6. The Bare Necessities
[3:51] 7. I Only Have Eyes For You
[4:29] 8. Ruby Baby
[4:09] 9. Honey Suckle Rose
[3:54] 10. That's Amore
[0:00] 11. I Keep Going Back To Joe'sâ
[2:57] 12. Orange Coloured Sky

Are we there yet? is another collaboration with The Malcolm Edmonstone Trio. The jazz trio features Malcolm Edmonstone on piano, Andrew Bain on drums, Julian Jackson and Alec Dankworth on bass. This "Radio friendly" recording has a considered vocal approach and intimacy of recording that takes the listener through a thoroughly entertaining journey. Edmonstone's arrangements give the impression of a big band, with confident vocals from the slightly altered lyrics of the opening track TV Blues, right through to the snappy arrangement of Orange Coloured Sky. Rust has dedicated this CD to beautiful and precious gifts, his two children.

Tom Rust - Voice; Malcolm Edmonstone - Piano; Julian Jackson - Double Bass; Alec Dankworth - Double Bass; Andrew Bain - Drums.

Recorded at Red Gables Studios in London.

Are We There Yet?

Roy Meriwether - This One's On Me

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 64:18
Size: 147.2 MB
Label: Fahrenheit
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[ 5:57] 1. The Sidewalks Of New York
[ 4:16] 2. This One's On Me
[ 6:42] 3. Don't Look Under The Bed
[ 7:24] 4. When I Think Of Miles
[10:45] 5. Ah George, We Hardly Knew You
[ 5:38] 6. Don't Call Me Brother (& Rip Me Off)
[ 6:05] 7. Please Send Me Someone To Love
[ 5:41] 8. Soup & Onions
[ 5:27] 9. Silver Mist
[ 6:19] 10. The Beautiful Ones

New York City-based pianist Meriwether has always had chops to burn, as he displays here. There are instances, however, where he does tone down and get into more soulful, patient constructions. Bassist Chris Berger and drummer Neal Smith are relatively unheralded, but do their rhythmic jobs in buoying the leader's flights of fancy. Meriwether also composed several of these ten selections. Three are ballads: the moderately slow title track; the slower "Silver Mist," an older composition (1968) which Meriwether revisits; and the languid "When I Think of Miles." He also penned the wildly upbeat soul blues "Soup & Onions," another older tune (1966) that has perennially been a set closer in his live dates. The pianist also has a penchant for jazzing up pop tunes: The O'Jays "Don't Call Me Brother" is done as a waltzy funk; Prince's "The Beautiful Ones" as a steady tick-tock ballad; and the universal Percy Mayfield evergreen "Please Send Me Someone to Love" as a patently slow and sweet number. A little more progressive is the Don Pullen piece "Ah George, We Hardly Knew Ya" in a six-beat blues funk bag with none of Pullen or Meriwether's histrionic pianistics, but with plenty of soul. A blues strut -- perhaps what the pianist does best á la Gene Harris -- appears on "Don't Look Under the Bed," while Meriwether's signature tune "Sidewalks of New York" sports "Cherokee" changes and inflections of "When I Grow Too Old to Dream" in solid blues-gospel garb where the pianist splashes note clusters and furious runs in showy fashion. For those who are familiar with Meriwether's expertise, this CD will serve as further evidence of his talent. For those who are not, this may be a good primer to lead toward his older recordings, especially the Columbia discs of the '60s. ~ Michael G. Nastos

This One's On Me

Geri Allen - Maroons


Styles: Piano Jazz
Label: Blue Note
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:19
Size: 166,5 MB
Art: Front

(1:32)  1. Feed the Fire I
(7:06)  2. No More Mr. Nice Guy
(5:32)  3. And They Partied
(4:38)  4. Number Four
(5:45)  5. Prayer for Peace
(7:40)  6. Mad Money
(2:49)  7. Two Brothers
(3:29)  8. Feed the Fire II
(5:01)  9. Dolphy's Dance
(4:10) 10. For John Malachi
(8:21) 11. Laila's House
(3:19) 12. Feed the Fire III
(1:05) 13. Brooklyn Bound "A"
(5:21) 14. Bed-Sty
(6:25) 15. Maroons

Geri Allen's star had fully risen by 1992 with the release of this potpourri of tracks reflecting various aspects of her recording career and peeking at the future. Detroit mentor Marcus Belgrave appears on two tracks, while trumpeter and husband Wallace Roney is on the remainder of the ensemble selections -- and he has shed the Miles Davis clone visage, striking his own poses and shadings. There are also several trio or quartet tracks with different drummers and bassists, as Allen revisits older material and adds to her widening repertoire with new compositions, always with the ingenious, virtuosic, and spontaneous style that makes her one of the most interesting players in modern post-McCoy Tyner jazz. A remake of "No More Mr. Nice Guy" (done with Charlie Haden and Paul Motian on In the Year of the Dragon) is rendered a bit faster here with bassist Dwayne Dolphin and drummer Tani Tabbal, but retains its elusive, cryptic quality. There are three versions of "Feed the Fire" as preludes -- one with hand percussionists Tabbal and Pheeroan akLaff; one with them and twin bassists Dwayne Dolphin and Anthony Cox; and a third with Allen, Dolphin, and Tabbal -- and all are very energetic and probing, with drum solos or bop notions inserted. The best trio track is "Bed-Sty" with Dolphin and Tabbal, a steamrolling, head-nodding piece, swimming in the spontaneous improvisations only Allen can conjure on the spot. 

Of the cuts featuring the emerging personal voice of Roney's trumpet, "Mad Money" is all about the insane drive for the Benjamins, deliberate and clipped in its modal melody, but moving right into Allen's clever solo. "And They Partied" has the contemporary funky M-Base approach with a bit of an inebriated, sauced line from Roney, while the title selection is totally in an underground mood, with the trumpeter evincing voodoo tones but quite unlike Miles Davis. Allen and Belgrave play a jaunty, lyrical duet on the Lawrence Williams composition "Number Four" as a tribute to their Detroit home base, while the two trumpeters join forces for "Dolphy's Dance," an angular, scattered post-bop melody that has future standard written all over it. Because of the variety of groupings, ever-changing and chameleonic through this program, it makes for a remarkable listening session from beginning to end. Dressed in elegant Victorian period clothing in the artwork, Allen seems to suggest that her past is as important as her present -- yet Maroons still exists in modern times, and she refuses to be stuck in old habits while reaching for new vistas, standing solidly on terra firma. Thisexcellent recording is easily recommended to her fans and potential new devotees.~Michael G.Bastos http://www.allmusic.com/album/maroons-mw0000616167.

Personnel: Geri Allen (piano); Marcus Belgrave, Wallace Roney (trumpet); Anthony Cox, Dwayne Dolphin (bass); Pheeroan AkLaff, Tani Tabbal (drums).


Eddie Higgins Trio - Speaking Of Jobim

Styles: Piano Jazz
Label: Sunny Side
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:02
Size: 132,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:40)  1. O Morro Nao Tem Vez
(6:51)  2. I Was Just One More For You
(4:38)  3. Brigas, Nunca Mais
(4:35)  4. Falando de Amor
(3:53)  5. Two Kites
(4:16)  6. Bonita
(5:21)  7. Voce e Eu
(6:32)  8. Choro
(6:26)  9. Felicidade
(3:17) 10. So Tinha De Ser Com Voce
(3:52) 11. Caminhos Cuzados
(2:34) 12. Inutil Paisagem

By now everyone has heard at least one of Antonio Carlos Jobim's beautiful compositions, if only his most famous ones, "Girl From Ipanema" or "Desafinado," playing poppishly in an elevator or mall somewhere. His work has been recorded by every combination of instrument and voice, including Sinatra's. What distinguishes this CD from hundreds of others is its inclusion of 11 relatively obscure Jobim tunes, and the way this classy trio succeeds in communicating the essence of his special gifts with a minimum of fuss and feathers. (One track is a Carlos Lyra composition, "Voce e Eu," which blends in nicely.) The arrangements are elegant, combining jazz and Brazilian rhythms to gently swing the melodies and highlight Jobim's lush harmonies. The under-recognized pianist Eddie Higgins is a delight: Straightforward, relaxed, and varied, he sizzles on the up-tempo "Two Kites" and does a gorgeous rubato turn on "Inutil Pasagem" (Useless Landscape), one of Jobim's most heartbreaking songs. 


The always melodic bassist Jay Leonhart has some wonderfully warm solos, and demonstrates his superb bowing technique on several tracks, including the lovely "Bonita," while drummer Terry Clarke is consistently sensitive and vital, whether lofting a samba or swaying a ballad. It's difficult to pick highlights from this collection of sparkling gems, but it's easy to recommend it. An excellent introduction to Jobim's unique beauty, it will also appeal to long-term fans who already have an extensive collection of his work. Highly recommended.~Judith Schlesinger http://www.allmusic.com/album/speaking-of-jobim-mw0000620445.

Personnel: Eddie Higgins (piano); Jay Leonhart (bass); Terry Clarke (drums).


Richie Beirach & George Coleman - Convergence

Styles: Jazz

Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:43
Size: 130,4 MB
Art: Front

( 6:57)  1. The Lamp Is Low
( 6:48)  2. I Wish I Knew
( 4:39)  3. Flamenco Sketches
( 5:15)  4. Rectilinear
( 6:54)  5. For BC
( 5:45)  6. Riddles
( 6:16)  7. Zal
( 3:27)  8. What Is This Thing Called Love?
(10:37)  9. Infant Eyes

Pianist Richie Beirach and saxophonist George Coleman interpret a collection of standards, with a few Beirach originals thrown in for good measure. Beirach's a world-class jazz romantic; his soft touch makes it sound as if there's a pillow underneath the keyboard. Which is not to say he's an imprecise player, or needlessly docile. He's really quite the opposite, but there's an underlying gentleness to his work that imparts an air of vulnerability to everything he plays, even when he's at his most aggressive. Coleman is similar, in a way, though the saxophonist's sensitivity is occasionally camouflaged by a good-natured surliness that we know is just a front. On this album, Coleman can't help but put his heart on his sleeve Beirach's accompaniments demand it. The music that results is a nice blend of the bucolic and the temperamental; the pianist's pastoral tranquility combines with the saxophonist's restless urbanity to good ends.~Chris Kelsey http://www.allmusic.com/album/convergence-mw0000279091.

Personnel: Richie Beirach (piano); George Coleman (tenor & soprano sax).

Convergence

Friday, August 30, 2013

Cathy Segal-Garcia & Joe Diorio - Day By Day

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 46:32
Size: 106.5 MB
Label: Dash Hoffman
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[4:01] 1. How Deep Is The Ocean
[5:27] 2. I Remember Clifford
[3:03] 3. Taking A Chance On Love
[5:08] 4. Estate
[3:59] 5. I Fall In Love Too Easily
[4:45] 6. Day By Day
[6:13] 7. Willow Weep For Me
[5:08] 8. You Are Too Beautiul
[3:47] 9. The Night Has A Thousand Eyes
[4:56] 10. Star Eyes

In 1976 while playing a gig at the jazz club "Donte's" in North Hollywood, I met Cathy for the first time. She asked me if she could sing "Lush Life" with me in Ab. I said, "I have hard enough trouble playing that in Db!" She sang a few tunes and floored us. Well, since then I've been a friend and a fan of hers. She has a sweet and gentle voice that I love. This makes it all the easier to play for her. In 1995 we finally made this CD in a tiny voice-over studio that was cluttered with all kinds of junk. I'm amazed that we got a great CD under such uncomfortable circumstances. But such is the power of music. JOE DIORIO

What a gift for me, to work on a recording with Joe! It turned out to be a ballad album, because every song we moved to, Joe would say, "Hey Cath, how about doing this a little slower?" Joe is a brilliant musician, but he's more than that, because music, of course, isn't all technical prowess... it's soul, spirit, elan vital, the muse, the lovers! That's what he brings to the music. Thank you Joe, and thank to you all for listening. CATHY SEGAL-GARCIA

Day By Day

Ben Sidran - Dylan Different

Time: 46:10
Size: 107.3 MB
Label: Nardis Music
Styles: Cool, Vocal jazz
Year: 2009
Bitrate: 320K/s
Art: Front

[3:25] 1. Everything Is Broken
[3:18] 2. Highway 61 Revisited
[3:46] 3. Tangled Up In Blue
[4:47] 4. Gotta Serve Somebody
[3:46] 5. Rainy Day Woman
[2:57] 6. Ballad Of A Thin Man
[4:58] 7. Maggie's Farm
[3:51] 8. Knockin' On Heaven's Door
[3:39] 9. Subterranean Homesick Blues
[3:09] 10. On The Road Again
[3:20] 11. All I Really Want To Do
[5:08] 12. Blowin' In The Wind

Upon hearing "Everything Is Broken," the opening track of Ben Sidran's Dylan Different, a collection of Bob Dylan covers that uncovers a near symbiotic connection to his source's material, one wonders what took him so long to record this. Sidran chose a dozen tunes from Dylan's songbook and recorded them over four days in France, applying his requisite musicality, unaffected jazzman's cool, and streetwise yet elegant poetic imagination. There is a decidedly old-school feel to the manner in which this material is recorded that recalls his late-'70s sides. Sidran plays Fender Rhodes, Wurlitzer, and acoustic piano as well as a Hammond B-3, and is accompanied by a killer backing band that includes trumpeter Michael Leonhart, drummer Alberto Malo, bassist Marcello Giuliani, saxophonist Bob Malach, guitarist Rodolphe Burger, and vocalist Amy Helm. His son Leo did the horn arrangements and played additional piano, B-3, and koto, and there are guests on backing vocals, including Georgie Fame, who duets on "Rainy Day Women #12 & 35," and Jorge Drexler on "Knockin' on Heaven's Door." What it all adds up to is a truly new presentation of Dylan's work that seamlessly fits Sidran's aesthetic without removing the authority of these songs from their historical context. Check the nocturnal funky groove on "Gotta Serve Somebody" or the bluesy dual pianos on "Tangled Up in Blue," on which Sidran does his talk-singing accompanied by female backing vocalists on the chorus and a restrained horn section. He turns the tune into a slippery, finger-popping club number. Dylan's slide guitar anthem "Highway 61 Revisited" is given a lithe Latin treatment with Burger's guitar referencing the original even as the piano and rhythm section make it a funky-butt slow-boiling rhumba. The minor-key swing in "Ballad of a Thin Man" accents the tune's poetry while extrapolating harmonies in the minor-key arrangement. Given Sidran's treatment of the lyric, if you didn't know better, you might think he wrote it. (The bass clarinet solo by Malach is a sweet touch, too.) He took the greatest liberties with "Maggie's Farm," which is not frenetic guitar-based blues-rock here, but a late-night, shimmering piece of beat jazz with an eerie arrangement that extends the reach of the tune's cultural and economic critique into the heart of the new century. Sidran even has the stones to redo "Blowin' in the Wind." He makes it as disturbingly inquisitive and world-weary as the song itself must feel by now, but without losing a measure of its poignancy. Dylan Different reveals Sidran as being in full possession of his jazz and creative gifts but also his ones for interpretive song; by turns, with this fine album, he adds even more weight to the argument that Dylan is a writer of folk songs that transcend their eras of origin in relevancy. ~ Thom Jurek

Ben Sidran (vocals, piano, Fender Rhodes piano, Hammond b-3 organ, Wurlitzer organ); Leo Sidran (guitar, koto, piano, Hammond b-3 organ); Rodolphe Burger (guitar); Bob Malach (flute, bass clarinet, tenor saxophone); Michael Leonhart (trumpet, flugelhorn); Marcello Giuliani (acoustic bass, electric bass); Alberto Malo (drums, percussion); Amy Helm (background vocals).

Dylan Different

Eddie Higgins Trio - Haunted Heart

Styles: Jazz
Label: Venus Records
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:17
Size: 115,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:43)  1. My Funny Valentine
(4:40)  2. Haunted Heart
(7:24)  3. Stolen Morments / Israel
(5:31)  4. Lush Life
(6:04)  5. How My Heart Sings
(4:46)  6. Someone To Watch Over Me
(5:11)  7. I Should Care
(6:57)  8. Lover Come Back To Me
(3:56)  9. Isn't It Romantic?

The lonely cover photo and title of this Japanese import give away most of the story; this is a haunted, introspective album of piano-trio jazz very much indebted to Bill Evans and, to a lesser extent, George Shearing. Veteran Eddie Higgins mostly serves up standards from the Great American Songbook -- "My Funny Valentine," "Someone to Watch Over Me," "I Should Care," "Lush Life," the usual suspects -- in a tasteful, unshowy, often gently swinging way, harmonically locked into the mainstream, occasionally throwing in a gentle quote for humor's sake. Elsewhere, "Israel" forms the core of a "Stolen Moments" sandwich, and "Lover Come Back to Me" is given the token bossa nova treatment. Ray Drummond (bass) and Ben Riley (drums) make up the fine rhythm section, and they never miss a cue.~Richard S.Ginell (http://www.allmusic.com/album/haunted-heart-mw0000046753).

Personnel: Eddie Higgins (piano); Ray Drummond (bass); Ben Riley (drums).

Haunted Heart

Stan Getz - Autumn Leaves: 27 Standards

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 79:19
Size: 186.0 MB
Label: Retrospective Records
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1980
Art: Front

[3:07] 1. Autumn Leaves
[2:50] 2. Indian Summer
[2:55] 3. There's A Small Hotel
[3:21] 4. What's New?
[2:55] 5. Too Marvellous For Words
[3:17] 6. I've Got You Under My Skin
[2:44] 7. My Old Flame
[2:54] 8. You Stepped Out Of A Dream
[3:05] 9. Wrap Your Troubles In Dreams
[3:16] 10. The Lady In Red
[2:56] 11. Gone With The Wind
[2:46] 12. On The Alamo
[2:48] 13. Yesterdays
[3:01] 14. You Go To My Head
[2:31] 15. Strike Up The Band
[2:24] 16. Imagination
[2:29] 17. Out Of Nowhere
[2:55] 18. 's Wonderful
[2:47] 19. It Might As Well Be Spring
[2:49] 20. This Song Is You
[3:15] 21. Moonlight In Vermont
[3:26] 22. Tenderly
[3:03] 23. The Way You Look Tonight
[3:21] 24. Stars Fell On Alabama
[2:25] 25. Lullaby Of Birdland
[2:27] 26. Fools Rush In
[3:19] 27. These Foolish Things

One of the all-time great tenor saxophonists, Stan Getz was known as "The Sound" because he had one of the most beautiful tones ever heard. Getz, whose main early influence was Lester Young, grew to be a major influence himself and to his credit he never stopped evolving.

Getz had the opportunity to play in a variety of major swing big bands while a teenager due to the World War II draft. He was with Jack Teagarden (1943) when he was just 16, followed by stints with Stan Kenton (1944-1945), Jimmy Dorsey (1945), and Benny Goodman (1945-1946); he soloed on a few records with Goodman. Getz, who had his recording debut as a leader in July 1946 with four titles, became famous during his period with Woody Herman's Second Herd (1947-1949), soloing (along with Zoot Sims, Herbie Steward, and Serge Chaloff) on the original version of "Four Brothers" and having his sound well-featured on the ballad "Early Autumn." After leaving Herman, Getz was (with the exception of some tours with Jazz at the Philharmonic) a leader for the rest of his life. ~excerpt from bio by Scott Yanow

Autumn Leaves: 27 Standards

Veronica Mortensen - Pieces In A Puzzle

Styles: Vocal
Label: Stunt Records
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:36
Size: 97,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:50)  1. Garden of my past
(3:57)  2. Julie
(4:06)  3. Flavour of the season
(4:44)  4. I am here for you
(3:21)  5. If
(4:30)  6. I't doesn't matter who's to blame
(3:59)  7. Mondays
(3:37)  8. You're on your own
(4:05)  9. Miles and miles apart
(4:21) 10. Running out of time
(2:00) 11. I am here for you

Born in Aarhus (Denmark), singer VERONICA MORTENSEN was raised by her mother in Athens, Greece. At the age of 20, she moved back to Denmark to pursue a singing career – a natural choice, being the daughter of 2 musicians. She started her own soulband, a mini-bigband playing Aretha Franklin covers and Motown-classics, and soon after joined the more experimental acidjazzband Virtual Fantasy. Veronica Mortensen graduated from Royal Academy of Music in Aarhus in the summer of 1996 and took her Diploma exam from Rythmic Conservatory of Copenhagen in 1998. She has performed on several albums and TV-shows, both as a lead singer and as a background vocalist. She also has appeared in rockmusicals like “A tribute to the Blues Brothers”, “Another Brick In The Wall” and “Hair” playing in both Copenhagen and Paris.

Her 2 albums “Pieces In A Puzzle” (2003) and “Happiness Is Not Included” (2007) got very fine reviews by the press and were both chosen for “Album of the week” by the Danish national radio (DR). The albums generated concerts in Denmark and abroad, among them at Bangkok Heineken Jazzfestival (Thailand), Beijing Jazzfestival (China) and at Ladies’ Jazzfestival in Gdynia (Poland). Beside her own music and band, she has also appeared with Peter Vuust Quartet, with whom se recorded the cd “Image Of Falling” (Imogena Records, 2005).

In 2007 Veronica Mortensen received a prize from Danish Songwriters’ Association (DPA), acknowledging her work as a songwriter. Lately she has been working with several Big Bands, among them Athens Big Band (Greece) and swedish Bohuslän Big Band, with whom she’s been touring a number of times in Sweden. She has been a popular guest with Klüvers Big Band from Aarhus (Denmark) for the last 15 years and among many concerts, they have played the Aarhus Jazzfestival, toured Estland and played “Sacred Concerts” of Duke Ellington.

Veronica Mortensens 3rd album “I’m The Girl” is a live recording with Klüvers Big Band from Ridehuset in Aarhus, released in April 2010 on Stunt Records. The album shows what a great live performer she is and contains not only her own material, but also interpretations of other well-known songs. Special guests are Dave Samuels (US) on vibraphone/marimba and Dennis Mackrel (US) on drums. Bio (http://veronica.dk/biography).

Phil Woods Quintet - Bouquet

Styles: Bop, Hard Bop, Saxophone Jazz, Jazz Instrument
Label: Concord Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:35
Size: 118,1 MB
Scans: Front

( 9:26)  1. Theme From Star Trek
( 0:22)  2. Introductory Announcement
(11:20)  3. Bouquet
( 0:25)  4. Introductory Announcement
(10:18)  5. Tune Of The Unknown Samba
( 0:18)  6. Introductory Announcement
( 7:54)  7. Mom
(11:27)  8. Willow Weep For Me

Phil Woods' combos of the 1970s, '80s and '90s have helped to keep the tradition of bop alive by adding to the music's repertoire and featuring creative solos within bop structures; high musicianship and stable personnel have also helped. Recorded live at the 1987 Fujitsu-Concord Jazz Festival in Tokyo, Bouquet is a well-balanced set consisting of five lengthy workouts for the altoist's 1987 quintet (which also includes trumpeter Tom Harrell, pianist Hal Galper, bassist Steve Gilmore and drummer Bill Goodwin). "Theme From Star Trek" is taken at a blazing tempo that is highlighted by a fiery and witty tradeoff of two-bar phrases by Woods and Harrell. The trumpeter's moody ballad "Bouquet" precedes Hal Galper's "Tune of the Unknown Samba," a Latin piece that finds the pianist taking solo honors. Woods' emotional "Mom" and a surprisingly brisk "Willow Weep for Me" (with the altoist hinting at Eric Dolphy) wrap up this fine CD, easily recommended to Phil Woods' fans.

Wes Montgomery - The Montgomeryland Sessions (CD1) And (CD2)

Styles: Jazz
Label: Phoenix Records
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:43 (CD1)
Size: 177,9 MB (CD1)
Time: 79:19 (CD2)
Size: 181,6 MB (CD2)
Art: Front

(CD1)

( 2:33)  1. Finger Pickin'
( 6:57)  2. Sound Carrier
( 4:47)  3. Lois Ann
( 7:33)  4. Bud's Beaux Arts
(10:08)  5. Bock To Bock
( 3:58)  6. All The Things You Are
( 4:41)  7. Billie's Bounce
( 5:55)  8. Far Wes
( 3:30)  9. Leila
( 6:38) 10. Old Folks
( 4:11) 11. Wes' Tune
( 4:37) 12. Hymn To Carl
( 4:03) 13. Montgomeryland Funk
( 4:23) 14. Stompin' At The Savoy
( 3:42) 15. Love For Sale

(CD2)

(4:53)  1. Summertime
(3:57)  2. Monk's Shop
(6:16)  3. Falling In Love With Love
(3:33)  4. Renie
(6:40)  5. Ouverture
(6:19)  6. And This Is My Beloved
(5:01)  7. Fate
(4:55)  8. Stranger In Paradise
(3:29)  9. Baubles, Bangles And Beads
(7:24) 10. Not Since Nineveh
(3:42) 11. A Good Git Together
(3:49) 12. Feed Me
(3:57) 13. Music In The Air
(2:53) 14. Pretty Strange
(5:03) 15. The Shouter
(2:22) 16. Social Call
(4:54) 17. Out Of The Past

Wes Montgomery's admirers have often speculated on what direction his career might have taken had he not died prematurely in 1968. Would he have returned to straight-ahead bop, or would the slick, heavily produced smooth jazz he turned to during the last few years of his life continue to be his primary focus? Would there have been any Montgomery Brothers reunions in the ‘70s? One can only speculate. But what we can say for certain is that when he was still bop-oriented, the influential guitarist made his mark both as a leader and on sessions he co-led with bassist Monk Montgomery and pianist/vibist Buddy Montgomery. The Montgomery Brothers' pre-‘60s output is the focus of The Montgomeryland Sessions; spanning 1955-1959, this two-CD set contains the albums The Montgomery Brothers Plus Five Others and Montgomeryland in their entirety. Also included are live performances from the Kismet album (recorded at the Forum Theater in Los Angeles in 1958) and Jon Hendricks' A Good Git-Together (which finds The Montgomery Brothers backing that risk-taking singer at Fugazi Hall in San Francisco in 1959). 

And collectors will be glad to know that this double-CD contains a rare Montgomery Brothers version of Cole Porter's "Love for Sale" from 1955. The Montgomeryland Sessions isn't the last word on Wes Montgomery's recordings with his brothers; for example, this release doesn't get into their Groove Yard session of 1961. But it takes more than a superficial look at their late-‘50s activities, and even though The Montgomeryland Sessions isn't recommended to casual listeners, it's a release that serious collectors will be glad to have.~Alex Henderson (http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-montgomeryland-sessions-mw0001457396).