Monday, August 18, 2014

The J Street Jumpers - Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 54:33
Size: 124.9 MB
Styles: Swing, Jump blues
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[2:31] 1. Better Beware
[3:51] 2. Ain't But One
[3:08] 3. Night Life Boogie
[3:35] 4. That's How I Feel About You
[4:38] 5. Topsy
[2:54] 6. Jump, Jive And Wail
[2:59] 7. Gal With A Whole Lotta Loot
[3:14] 8. When I Get Low I Get High
[4:14] 9. Please Send Me Someone To Love
[3:32] 10. Momma, He Treats Your Daughter Mean
[2:40] 11. Onion
[2:57] 12. Going Back To New Orleans
[4:16] 13. Sure Had A Wonderful Time Last Night
[2:30] 14. The Big Question
[3:10] 15. Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby
[4:16] 16. At Last

This is a great album for anyone who likes great swing-blues music with a solid jazz feel. The arrangements are tight, the solos are first rate, and Marianna Previtti sings with her own style that builds on the wonderful jazz-blues singers of the past. Their version of Jump, Jive, and Wail is more than a match for the Louis Prima rendition featured on the recent Gap commercial. You can swing dance to most tunes and slow dance to the rest (as we do here around DC where the J Street Jumpers usually perform). Or just listen and enjoy swingin, wailing musicians perform the music so many of us love. ~/amazon

Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby

Eva Simontacchi - Places

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 52:17
Size: 119.7 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[7:46] 1. I'm Glad There Is You
[6:15] 2. Invitation
[3:19] 3. Places
[2:53] 4. The Shadow Of Your Smile
[5:44] 5. For All We Know
[4:57] 6. Alone Together
[2:57] 7. Cheek To Cheek
[6:33] 8. Darn That Dream
[4:20] 9. Sun And Rain
[3:33] 10. It Could Happen To You
[3:55] 11. The Island

An extraordinary voice, endowed by a soothing and warm timbre, an ensemble that includes heavyweights of the Italian and international jazz scene, the suggestive trumpet of Tom Harrell, one of the most fascinating performers in our recent history. These are the ingredients of a great Italian production where tradition, modern style, freshness of arrangements and intensity of expression combine perfectly together. Repertoire that draws from the tradition of the American standards.

"A wonderful recording by a beautiful singer" ~Sheila Jordan

Roberto Cipelli : piano; Tom Harrell : trumpet and flugelhorn; Massimo Manzi : drums; Eva Simontacchi : vocals; Attilio Zanchi : doublebass.

Places

Wild Bill Davis - Live At Sonny's Place 1985

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 65:15
Size: 149.4 MB
Styles: Hammond organ jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[5:52] 1. Satin Doll
[5:24] 2. Honeysuckle Rose
[6:39] 3. Azure Te
[6:06] 4. Stolen Sweets
[7:38] 5. Blues For New Orleans
[7:24] 6. St. Thomas
[7:52] 7. In A Mellotone
[6:18] 8. I Got It Bad And That Ain't Good
[7:03] 9. Jive Samba
[4:13] 10. Johnny Come Lately
[0:41] 11. April In Paris

Wild Bill Davis is the father of the Hammond organ in Jazz Music. As a legendary sideman with the likes of Johnny Hodges, Duke Ellington, Illinois Jacquet, Milt Larkin, Louis Jordan, Lionel Hampton and others, as well as a composer and arranger for Louis Jordan, Count Basie etc, he also lead his own groups and toured regularly. Here we present a rare glimpse of Will Bill Davis’ own group, performing live during the later part of his career. Here we have his regular trio group, with Clyde Lucas on drums and Chuckie Thompson on guitar and vocals, augmented by a then very young, alto sax & clarinetist Joey “G-Clef” Cavaseno. Sonny’s Place was a legendary Jazz club in Seaford, Long Island (New York) which at the time attracted many New York City artists or those who may have been traveling through the area.

Live At Sonny's Place 1985

Arielle Dombasle - Amor Amor

Styles: Chanson
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:18
Size: 81,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:44)  1. Quien Sera
(2:41)  2. Amor Amor
(2:51)  3. Quizas, Quizas, Quizas
(2:49)  4. Rhum And Coca Cola
(3:07)  5. El Tiburon
(4:10)  6. Quiereme
(2:04)  7. As Time Goes By
(3:43)  8. I Wish You Love
(3:03)  9. Cuando Calienta El Sol
(3:04) 10. Solamente Una Vez
(2:13) 11. Whispering
(2:42) 12. Quizas, Quizas, Quizas

Arielle Dombasle is a French film actress with more than 50 movies to her credit, and now she's trying her hand as a kind of torch singer. The vintage material and arrangements on Amor Amor certainly evoke an era of sophisticated bands and witty and heartfelt material, be it the classic "As Time Goes By" or "Quireme." With her breathy voice and accent and singing in both Spanish and English Dombasle makes the most of her abilities to generate a little heat and sensuality, and it helps that much of the material is familiar, like "Cuando Calienta el Sol." But, frankly, her interpretations of the standards don't bear comparison with the greats, even when she duets on "Quizas, Quizas, Quizas" with Julio Iglesias. And her treatment of "Rhum and Coca-Cola" falls flat  it's not the Andrews Sisters and it's definitely not calypso. While it aims at being nostalgically chic, with several exotic shades of Cuba in some of the arrangements, it sadly never quite succeeds. ~ Chris Nickson  http://www.allmusic.com/album/amor-amor-mw0000479077

Personnel: Alexis Cárdenas, Zorica Stanojevic (violone); Julio Font (piano); Lionel Baracetti (marimba).

Amor Amor

Orrin Evans - Liberation Blues

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:37
Size: 167,2 MB
Art: Front

(9:22)  1. Devil Eyes
(5:36)  2. Juanita
(5:48)  3. A Lil' D.A.B. A Do Ya
(6:21)  4. A Free Man?
(5:00)  5. Liberation Blues
(5:58)  6. Simply Green
(6:12)  7. Anysha
(6:46)  8. Meant To Shine
(7:36)  9. Mumbo Jumbo
(4:55) 10. How High The Moon
(2:03) 11. The Theme
(6:55) 12. Ther Night Has A Thousand Eyes

Orrin Evans, pianist, bandleader and notorious musical catalyst, is a bona fide, jazz original. Brimming with music and ideas, Orrin’s Liberation Blues debuts one of his most impressive projects yet, a new quintet lineup that includes Sean Jones, JD Allen, Luques Curtis, and Bill Stewart. The recording, made live at Smoke Jazz Club in New York City, occurred immediately following the passing of bassist Dwayne Burno, and the opening selections comprise the “Liberation Blues Suite” dedicated to his memory. Orrin explains, “In my eyes, Burno is now a ‘Free Man’ … but with that freedom, we’ve lost a great man right here on earth. 

So, there’s still a blues we feel missing our brother and friend.” Simply put, the playing is inspired. Sean Jones and JD Allen are a brilliant pairing and it is hard to miss Bill Stewart’s presence. Orrin says, “Let me do something that people wouldn’t expect, somethin’ that I wouldn’t even expect. Listen … now is the time for Bill Stewart.” After mining the compositions of Paul Motian, Trudy Pitts, Miles Davis, and, of course, Orrin Evans, the night concludes with a memorable encore visit from Philadelphia vocalist Joanna Pascale for a sultry version of “The Night has a Thousand Eyes.” http://www.smokesessionsrecords.com

Personnel: Sean Jones Trumpet (except on 7, 10, 11, 12); JD Allen: Tenor Saxophone (except on 10,11,12); Orrin Evans: Piano; Luques Curtis: Bass; Bill Stewart: Drums; Joanna Pascale (12 only).

Sunday, August 17, 2014

George Braith - The Complete George Braith Bluenote Sessions (2-Disc set)

The use of multiphonics in jazz has been mastered by very few players, and while at times shrill and thin, can be enlivening and exciting. Rahsaan Roland Kirk and Albert Mangelsdorff set the gold standard, while several trumpeters like Rayse Biggs and Corey Wilkes have tried it with two brass instruments, and contemporary saxophonist Jeff Coffin gives it ago. George Braith holds a singularly unique place in the pantheon of these stylistas, following the path of Kirk in playing two saxophones while combining bop and soul-jazz. This set represents the complete works of Braith on Blue Note in 1963 and 1964 from the albums Two Souls in One, Soul Stream, and Extension. While a consistently satisfying set, it does take some orientation and a bit of patience warming up to the duality presented on a combination of soprano, alto, straight alto aka the stritch, and tenor sax. The brilliant guitarist Grant Green and Braith's high school classmate Billy Gardner on the Hammond B-3 organ are heard throughout, with three different drummers per album. Braith wrote the bulk of the material, with an occasional cover or traditional song tossed in for good measure. Because of the uneven level of song choices overall, there are definitive standout cuts, but the Two Souls in One recording features the great drummer Donald Bailey, and that factor alone lifts the first five tracks. Theoretically, doing "Mary Ann" and "Mary Had a Little Lamb" brings the session down to a childish level. A unique version on alto only of the choppy, Latin shaded "Poinciana," the original light waltz "Home Street" with the dual horns agreeably merging together, and the 13 1/2 minute soprano sax jam "Braith-A-Way" lifts the cache of Braith's music. Hugh Walker on the drum kit stokes the rhythms for Soul Stream, six cuts that range from a stealth, slinky variation of "The Man I Love" (dedicated to assassinated Pres. John F. Kennedy,) the spatial ballad title track, the hot bop "Boop Bop Bing Bash" with Braith's woodwinds a tad bleating, and the Spanish castanet flavored traditional "Billy Told," adapted from the "William Tell Overture." Finally Clarence Johnston is the drummer on the final six selections, all originals save for a bop take of the Cole Porter standard "Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye," which closely foreshadows the style of Kirk. Braith adopts a lilting quality for the spirit waltz "Nut City," paraphrases Dizzy Gillespie and Gil Fuller's "Things to Come" on "Extension," while Johnston proffers the perfect small shuffle beat on "Sweetville." "Out Here" is the most fun and playful tune of the entire collection, using pedal point start-stops, shifting bop lines, and tangents that stream out of the nimble beat. Grant Green is the true star here at a time where he was ultimately empowered as a sideman, and special attention must be given to the obscure but cozy and talented Gardner. Where the saxophonist's personal sound may not universally appeal to all, his style next to Kirk compares favorably. One of the truly lost figures of modern jazz, George Braith deserves a revisit, and this complete compilation is quite worthy of more attention as the years go passing by. ~Michael G. Nastos

Album: The Complete George Braith Bluenote Sessions (Disc 1)
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 57:19
Size: 131.2 MB
Styles: Post bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 2000

[ 7:28] 1. Mary Ann
[ 6:54] 2. Home Street
[ 6:13] 3. Poinciana
[ 6:54] 4. Mary Had A Little Lamb
[13:25] 5. Braitth-A-Way
[ 5:22] 6. The Man I Love
[ 7:50] 7. Outside Around The Corner
[ 3:10] 8. Soul Stream

Album: The Complete George Braith Bluenote Sessions (Disc 2)
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 56:38
Size: 129.6 MB
Styles: Post bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[6:20] 1. Boop Bop Bing Bash
[7:49] 2. Billy Told
[5:19] 3. Jo Anne
[5:52] 4. Nut City
[7:18] 5. Ethlyn's Love
[6:55] 6. Out Here
[6:35] 7. Extension
[5:59] 8. Sweetville
[4:27] 9. Eve'ry Time We Say Goodbye

The Complete George Braith Bluenote Sessions Disc 1, Disc 2                  

Paquito D'Rivera - Spice It Up!

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 66:21
Size: 151.9 MB
Styles: Afro-Cuban jazz
Year: 2001
Art: Front

[3:32] 1. Chucho
[6:33] 2. Havana Cafe
[4:38] 3. The Peanut Vendor
[5:49] 4. A Night In Tunisia
[3:54] 5. Mambo A La Kenton
[5:04] 6. Echale Salsita
[4:18] 7. Drume Negrita
[5:29] 8. Tropicana Nights
[5:58] 9. Who's Smoking
[5:29] 10. Tico Tico
[5:04] 11. Portraits Of Cuba
[0:48] 12. Excerpt From 'aires Tropicales'
[5:42] 13. What Are You Doing Tomorrow Night
[3:57] 14. A Mi Que El Manisero

"I'm impressed anew ... by the technical and emotional equipoise of Paquito's alto, soprano, and clarinet improvisations: his lyric focus and fierce rhythmic drive, the ease of execution in navigating complex harmonic changes, the dancing undercurrent of South America and the Caribbean, the complex chromatic elisions and bluesy grooves of swing and bop, the steely articulation and dynamic control of a classically-trained saxophonist. I'm actually kind of stunned." ~Chip Stein

Spice It Up!

Frank Wess & Johnny Coles - Two At The Top (2-Disc set)

Collectors have eagerly anticipated the reissue of Uptown's jazz LPs from the 1980s, as they inevitably add valuable material from the original sessions, period photos, and expanded liner notes. Long one of Wess' favorite records as a leader, Two at the Top is one of the label's finest releases, a session pairing Frank Wess and the unjustly neglected Johnny Coles, accompanied by a potent rhythm section consisting of pianist Kenny Barron, bassist Reggie Johnson, and drummer Kenny Washington. Don Sickler contributed the superb arrangements, with the session focusing primarily on songs by jazz greats who came of age between the '40s and early '60s: Bud Powell, Tadd Dameron, Gigi Gryce, Kenny Dorham, and Benny Golson. Coles is afire in the brisk setting of Dorham's "Whistle Stop," with Barron's intricate solo immediately following him. Powell's "Celia" has tended to be overlooked because the pianist wrote so many memorable songs, but the band makes the most of this hidden gem, a sauntering performance showcasing Barron in bop mode. Wess is heard on alto sax in Gryce's "Nica's Tempo," taking charge with a spirited, driving solo. There's a tense Afro-Cuban undercurrent suggestive of Dizzy Gillespie in the introduction to Gryce's "Minority," long a jam session favorite, in which Coles and Wess (on alto sax) play with gusto. Dameron's "A Blue Time" is another under-appreciated gem by a prolific composer, where the co-leaders blend perfectly in the ensembles and add sparkling solos as well. The sole standard is a subdued, emotional scoring of Harold Arlen's "Ill Wind." There are five bonus tracks from the 1983 sessions, all first takes of songs featured on the original record, none of which are flawed.

The entire hour of music on disc two is previously unissued, coming from a well-preserved 1988 radio broadcast recorded live at Yoshi's in Oakland, California. Wess and Coles are joined by pianist Smith Dobson, bassist Larry Grenadier, and drummer Donald "Duck" Bailey. Since it is a live gig, there is plenty of time for extended improvisations, including a blistering take of Sam Jones' "One for Amos" that showcases Wess' strong chops on flute, followed by Coles' expressive trumpet, buoyed by the in-the-pocket rhythm section. Coles sits out Wess' "If You Can't Call, Don't Come," a slow ballad with a bittersweet air which the composer conveys effectively on tenor sax. The extended workout of "Minority" is another treasure from the broadcast, as is Buddy Montgomery's less well-known "Blues for David," a rollicking finale to this valuable 1988 Yoshi's set, and a terrific bonus to the expanded reissue of Two at the Top. ~Ken Dryden

Album: Two At The Top (Disc 1)
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 77:14
Size: 176.8 MB
Styles: Mainstream jazz
Year: 2012

[5:58] 1. Whistle Stop
[5:33] 2. Morning Star
[4:59] 3. Celia
[6:37] 4. Nica's Tempo
[5:44] 5. Minority
[6:31] 6. Ill Wind
[6:08] 7. Stablemates
[4:15] 8. An Oscar For Oscar
[6:48] 9. A Blue Time
[4:16] 10. An Oscar For Oscar (Take One)
[5:01] 11. Stablemates (Take One)
[5:05] 12. Minority (Take One)
[4:36] 13. Whistle Stop (Take One)
[5:36] 14. Morning Star (Take One)

Two At The Top (Disc 1)

Album: Two At The Top (Disc 2)
Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 60:14
Size: 137.9 MB
Styles: Mainstream jazz
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[14:37] 1. One For Amos (Live)
[ 9:25] 2. If You Can't Call, Don't Come (Live)
[ 9:03] 3. Morning Star (Live)
[12:09] 4. Minority (Live)
[14:57] 5. Blues For David (Live)

Two At The Top (Disc 2)

Deborah Brown & The Eric Ineke Jazzxpress - For The Love Of Ivie

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:28
Size: 120,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:59)  1. Mood Indigo
(5:29)  2. My Old Flame
(3:37)  3. I'm Checkin' Out, Goom-Bye
(3:07)  4. Stormy Weather
(3:16)  5. It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)
(7:09)  6. Your Love Has Faded
(4:13)  7. I'm Satisfied
(3:19)  8. Solitude
(3:17)  9. Black Beauty
(3:30) 10. It Was A Sad Night In Harlem
(4:11) 11. All God's Chillun
(5:16) 12. I Got It Bad And That Ain't Good

Ivie Anderson was Duke Ellington's mainstay singer from 1931 to 1942, melding the depth of Billie Holiday with the sophisticated attitude of Lena Horne. Deborah Brown is one of the finest modern jazz vocalists ever to grace live venues and recording studios. In common with Anderson, she is a musician's vocalist, having played with the likes of Slide Hampton, Cedar Walton, Clark Terry, Johnny Griffin, Michel Legrand, Toots Thielemans and Roy Hargrove, amply showing the respect in which she is regarded by the players, as well as her great adaptability. With For The Love Of Ivie , Brown takes Anderson's repertoire in a modern direction swinging, scatting, and crooning with a group of outstanding European musicians, its core consisting of drummer Eric Ineke's Jazz Xpress, one of the continent's best groups. Well-recorded and mastered, with sensitive and responsive instrumentalists, the recording tastefully transcends Anderson and the Duke, mirroring the many moods and idioms of jazz, from blues, Latin and swing to bebop and beyond, with Brown delivering her typically disciplined yet lively and swinging interpretations. 

Few singers, if any, can match her unwavering precision, timing, vocal technique, and synchronization. Throughout this album, she sings intelligently, with resonant voice, and controlled expression of emotion, backed up with lively accompaniment and solos that pleasingly frame Brown's voice. It's all together a moveable jazz songfest.In addition to the Ellington classics like "Mood Indigo," "It Don't Mean a Thing if it Ain't Got That Swing," and "I Got It Bad and That Ain't Good," the album includes Billy Strayhorn's "Your Love Has Faded," featuring superb trombone work by Bart Van Lier, and standards like "My Old Flame" and "Stormy Weather." An instrumental version of Ellington's "Black Beauty" shows off the sidemen's talents, while Brown's artful rendition of the lovely blues-oriented ballad, "It Was a Sad Night in Harlem," is a dark horse number. 

Brown grew up in Kansas City (where she now resides), spent time in New Orleans, and was later based in Holland, where she mentored students such as JD Walter. Harking back to the days of swing and bebop, this album reflects Brown's KC roots enhanced by the European experience. Topping off the album's high quality are excellent liner notes, session photographs, and a precious photograph of Ellington and Anderson with band members, at what appears to be a train station in The Hague, Netherlands. A great way to listen to this album is to pair it off with Ivie Anderson with Duke Ellington and His Famous Orchestra (EPM, 1996). In particular, Anderson's melancholic version of "Mood Indigo" includes a signature solo by Ben Webster, and contrasts sharply with Brown's Latin-spiced rendition. It's also fun to contemplate which of them merits the seven-second exclamation, "That's the Version!" which Brown tacked onto her CD. ~ Victor L.Schermer  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/for-the-love-of-ivie-a-tribute-to-ivie-anderson-deborah-brown-challenge-records-review-by-victor-l-schermer.php#.U-6wkmNryKI
 
Personnel: Deborah Brown: vocals, piano; Benjamin Herman: alto saxophone; Bart Van Lier: trombone; Sjoerd Dijkhuizen: clarinet, bass clarinet, tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone; Rik Mol: trumpet, flugelhorn; Rob Van Bavel: piano; Eric Ineke: drums, cymbals, percussion.

Dave Santoro - The New Standard

Styles: Straight-ahead/Mainstream,Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:12
Size: 156,7 MB
Art: Front

(10:11)  1. I've Never Been In Love Before
( 7:16)  2. I Remember You
(12:35)  3. Witchcraft
( 7:35)  4. All Of You
( 9:04)  5. How About You
( 7:51)  6. Let's Pretend
( 6:39)  7. You're Too Marvelous For Words
( 6:56)  8. The Best Thing For You

Bassist Dave Santoro has formed a "standards" quartet that effectively expands the philosophy of Keith Jarrett's Standards Trio. Jarrett, along with drummer Jack DeJohnette and bassist Gary Peacock represent a "standards" unit, reinterpreting the great American songbook. They have had the market cornered in performing standards for the last 20 years. Santoro makes this concept one better with the addition of tenor saxophonist Jerry Bergonzi, who is charged with reharmonizing the same American Songbook. This has resulted in three recordings for Double-Time Records, of which The New Standard is the third. Dave Santoro has had a long relationship with Jerry Bergonzi, beginning their respective standards love affair on Bergonzi's Blue Note release, Standard Gonz (96256, 1989). This was followed up in 1999 with The Dave Santoro Standards Band (Double Time Records, 151) and with The Dave Santoro Standards Band II (Double Time Records, 165, 2000). The former of these recordings offers a vastly reharmonized "On Green Dolphin Street" that was to set the stage for the next two recordings. The present recording contains eight blissfully realized standards, none of which clock in at less than six minutes. 

The band has a casual, well-practiced swing, making their collective musicality sound easy. This recording sounds the least like a bassist-led affair than any other I have recently heard. Part of the reason for this is the relatively little soloing Santoro performs and the large amount of space the leader affords Bergonzi and pianist Chicco. Both men sound fresh and bright, choosing all of there notes intelligently and dynamically. Bergonzi, whose tone has long associated with a substantial Coltrane influence, proves down right lyrical in a full-throated sort of way that makes his playing more attractive than that of the master. The two lengthiest pieces, "I've Never Been in Love Before" and "Witchcraft" provide copious example of the piano-tenor intuition in this band. Santoro purrs slightly behind the beat, giving the music a hesitant momentum that is thick and dense. 

Drummer Tom Melito plays the dozens with his band members by trading eights with them and never giving an inch. In cooperation with Santoro, Melito propels the group in a sure and stalwart manner. Santoro's solos, when he takes them, are lyrical with no wasted notes. He does not over play. Tasteful harmonics and a sure time characterize Santoro's playing, illustrating his smart but homespun approach. His choice of material also betrays his common intelligence. The New Standard is thoroughly satisfying. It is a down the middle-of- the-road treat. ~ C.Michael Bailey  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-new-standard-dave-santoro-double-time-jazz-review-by-c-michael-bailey__14775.php#.U-6j6mNryKI

Personnel: Dave Santoro: Bass; Jerry Bergonzi: Tenor Saxophone; Renato Chicco: Piano; Tom Melito: Drums.

The New Standard

Clifford Brown - The Definitive Clifford Brown

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:58
Size: 174,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:40)  1. Easy Living
(6:57)  2. Wee Dot
(7:43)  3. Jordu
(7:38)  4. I Get A Kick Out Of You
(6:48)  5. Joy Spring
(4:01)  6. Daahoud
(5:21)  7. I've Got You Under My Skin
(4:09)  8. He's My Guy
(5:14)  9. Born To Be Blue
(3:22) 10. Stardust
(5:43) 11. Cherokee
(9:12) 12. I'll Remember April
(6:04) 13. The Scene Is Clean

Trumpeter Clifford Brown had a brief career. He started playing jazz in the late '40s but was killed in a car accident in 1956 (along with pianist Richie Powell, younger brother of Bud). In that short time his interest in expanding the bebop medium is apparent on The Definitive Clifford Brown. Several of the legendary hard bop quintet sides he recorded with Max Roach for Emarcy are featured as well as his warm tone mixing beautifully with string arrangements and backing up vocalists Helen Merrill, Dinah Washington, and Sarah Vaughan. The Definitive Clifford Brown is a well rounded introduction providing a glimpse into the full spectrum of a career cut tragically short. ~ Al Campbell  http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-definitive-clifford-brown-mw0000223919

Personnel: Clifford Brown (trumpet); Dinah Washington, Helen Merrill, Sarah Vaughan (vocals); Barry Galbraith (guitar); Gigi Gryce (flute, alto saxophone); Herbie Mann (flute); Herb Geller, Lou Donaldson (alto saxophone); Harold Land, Paul Quinichette, Sonny Rollins, Charlie Rouse (tenor saxophone); Danny Bank (baritone saxophone); Clark Terry, Maynard Ferguson (trumpet); John Richard Lewis, Horace Silver, Jimmy Jones , Junior Mance, Richie Powell (piano); Max Roach, Osie Johnson, Roy Haynes, Art Blakey (drums).

The Definitive Clifford Brown

Claudio Roditi - Milestones

Styles: Hard bop, Jazz
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:28
Size: 159,4 MB
Art: Front

(10:41)  1. Milestones
(12:57)  2. I'll Remember April
(14:06)  3. But Not For Me
( 9:27)  4. Pent-Up House
(10:58)  5. Brussels in the Rain
(11:16)  6. Mr. P.C.

There aren't many trumpeters around more animated and energetic than Claudio Roditi. His searing solos and equally fiery accompaniment have been featured in several bands, and he takes center stage on Milestones. Besides his solos, the disc has some first-rate songs and an even better group. Alto saxophonist Paquito D'Rivera, pianist Kenny Barron, bassist Ray Drummond, and drummer Ben Riley would constitute a great band by themselves, and are no less playing with Roditi. ~ Ron Wynn  http://www.allmusic.com/album/milestones-mw0000092275

Personnel: Claudio Roditi (flugelhorn); Kenny Barron (piano); Ray Drummond (bass guitar); Ben Riley (drums); Paquito d'Rivera (alto saxophone).

Saturday, August 16, 2014

Martial Solal - Dodecaband Plays Ellington

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 58:42
Size: 134.4 MB
Styles: Big band
Year: 2001
Art: Front

[ 7:23] 1. Satin Doll
[14:53] 2. Caravan
[ 8:32] 3. In A Sentimental Mood
[ 8:56] 4. It Don't Mean A Thing
[ 9:58] 5. Take The 'a' Train
[ 8:58] 6. Medley: Cottontail, I Got It Bad, Prelude To A Kiss

Martial Solal's big band is a revelation. I've loved his piano music since I started acquiring (mostly through mail order) his records in the late 60's. His big band writing can be seen as an extension of his piano, but it is much more. Like his piano playing there are all kinds of rhythmic stops and starts that may sound like unmusical special effects at first hearing but actually make entire sense.

I usually don't like "songbook" CD's because they often sound like pale imitations why not just listen to the real thing. Solal has reconstructed these overplayed tunes, brought them up to date, and given them new life. They are still recognizable, but there are all kinds of rhythmic surprises, unexpected voicings, abrupt modulations, and turn-on-a-dime transitions that keep the band and the listener from settling in. Time continually shifts back and forth between 4/4 and free.

This twelve-piece band is more maneuverable than the standard big band. They can cut these complicated arrangements replete with unique voicings and freer swing concepts. Chautemps on soprano is the most prominent soloist besides Solal, but most players are featured at least once. The solos are short and integrated into the ensemble they barely establish a groove before the music moves on.

Like Charlie Parker Solal loves to throw quotes into his music. If anything his are sneakier and more tongue in cheek. Some examples: a hint of "Reveille" in "Satin Doll;" a muted trombone passage from "Morning Air" by Willie "The Lion" Smith in the conclusion of "It Don't Mean a Thing;" maybe one measure of "La Cucaracha" hidden in the theme statement of "Take the 'A' Train." Some of his writing combinations have a similarly individual feel: An abstract tuba introduces "It Don't Mean a Thing" after which the piece moves into a reeds vs. tuba exchange and tuba-led ensemble passages. "Caravan" briefly features piccolo over brass.

The arrangements are not derived from Solal's Ellington piano record except "Satin Doll" which features Solal in a prominent but fragmented solo role. "Caravan," a 15-minute tour de force with a two-soprano lead, dies with a whimper. Trumpet and soprano solo simultaneously over the band during "In a Sentimental Mood." In the concluding medley of eight Ellington tunes there are no clear cut breaks between themes. Solal sometimes borrows a motif from one tune to use as a riff in another. ~Craig Jolley

Dodecaband Plays Ellington 

Bobby Dukoff - Off The Cuff

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 33:17
Size: 76.2 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1957/2010
Art: Front

[2:34] 1. Thou Swell
[3:02] 2. You Brought A New Kind Of Love To Me
[3:12] 3. It's A Wonderfull World
[2:55] 4. What A Fabulous Night
[2:32] 5. Baby Won't You Please Come Home
[2:59] 6. When I Take My Sugar To Tea
[2:23] 7. You Do Something To Me
[3:00] 8. My Baby Just Cares For Me
[2:36] 9. Seems Like Old Times
[2:56] 10. You've Got The Laugh On Me
[2:34] 11. I'm Sitting On Top Of The World
[2:30] 12. Gotta Be This Or That

Bobby Dukoff was born October 11, 1918. He was first and foremost a phenomenal saxophone player. After he bought his first horn at the age of 14, for $45, with money he earned working at a delicatessen, he went on to become a member of some of the most famous Big Bands in history.

After his Big Band days—with notables such as Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey, and Jimmy Dorsey were over, Dukoff went on to have a very successful solo career. He was known for his lush tenor sound, which became a defining feature of his brand.

Off The Cuff

Various - Kissing Jessica Stein OST

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 40:19
Size: 92.3 MB
Styles: Soundtrack, Easy Listening
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[2:11] 1. Blossom Dearie - Put On A Happy Face
[4:54] 2. Sarah Vaughan - It's Crazy
[2:21] 3. Anita O'day - Taking A Chance On Love
[3:20] 4. Jill Phillips - That Could Happen To Us
[0:59] 5. Ernestine Anderson - There Will Never Be Another You
[2:24] 6. Shirley Horn - I Just Found Out About Love
[2:47] 7. Ella Fitzgerald - Manhattan
[2:43] 8. Dinah Washington - Teach Me Tonight
[4:57] 9. Matt Rollings - Gee Baby, Ain't I Good To You
[2:07] 10. Carmen Mcrae - Exactly Like You
[2:56] 11. Peggy Lee - I Don't Know About You
[3:18] 12. Diana Krall - Devil May Care
[3:10] 13. Billie Holiday - What A Little Moonlight Can Do
[2:05] 14. Blossom Dearie - I Wish You Love

Romantic comedies aren't something new; back in 1938, Bringing up Baby (starring Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant) was the definitive romantic comedy of its time. But the genre has evolved over the years, and so have musical tastes. These days, the soundtracks of romantic comedies are likely to have a lot of adult contemporary or pop/rock because those styles of music appeal to their target audience: younger women. But the soundtrack of Kissing Jessica Stein, a romantic comedy from 2002, is a major exception. While other romantic comedy soundtracks will emphasize artists like Celine Dion, Gloria Estefan, and Whitney Houston -- favorites in the adult contemporary market -- this CD is dominated by vocal jazz (with some traditional pre-rock pop here and there). Verve provides a few new recordings, but most of the soundtrack is devoted to older recordings by well-known vocalists like Anita O'Day ("Taking a Chance on Love"), Shirley Horn ("I Just Found out About Love"), Sarah Vaughan ("It's Crazy"), and Dinah Washington ("Teach Me Tonight"). The material is quite accessible -- nothing abstract or left of center -- and one doesn't have to be a really seasoned jazz fan to get into Ella Fitzgerald's version of "Manhattan" or Blossom Dearie's playful interpretation of "I Wish You Love." In fact, many of the jazz singers on this CD have over the years been able to appeal to pop fans who don't necessarily care for a lot of hardcore instrumental jazz; in other words, the type of listener who might love Vaughan and Fitzgerald but doesn't necessarily have a lot of John Coltrane or Art Blakey CDs in his/her collection. This is a pleasant, likable soundtrack that won't intimidate those who like their jazz singing accessible and easy to absorb. ~Alex Henderson

Kissing Jessica Stein OST

Dave Fleschner - At Home

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 56:58
Size: 130.4 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[4:55] 1. At Home
[4:36] 2. Vodka Tonic
[6:36] 3. Still
[6:02] 4. Brother
[5:58] 5. Madame G
[3:52] 6. March For The End Of Time
[7:09] 7. I Don't Know
[5:50] 8. The Runner
[4:46] 9. Family
[4:40] 10. Out From Behind
[2:28] 11. Goodnight

Dave Fleschner’s CD, “At Home,” marks his debut record as pianist, band-leader and composer. Fleschner began writing the music for “At Home” motivated by the idea that music is an evolutionary art form.

This music is the search for balance between challenge and ease, composition and improvisation, beauty and chaos, the past and the current. The album features performances by longtime musical associates of Fleschner’s including drummers Ken Ollis, Anthony Jones and Joel Fadness; Bassists Tyler Smith and Bill Athens; Saxophonist Marc Hutchinson; Guitarists Dan Gildea and A.G.Donnaloia, as well as a special guest appearance by Veteran Saxophonist John Gross.

At Home

Cheryl Conley - Tender Moments

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:27
Size: 109,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:43)  1. Close Your Eyes
(3:54)  2. Up Jumped Spring
(5:32)  3. The First Of September
(3:57)  4. Comes Love
(3:50)  5. It's Alright With Me
(6:23)  6. But Beautiful
(5:17)  7. Until It's Time For You To Go
(6:08)  8. That Sunday, That Summer
(3:35)  9. The Late, Late Show
(5:04) 10. The Island

Timing is everything . . . the time is right for Cheryl Conley. This lady has been singing and waiting, waiting for a break in the music industry. Cheryl can wait no longer, she is making her own break and we are all going to be happier with this maiden release of "Tender Moments." This CD is for those of us that enjoy a fantastic range of vocal ability coupled with uncanny musical timing and phraseology that just makes you wanna say, "Oh Yea, ahh!" This isn't smooth jazz; it's the versatility of Cheryl Conley. She can light a torch song, put indigo in your blues, make a crooner cry for mercy,or have you falling-down-drunk after a bout with her reminiscent ballads of lovers gone by. Cheryl Conley started out singing back-up R&B with the Ike and Tina Turner Review. She obtained her degree in music from the California State University of Los Angeles and is the director of one of the choirs at her church. 

With all of these activites going on Cheryl Conley has maintained a thriving career singing locally throughout the Southern California area, constantly refining her touch to the words written by her and others. This CD is about sitting down and actually hearing what the singer has to say. Cheryl Conley's chops span from smearing your face with the softness of chiffon from a lemon pie to the gutsy spike of a Category Five blues diva, all in the blink of an eye and without changing the groove of the song. Tender Moments feature the musical talents of: Bobby Pierce-piano; Donnell Lambert-bass; James Kousakis-sax; and Donald Dean-drums; all skillfully merged together by Engineer Noland Shaheed into a well balanced mix that makes your ears say, "Play it again." I have heard all of Cheryl's gears; this CD is just an eye opener. I hope that you hear it as I do . . . Cheryl Conley is the real deal! ~ Carl E. Betts, Entertainment Director Pasadena Journal   http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/conleycheryl

Bill Allred & Roy Williams - Absolutely

Styles: Trombone Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:20
Size: 161,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:21)  1. Constantly
(8:39)  2. Satin Doll
(4:41)  3. Isn't It A Pity
(5:23)  4. Gypsy In My Soul
(4:33)  5. Too Close For Comfort
(7:13)  6. Blues # 1
(4:17)  7. If There Is Someone Lovelier
(4:16)  8. Absolutely
(5:19)  9. Blue Bones
(4:54) 10. So Beats My Heart For You
(5:31) 11. It's Only A Paper Moon
(2:48) 12. Makin' Whoopee
(4:38) 13. Sometimes I'm Happy
(3:40) 14. You're Driving Me Crazy

Two trombones and rhythm is a tried and true formula first brought to prominence through the lilting sounds of J. J. Johnson and Kai Winding in the 1950s. Bill Allred and Roy Williams fall squarely in that tradition, with this full-length recording that focuses on popular tunes like "It's Only a Paper Moon" and "Too Close for Comfort." The two trombonists produce visceral excitement with their tight harmonies, upbeat tempos, and overall good fun. This is music that makes you want to stand up and dance. When Allred and Williams get hot as they do with great regularity they burn with enthusiasm. 

The trombonists don't take themselves too seriously; they focus on having a rollicking good time. Regardless of how sophisticated your tastes, if you ever wondered what attracted you to jazz in the first place, it very well might have been the kind of unadulterated joy manifested by this glorious quintet. Allred and Williams are pre-modern stylists: big toned, even raucous, but with great technique. They front a first-rate rhythm section, including powerful drummer Butch Miles, bassist (and otherwise sometime trombonist) Isla Eckinger, and pianist Johnny Varro. When they're hot as they are so often (just here 'em blow on "Blues #1") they are unstoppable. Simple, but never simplistic; tasteful, but never dull; professional, but not showy; and hot, but not corny what an act! Highly recommended for all those who love the sounds of the trombone, and those who just like a swinging good time. ~ Steve Loewy  http://www.allmusic.com/album/absolutely-mw0000231550

Personnel: Bill Allred (trombone); Roy Williams (trombone); Johnny Varro (piano); Butch Miles (drums).

Absolutely

Brad Mehldau & Mark Guillana - Mehliana Taming The Dragon

Styles: Jazz Funk
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:46
Size: 164,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:39)  1. Taming the Dragon
(5:52)  2. Sassyassed Sassafrass
(4:59)  3. Swimming
(4:56)  4. London Gloaming
(5:41)  5. Luxe
(5:45)  6. You Can't Go Back Now
(5:24)  7. The Dreamer
(7:33)  8. Elegy For Amelia E
(6:18)  9. Sleeping Giant
(5:01) 10. Hungry Ghost
(7:52) 11. Gainsbourg
(5:40) 12. Just Call Me Nige

First impressions shouldn't necessarily be the lasting ones. Despite, according to the press sheet, having played together for several years, über-pianist Brad Mehldau and drummer Mark Guiliana only began touring as Mehliana in 2013, and one of the heavily electronic duo's early performances at the 40th Vossa Jazz Festival in Voss, Norway was, sadly, eminently forgettable. But a year has passed and, in the interim, the duo has clocked a lot of road time, and with the released of Taming the Dragon, it's a pleasure to report that plenty has changed since that Vossa Jazz date...and all for the better. Much, much better. Mehldau's reputation and career have largely been built upon his inimitable talent as an acoustic pianist, primarily with his longstanding trio that's had just one personnel change in nearly 20 years: the original incarnation well-documented in the Art of the Trio Recordings 1996-2001 (Nonesuch, 2011) box; and his current lineup heard, most recently, on two 2012 sets (also for Nonesuch), Ode and Where Do You Start. But, largely in private, Mehldau has clearly been occupied by more electronic environs, with some early hints revealed on Largo (Warner Bros., 2002), an ambitious set with a larger cast that, produced by Jon Brion also a multi-instrumentalist who has previously worked in the pop world with everyone from Rickie Lee Jones and Peter Gabriel to Fiona Apple and Tenacious D, as well as in the jazz sphere on Bill Frisell's collaborative Floratone II (Savoy Jazz, 2012) and Nels Cline's Dirty Baby (Cryptogramophone, 2010) was something of a shot across the bow for those who were getting too comfortable with Mehldau as a purely acoustic instrumentalist. 

Ten years younger than the 43 year-old Mehldau, Guiliana who also brings his own electronics to Taming the Dragon first made his name with bassist Avishai Cohen, but in the ensuing years has built a reputation predicated on a fresh approach to the kit that's garnered attention (and work) from artists ranging from Meshell Ndegeocello and Wayne Krantz to Jason Lindner and Dhafer Youssef. He may know his jazz tradition, but he also knows his hip hop, drum 'n' bass, progressive rock and much, much more. He brings all of this and more to Mehliana, and perhaps the biggest surprise is that Mehldau does, too. Even more surprising is that Mehldau has gone from writing the long, pretentious liner notes of his early recordings to the dream-inspired tale that he tells over the opening title track and is reproduced inside the Taming the Dragon's six-panel cardboard digipak. It's beatnik-inspired prose updated for the 21st century, where the narrator (Mehldau?) recounts a "trippy dream" of being driven around Los Angeles by "on old hipster with a scratchy voice kind of like Joe Walsh sings, but he kind of had some of that vibe and energy of Dennis Hopper in Easy Rider," all in vehicle that starts as an old convertible, morphs into a VW van and, by the end of the story, becomes "more like this spaceship kind of thing." 

As Mehldau narrates, the dream unfolds to reveal the dichotomy of human nature ("you've got this one part of you that watches out for you and keeps you steady, you've got this other part that's raging and full of anger"), with a deadpan delivery not unlike American poet Franz Wright only younger and less grizzled and the music juxtaposes slow-moving synth washes to fiery, drum 'n' bass propelled by a splashy, processed crash cymbal, and a slower, high hat-driven groove, all bolstered by a positively filthy bass synth line. Six of Taming the Dragon's twelve tracks a full 72-minute program whose overarching narrative gradually unfolds and is ultimately best absorbed in its entirety are written by Mehldau; the others are co-credited to Guiliana and, no doubt, come from improvisations that demonstrate far more focus and intent than the duo's Vossa Jazz performance. Mehldau opens "Luxe" with some heavily delayed Fender Rhodes, but it's not long before Guiliana is in the pool and the keyboardist once again drops another dirty synth bass line underneath. It's sometimes difficult to discern amidst the density of it all, but the prodigious technique that allows Mehldau's two hands to sound like four ultimately reveals itself, even as Guiliana's staggering contribution justifies Bill Bruford's documented admiration for the drummer. It's not a dominant instrument on Taming the Tiger, but Mehldau does throw some acoustic piano into the mix on "You Can't Go Back Now," though it's initially just an a cappella introduction to a more hard-edged six minutes that ultimately take off, once again, with Rhodes, synth bass and processed kit dominating. 

Guiliana's ability to play with time while still keeping it feels like an homage to Bruford's work in Bruford Levin Upper Extremities (DGM, 1998), in particular the opening "Cerulean Sea," where the progressive rock legend plays liberally (but differently) with time over a relentless ostinato. But here, Mehldau adds far more harmonic and melodic building blocks, with layers of synths, Rhodes and acoustic piano building to a fiery climax of rare virtuosity that's matched with similar effortless mastery by his partner in Mehliana. Amidst all the heat and jagged angularity, there are still moments of beauty to be found. "The Dreamer," another collaborative composition, is driven by processed acoustic piano, a searing synth line and electronically processed percussion, but at its core it's a ballad even one that Mehldau could easily transfer to his acoustic trio to demonstrate an inner funky bad self that rarely surfaces in that context albeit one that concludes with more spoken word that links into the story of the title track as an assessment of dreams and the dreamer who dreams them. It's difficult to alter predisposition when faced with an artist who has largely, for the past two decades, operated in the acoustic world, and there will, no doubt, be those who view Mehliana and Taming the Dragon with nothing short of contempt. But for those who are prepared to let an artist follow his muse in any direction it takes him, Taming the Dragon will be revealing yet still inexorably connected to the music Mehldau makes with his trio and on more expansive projects like Highway Rider (Nonesuch, 2010). When you've a voice as strong as Mehldau's, it shines through, whatever the context even one as radically different as this. Having now proven itself far better than suggested by its Vossa Jazz performance with the release of Taming the Tiger, Mehliana has released a debut recording that, if it can be assessed on its own merits and not in comparison to past work even the somewhat electro-centric Largo will be seen as another superlative effort in the career of a pianist who has been consistent in his commitment to excellence and genre-defying creativity and one that shines a major spotlight on the stylistically unbound and similarly forward-thinking Guiliana. For those who are not completely married to Mehldau as a mainstream pianist, it could even be considered a potential classic. Only time will tell. ~ John Kelman  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/brad-mehldau-mark-guiliana-mehliana-taming-the-dragon-by-john-kelman.php#.U-4-RGNryKI

Personnel: Brad Mehldau: synths, Fender Rhodes, piano, spoken voice, "Ahh" vocals; Mark Guiliana: drums, electronics.

Mehliana Taming The Dragon

Friday, August 15, 2014

Bennie Green - Bennie Green Swings The Blues

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 74:09
Size: 169.7 MB
Styles: Bop, Trombone jazz
Year: 1960/2012
Art: Front

[3:57] 1. Been Walkin'
[3:07] 2. Blue Mambo
[3:51] 3. Love At Last
[4:43] 4. Penthouse Blues
[5:40] 5. Hop, Skip And Jump
[4:18] 6. A Bun Dance
[3:22] 7. Pennies From Heaven
[4:24] 8. Change Up Blues
[5:20] 9. The Shouter
[6:15] 10. Green Leaves
[7:23] 11. This Love Of Mine
[9:46] 12. Walkin' And Talkin'
[6:03] 13. All I Do Is Dream Of You
[5:54] 14. Hoppin' Johns

This budget LP from the long-defunct Mount Vernon label does not give the personnel or dates, kind of an odd omission considering that tenor saxophonist Jimmy Forrest was a much more commercial name in 1959 than leader/trombonist Bennie Green. The quintet set (which also features pianist Sonny Clark, bassist George Tucker and drummer Paul Gusman) does not quite stick to the blues, since there is a ballad and a couple of numbers based on other chord changes (including the familiar "I Got Rhythm" pattern). However, the playing is on a high level. Green and Forrest play off each other well, and the basic originals (highlighted by "Penthouse Blues" and "Hop, Skip and Jump") are all swinging. This obscure album has been reissued on CD in more recent times by Fresh Sound. ~Scott Yanow

Bennie Green (trombone); Jimmy Forrest (tenor saxophone); Sonny Clark (piano); Paul Gusman (drums). Recording information: Nola Penthouse Studios, New York, NY (1959).

Bennie Green Swings The Blues