Monday, September 8, 2014

Steve Tyrell - Songs Of Sinatra

Size: 113,7 MB
Time: 48:59
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2005
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals, Swing
Art: Front

01. I Get A Kick Out Of You (3:59)
02. I Concentrate On You (3:08)
03. Fly Me To The Moon (2:42)
04. Witchcraft (3:15)
05. In The Wee Small Hours (3:10)
06. The One I Love Belongs To Somebody Else (2:46)
07. I've Got You Under My Skin (3:46)
08. Bewitched Bothered And Bewildered (4:28)
09. Night And Day (3:46)
10. All The Way (3:40)
11. Nice 'n' Easy (3:35)
12. Something Stupid (2:42)
13. All Of Me (3:34)
14. You Go To My Head (4:22)

As its title indicate, this CD sees popular vocalist Steve Tyrell pay tribute to the Sinatra songbook, and pretty much every track is a famous nugget closely identified with the Chairman of the Board. That Tyrell is no Sinatra is a given, but the combination of his slightly hammy delivery and old-school arrangements makes this perfect bourbon and leather-armchair music--familiar and comfortable. Three of the songs ("Fly Me to the Moon," "The One I Love Belongs to Somebody Else" and "Something Stupid") reproduce the original orchestrations--and really, how can you go wrong with those?--while the others boast cushy new ones by Bob Mann, Alan Broadbent or Count Basie arranger Sammy Nestico. In his press notes, Tyrell remarks that "Nice and Easy" features "the most modern of all the arrangements on the album," but fear not: It sounds exactly like the others, and modernity here only means extra-velvety strings and super-relaxed horns. Echoing the pairing of Frank and Nancy Sinatra on the original, Tyrell sings "Something Stupid" with his daughter Lauryn, though she seems to be pushed behind in the mix and is barely audible. But hey, Frank didn't like sharing the spotlight either! --Elisabeth Vincentelli

With his breakthrough performances in Father of the Bride and Father of the Bride II, Steve Tyrell reinvented and repopularized classic pop standards for a modern audience. With the encouragement of music legend Quincy Jones and the Sinatra family, plans were hatched for an album of Frank's material. For the first time the Sinatra family has shared some of the very charts and music Frank used with another artist. The greatest musicians in the world playing some of the greatest songs of all time, this is an album audiences will want to hear again and again and again. Hollywood. 2005

Songs Of Sinatra

Oscar Klein - One Night With You (Live)

Size: 178,8 MB
Time: 76:19
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Trumpet Jazz, Dixieland
Art: Front

01. Freeze An' Melt (3:04)
02. Revolutionary Blues (2:52)
03. Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone (3:36)
04. Milenberg Joys (3:47)
05. China Boy (2:03)
06. The Lonesome Road (4:56)
07. Jazz Me Blues (3:12)
08. Mood Indigo (3:15)
09. Bye 'n' Bye (1:49)
10. Ja-Da (3:32)
11. Ory's Creole Trombone (2:51)
12. St. James Infirmary (4:34)
13. Hotter Than That (3:11)
14. Two Deuces (3:25)
15. King Of The Zulus (5:58)
16. Apex Blues (3:02)
17. The Last Time (4:27)
18. Shim Me Sha Wabble (3:15)
19. Basin Street Blues (3:29)
20. Tiger Rag (2:57)
21. I Want A Little Girl (4:13)
22. St. Louis Blues (2:43)


An excellent Dixieland trumpeter and an occasional swing guitarist, Oscar Klein (although not well known in the U.S.) had a long and productive career in Germany. Klein was an important member of Fatty George's band (1952-1957), the Tremble Kids (1957-1960), and the Dutch Swing College Orchestra (1959-1963). Back with the Tremble Kids off and on during 1963-1977, Klein also had the opportunity to play with American musicians passing through Europe, including Albert Nicholas and Wild Bill Davison. Virtually all of his recordings have been made for European labels; most are worth searching for. ~by Scott Yanow

One Night With You

Judith Owen - In The Summertime EP

Size: 39,9 MB
Time: 16:59
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. In The Summertime - Radio Edit (3:36)
02. Blue Jeans (2:41)
03. Summer Nights (3:39)
04. It Might As Well Rain Until September (3:26)
05. Summer Breeze (3:35)

Back in May, Wales-born singer-songwriter Judith Owen released her acclaimed Ebb & Flow album, which she calls her "love letter to the American troubadour music of the 1970s."

Finding herself still in a Laurel Canyon state of mind, Owen spun off an additional EP from one of that album's tracks, her version of the 1970 Mungo Jerry hit In the Summertime.

If you've been putting off this season's summertime romance, Owen's EP will make you glad you waited. Her covers possess the lure and excitement of a late-summer fling. Owen already had recorded In the Summertime and Carole King and Gerry Goffin's It Might as Well Rain Until September with some of the great Los Angeles session musicians who'd had played on classic albums by King, Joni Mitchell and James Taylor.

"After that I ventured further outside my musical comfort zone to turn the effervescent, Summer Nights from Grease, into a 'woman wronged' torch song, David Dundas's very polite Blue Jeans into a pseudo-New Orleans rhythmic romp, and Seals and Crofts' Summer Breeze into a semi-classical piano ballad." Owen recorded those tracks in London, shortly after her L.A. sessions, using cellist Gabriella Swallow, percussionist Pedro Segundo and double bassist Geoff Gascoyne.

"For me," Owen says, "this EP's a souvenir of summer to cast an ironic and wistful warmth on the cold months ahead."

In The Summertime

Aimua Eghobamien - London Live

Size: 137,4 MB
Time: 59:23
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Benediction (Live) (3:34)
02. On The Surface (Live) (5:05)
03. Patches Enough (Live) (8:36)
04. Coffee Shop Window (Live) (7:08)
05. Wayfaring Stranger (Live) (5:03)
06. Same Girl (Live) (3:26)
07. You Gotta Move (Live) (3:33)
08. There Is A Balm In Gilead (Live) (5:14)
09. Pearls (Live) (5:19)
10. Indigo/Slate Of The Atlantic (Live) (7:44)
11. Loving You (Live) (4:36)

Singer-songwriter and poet Aimua Eghobamien, now based in New York having moved from his hometown of London recently to the city where he studied, is to release his latest album London Live via Quaesitor Music on 4 September. Recorded at Black Sessions nights in London venues Kings Place and at Pizza Express Jazz Club, the first tracks of this second album following on from the earlier Poured Gently four years ago are ‘Benediction’ based on an Edo lullaby, the singer digging deep into his Nigerian roots and featuring the marimba playing of Justin Woodward; and ‘On The Surface’, where the singer is joined here and on other tracks by double bassist Jerome Davies, percussionist Chris Wells, marimba player Justin Woodward, violinist Julian Ferraretto, violinist Miles Brett, violist Helen Sanders-Hewett, and cellist Alex Eichenberger.

Then ‘Patches’ begins with a spoken word poem segueing into experimental voice before switching into ‘Enough’. ‘Coffee Shop Window’, one of the big songs of the album, ‘Wayfaring Stranger’ a duo featuring Eghobamien and percussionist Chris Wells, ‘Same Girl’ by Randy Newman, a song that featured in the set of Aimua’s long running National Theatre shows, the delta blues ‘You Gotta Move’ rendered convincingly as a duo with bassist Davies, the spiritual ‘There Is a Balm in Gilead’, Sade’s ‘Pearls’, ‘Indigo / Slate Of The Atlantic’, and ‘Loving You’ complete the album.

Eghobamien has a very strong ringing voice, and a sound of his own, influenced by Miles Davis, Bill Evans, John Coltrane, Fela Kuti, Babatunde Olatunji, Louis Armstrong, Billie Holiday, and Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau among others. London Live is to be launched at David Beahm Design 529 w 20th Street suite 11 in New York on 4 September where Eghobamien is to be joined by Bashiri Johnson, the percussionist who appeared on Eghobamien’s debut Poured Gently and by bassist Ben Zwerin, with a London date as part of the London Jazz Festival on 16 November at the Pizza Express Jazz Club, Soho.

London Live

Yelena Eckemoff Quintet - A Touche Of Radiance

Size: 160,3 MB
Time: 69:04
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Modern Jazz
Art: Front

01. Inspiration (9:24)
02. Reminiscense (9:01)
03. Exuberance (6:36)
04. Affection (7:24)
05. Pep (6:18)
06. Imagination (6:52)
07. Reconciliation (7:19)
08. Tranquility (5:17)
09. Encouragement (5:00)
10. Radiance (5:49)

Pianist/composer Yelena Eckemoff defines radiance as a state of happiness or confidence when everything around you is shining. On her latest CD, A Touch of Radiance, she explores that idea from ten different perspectives, drawing rich inspiration from memories, emotions, and dreams, and the inner world where all three intersect.

In addition to the ten musical expressions of radiance, Eckemoff also examines the concept in other media; she painted the vivid sunset on the album cover and wrote ten short poems to expand on each piece, all of which are included in the album s liner notes. A Touch of Radiance also expands her horizons instrumentally, marking the first time that the classically-trained pianist has recorded with more than a trio. She s assembled a stunning yes, even radiant band for the occasion, featuring saxophonist Mark Turner, vibraphonist Joe Locke, bassist George Mraz, and drummer Billy Hart.

These four gifted artists respond gorgeously to Eckemoff s music, wringing bold colors and deep feeling from pieces that are both airy and intricate. The musicians helped me to paint my musical picture, Eckemoff says. What made the project a success is that in addition to improvising brilliantly, all the musicians were extremely respectful to my written structures, tunes and melodic lines. The combination of written and improvised music as well as totally loose group improvisations has been my carefully and passionately chosen musical language, and I am getting more and more comfortable with this language with each new recording.

Aside from the opening track, Inspiration, which sets the tone for the album through its air of dream-like mystery, the pieces on A Touch of Radiance and their accompanying poems move chronologically through Eckemoff s life. The playful opening melody of Reminiscence, articulated by Eckemoff and Locke, introduces a piece that harkens back to the composer s childhood in the Soviet Union, offering a glimpse of an imaginative child surrounded by a loving family. When her father enters at the poem s end saying, I met a rabbit on my way home / And look what a tasty treat he gave me for my little girl! it s as if the children s book and the world outside have merged, a memory that feels like a fantasy or a fantasy that feels like a memory.

The aptly-titled Exuberance, which portrays a six-year-old Eckemoff eagerly if clumsily helping her mother and grandmother cook a family feast, and the tender Affection, about a beloved puppy, continue these warm memories of youth in a cold country. She skips forward to her own life as a parent with the frantic Pep, dizzy with the never-ending work of a wife, mother, artist, and teacher. The shadowy mood of Reconciliation provides a bittersweet image of domestic life, with arguments and hurt feelings overcome by a loving reunion, and Encouragement celebrates the support to be found in family.

Eckemoff s music has often drawn inspiration from the natural world, and she returns to that theme on Imagination, a portrait of a snowy winter scene dreamed up on what turns out to be a sweltering summer day. Tranquility captures the pianist s ability to tune out the harsh noise of the city to focus on the sounds of nature, while the title track watches a moth drawn to light in the same way that Eckemoff found herself pulled in by the broader notion of radiance.

Very rarely am I surprised like I am with Yelena, enthuses Hart. Somebody that comes out of nowhere with this much maturity and experience and musicality. You don t expect somebody that you don t know to challenge you in such an enjoyable way. In a very euphoric way it was a very satisfying project for me. -- From Press Release by Shaun Brady.

A Touche Of Radiance

Billy Childs - Map To The Treasure: Reimagining Laura Nyro

Size: 142,2 MB
Time: 61:10
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. New York Tendaberry (Feat. Renee Fleming & Yo-Yo Ma) (7:18)
02. The Confession (Feat. Becca Stevens) (4:39)
03. Map To The Treasure (Feat. Lisa Fischer) (7:15)
04. Upstairs By A Chinese Lamp (Feat. Esperanza Spalding & Wayne Shorter) (5:17)
05. Been On A Train (Feat. Rickie Lee Jones & Chris Potter) (6:20)
06. Stoned Soul Picnic (Feat. Ledisi) (4:26)
07. Gibsom Street (Feat. Susan Tedeschi & Steve Wilson) (6:27)
08. Save The Country (Feat. Shawn Colvin & Chris Botti) (7:30)
09. To A Child (Feat. Dianne Reeves) (5:45)
10. And When I Die (Feat. Alison Krauss & Jerry Douglas) (6:08)

Laura Nyro was an intensely emotional powerhouse of a singer-songwriter who, over the course of a 30-year career, wrote huge hits for others. One measure of her impact is that, for two weeks in 1969, she had written three songs in Billboard’s Top 10. Yet, as a performer, she never won a Grammy award or earned a Top 40 single before her untimely death in 1997 at the age of 49.

A new album of her songs by Grammy-winning composer-pianist Billy Childs and all-star cast of singers and musicians seems likely to win Nyro new fans and reinvigorate her musical legacy.

Much more than a tribute album, Map To The Treasure: Laura Nyro Reimagined (Sony Masterworks), which is set for release on Sept. 9, boldly reinterprets and recontextualizes her songs, drawing on jazz and chamber music, while retaining the joyous blend of Brill Building pop, soul, gospel and jazz that made Nyro such an original.

Although she never won more than a fervent cult following as a singer and performer, almost everyone has heard the great covers of Nyro songs like The 5th Dimension’s “Stoned Soul Picnic” and “Wedding Bell Blues”; Blood, Sweat & Tears’ “And When I Die”; Three Dog Night’s “Eli’s Comin’”; and Barbra Streisand’s “Stoney End.” Yet her most lasting legacy might be her influence on a generation of pop and jazz innovators: Joni Mitchell, Donald Fagen, Rickie Lee Jones, Todd Rundgren and Elton John have all acknowledged her as an inspiration.

Also among her early fans were two 16-year-old, budding jazz musicians from Los Angeles: Childs and a young bass player named Larry Klein, who had met in a music theory workshop for musically gifted high schoolers at USC. After class, the two friends found inspiration listening to Nyro records together; they would later play together as sidemen for Freddie Hubbard in the late 1970s. (“Larry got me on that gig,” Childs said recently.)

After that, their musical paths diverged: Childs became a jazz pianist and composer of chamber and symphonic music, while Klein found fame as a producer for Mitchell and other pop and jazz artists. The Nyro project, with Childs arranging and playing keyboards, and Klein producing, is their first collaboration since touring with Hubbard.

The friends have assembled an impressive cast of singers for the project, including Jones, Esperanza Spalding, Renée Fleming (who sings the aria-like “New York Tendaberry”), Alison Krauss, Dianne Reeves, Ledisi, Becca Stevens, Shawn Colvin, Susan Tedeschi and Lisa Fischer (of 20 Feet from Stardom fame).

Guest musicians on the album include soloists Yo-Yo Ma (who accompanies Fleming), Wayne Shorter, Chris Botti, Jerry Douglas, Chris Potter and Steve Wilson, along with the inspired pianism of Childs and a band that includes drummers Brian Blade, Jay Bellerose and Vinnie Colaiuta, bassist Scott Colley and guitarist Dean Parks.

Klein has ample experience producing large, complex projects; he co-produced River: The Joni Letters with Herbie Hancock, which won the Album of the Year Grammy in 2008. That record explored the jazz implications of Mitchell’s songs and led to a greater acceptance of her as a composer of jazz standards; this album could do something similar for Nyro.

In scoring a suite of Nyro songs, Childs drew upon his background in both jazz and classical formats—he has written works for orchestras, including the L.A. Philharmonic as well as leading his own chamber jazz group.

The result is full of revelatory moments including inspired soloing by Shorter to adorn Spalding’s pure vocal in “Upstairs By A Chinese Lamp”; Botti’s mournful trumpet elegy in the introduction to a solemn, orchestral interpretation of “Save The Country” (sung with feeling by Colvin); and the way “Stoned Soul Picnic,” fully inhabited by r&b singer Ledisi, morphs at the end into a funky, boppish piano solo.

When selecting songs for the album, Childs chose to explore Nyro’s Gothic imagination, which may surprise fans of her more familiar and sunnier melodies. “Her songs are like part of one long opera,” he said by phone from Los Angeles, “where there are these recurring characters—God and the Devil, her father, her mother, her friends, men who have done her wrong and men who are good. It’s like a great novel.”

He said he felt compelled to include not only some of the hits, like “Stoned Soul Picnic” and “Save The Country,” but also very dark songs that confront the world’s evils, like the heroin ballad “Been On A Train,” harrowingly realized by Jones; and “Gibsom Street,” whose chilling lyrics, sung by a world-weary Tedeschi (sample verse: “Don’t go to Gibsom cross the river/ The devil is hungry, the devil is sweet/ If you are soft then you will shiver/ They hang the alley cats on Gibsom Street”), reminds Childs of German expressionist films like M or The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari.

Childs enjoyed working with his old friend Klein. One example of their collaboration was rethinking the song “Save The Country.” Nyro’s version had an optimism—it was like a rallying song for the nation’s spirits following the assassinations of President Kennedy; his brother Robert Kennedy; and Dr. Martin Luther King. Childs said, “I loved the tunefulness and the upbeat quality of her version, but Larry had an idea: He said, ‘Why don’t we do it with a more somber approach, as though we’re looking back on the past 40 years, and the country has gone to hell in a handbasket?’ It’s more of a desperate plea, so I approached it that way. And it was a great idea.”

Childs knew he faced a tremendous challenge in reimagining Nyro’s work. “How do you improve on something that’s already perfect?” Childs asked. “The point for me is not to improve on it, because you can’t. But I love this music so much, and it’s had such a profound effect on me, that I want to put it through the prism of my own experience.”

This is not your mother’s Laura Nyro record, but “red-yellow honey, sassafras and moonshine” for a new generation. —Allen Morrison

Map To The Treasure

MonaLisa Twins - MonaLisa Twins Play Beatles And More

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 50:04
Size: 114.6 MB
Styles: Rock, Pop
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[3:54] 1. Revolution
[2:53] 2. Friday On My Mind
[2:58] 3. Johnny B. Goode
[2:58] 4. This Boy
[2:16] 5. In My Life
[2:18] 6. Blackbird
[4:05] 7. For What It's Worth
[2:33] 8. Drive My Car
[2:06] 9. Can't Buy Me Love
[4:28] 10. While My Guitar Gently Weeps
[2:55] 11. God Only Knows
[6:40] 12. People Are Strange
[3:07] 13. Day Tripper
[3:27] 14. The Last Time
[3:19] 15. Mercedes Benz

As of February 9, 2014, it's been 50 years since the Beatles appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show, thereby beginning their revolutionary invasion of American pop culture. Five decades later, it's more clear than ever before that musicians will never stop covering the Beatles. “Yesterday” remains the most widely covered song in pop music history. Popular tributes to the Beatles range from film musicals (Across the Universe) to Broadway imitations (RAIN) to the four guys who dress up as mop tops every summer and play songs by John, Paul, George, and Ringo at my hometown’s big annual festival. The band’s songs have been the basis for episodes of Glee and American Idol. Hell, a “Grammy Salute to the Beatles” featuring high-profile pop acts like John Mayer, Keith Urban, John Legend, Alicia Keys, and Katy Perry is airing on national television as I type these words.

This is a band whose songs will never die, partially because they are great, great songs and because they served as soundtrack for an entire generation, but also because modern bands and artists will never stop replaying, recreating, and retreading those songs for long enough to let them go or give them rest. This is both a blessing and a curse. It’s a blessing because Beatles songs almost always sound good and it's a curse because so many of the band’s songs have become overdone. I’d heard Beatles tunes so many times before I even started exploring music that I could never see myself investing as much in the band’s music as I have with, say, Bruce Springsteen. More than any other artist, the Beatles seem like a band that belongs to the generations that came before me rather than to me personally, and I’ve never been really able to put myself into their music and make it my own as a result. I know for a fact that I’m not the only person who has this issue.

This is probably all just my way of admitting that there are no Beatles records in my all-time top 50. But that doesn’t mean I’m not a ardent fan of the band’s music, or that I can’t appreciate one of their songs whenever I hear it, whether its playing out of a jukebox or being covered by a band up on the stage. On the contrary, it was with excitement and anticipation that I first pressed play on MonaLisa Twins play Beatles & more, a compilation oldies cover album that landed in my inbox earlier this week. I wasn’t excited because I knew who the MonaLisa Twins were. Rather, I was intrigued because I knew the songs. I wasn’t rolling my eyes at another band doing a Beatles tribute/cover album, or wondering how I was going to sit through yet another version of “While My Guitar Gently Weeps.” I was ready to hear these songs again, even if the cover versions brought nothing new to the table. And isn’t that interesting? Doesn’t it speak volumes about the universality and unparalleled accessibility of the Beatles music that I was ready to hear it again, presented in new form, by artists I knew nothing about? I don’t think it even particularly mattered how much I liked the record. I knew I was going to listen, and I knew I was going to write this review, because I already had most of that first paragraph in my mind before I even downloaded the record or pressed play.

Luckily, I do like this record. It’s nothing new, obviously. It’s the songs we’ve heard a million times before, and it’s not making any ambitious attempt to do them differently. Maybe if Tame Impala recorded the entirety of Revolver for his next record, you could expect a few curveballs, but that's not what this is. Instead, the record is delivered by two throwback pop songstresses from Austria – who really are twins named Mona and Lisa, respectively – and who recorded at least half these takes in live environments. Suffice to say, it’s a pretty no-frills cover album, but it works solely because the MonaLisa Twins are good enough musicians to pull it off. ~Craig Manning

MonaLisa Twins Play Beatles And More

The International Sweethearts Of Rhythm - The Best Of

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 48:22
Size: 110.7 MB
Styles: Swing, Big band
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[2:45] 1. Bugle Call Rag
[3:22] 2. Galvanising
[2:01] 3. Sweet Georgia Brown
[2:07] 4. Central Avenue Boogie
[3:52] 5. Lady Be Good
[2:50] 6. Gin Mill Special
[2:21] 7. Honeysuckle Rose
[2:40] 8. Diggin' Dykes
[3:03] 9. Slightly Frankie
[2:26] 10. One O'clock Jump
[2:55] 11. Tuxedo Junction
[2:45] 12. Jump Children
[2:29] 13. She's Crazy With The Heat
[3:00] 14. That Man Of Mine
[2:49] 15. Vi Vigor
[2:59] 16. Don't Get It Twisted
[2:24] 17. Blue Lou
[1:26] 18. Swing Shift

Probably the finest all-female jazz group, the International Sweethearts of Rhythm was formed in 1939 at the Piney Woods Country Life School in Mississippi. The 17-piece swing group, which was led by singer Anna Mae Winburn, included such fine soloists as tenor saxophonist Viola Burnside and trumpeter Tiny Davis. Eddie Durham and Jesse Stone were among the arrangers. The Sweethearts gradually became popular in the 1940s, appearing on radio broadcasts, touring the U.S., and visiting Europe (1945). The orchestra only made a few records before its breakup in 1949, but a couple of its broadcasts from 1945-1946 were released on a Rosetta LP. ~bio by Scott Yanow

The Best Of

Anne Bisson - Portraits & Perfumes

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:45
Size: 125,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:47)  1. Us and them
(5:21)  2. How Insensitive
(3:25)  3. Spinning Wheel
(4:15)  4. The nearness of you
(4:12)  5. With a little help from my friends
(4:24)  6. Better than anything
(4:55)  7. In the Wee small hours
(3:28)  8. Call me / You've got a friend
(4:21)  9. Ripples
(4:22) 10. I like you too
(3:27) 11. What's wrong with me?
(5:42) 12. My little boy

Another stunning release from Anne Bisson! Intimate and silky vocals, backed by expert musicianship. Canadian jazz vocalist/pianist Anne Bisson returns with her sophomore album, Portraits & Perfumes. Featuring covers from legendary artists such as Pink Floyd, The Beatles, Carole King, along with two new musical gems written by Anne, this album is an audiophile must have! Anne is joined again by some of the best jazz musicians in Quebec and by legendary producer, conductor, and arranger Guy St-Onge. Recorded at St-Onge's Reference Studio in St-Calixte, Quebec, Canada. Portraits & Perfumes is an opus of jazz standards featuring expansive, original arrangements and covers, including a brilliant cover of Us and Them by Pink Floyd, a stunning rendition of With A Little Help From My Friends' by The Beatles, a calming transcription of Call Me/You've Got A Friend by Carole King, alluringly sweet adaptation of The Nearness Of You by Hoagy Carmichael, and many, many more. ~ Editorial Reviews  http://www.amazon.com/Portraits-Perfumes-Anne-Bisson/dp/B0052RV1MW

Bill Holman - Jazz Erotica

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:28
Size: 95,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:35)  1. Way Down Under
(4:22)  2. Blue Jazz
(4:00)  3. Angel Eyes
(3:21)  4. Stella By Starlight
(4:33)  5. Star Eyes
(4:28)  6. I Hadn't Anyone Till You
(3:45)  7. Linger Awhile
(4:40)  8. Things We did Last Summer
(4:06)  9. If You Were No One
(4:35) 10. Indiana

Richie Kamuca recorded less than a dozen dates as a leader prior to his death (one day shy of his 47th birthday) in 1977, and this long out of print LP release by HiFi in 1959 may be the hardest one to find. The tenor saxophonist leads a strong octet, with trombonist Frank Rosolino, trumpeters Conte Candoli and Ed Leddy, pianist Vince Guaraldi, bassist Monte Budwig, drummer Stan Levey, and baritone saxophonist Bill Holman, who wrote the arrangements, too. The charts are good examples of cool jazz and feature rich ensembles behind the soloists, especially on standards like "Angel Eyes" and "Indiana." "Blue Jazz" (oddly credited to the leader on the label but Holman in the liner notes) and a brisk "Stella By Starlight" feature Kamuca in a stripped-down setting with the rhythm section. Expect to pay a premium price for this LP. ~ Ken Dryden  http://www.allmusic.com/album/jazz-erotica-mw0000897741

Personnel: Richie Kamuca (tenor saxophone); Bill Holman (baritone saxophone); Conte Candoli, Ed Leddy (trumpet); Frank Rosolino (trombone); Vince Guaraldi (piano); Stan Levey (drums

Jazz Erotica

Bunny Beck Jazz Ensemble - From The Spirit

Styles: Jazz Contemporary
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:59
Size: 91,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:04)  1. Our Fantasies
(4:07)  2. Spirit
(5:13)  3. The Night Is Long
(6:02)  4. Dark Feelings
(4:18)  5. Emanon Two
(5:41)  6. My Heart
(5:17)  7. Punch Out
(4:14)  8. Your Cheatin' Heart

Birdland. The Village Vanguard. The Jazz Standard. Just a few of the New York clubs that have saturated the city's streets with the smooth sounds of jazz. Within this tradition, New York-native pianist and composer Bunny Beck presents seven cool and swinging original compositions as well as an arrangement of Hank Williams' "Your Cheatin' Heart" on her second release on Big Round Records, FROM THE SPIRIT. Featuring saxophonist Matt Blostein, guitarist Ed MacEachen, bassist Tom Hubbard, and drummer Vinnie Sperrazza, with Bunny Beck on piano, the Bunny Beck Jazz Ensemble highlights crisp and expressive improvisations while occasionally breaking into Latin rhythms. This album captures the relaxed and refined atmosphere emanating from those New York clubs. http://parmarecordings.blogspot.com.br/2014/05/new-releases-on-navona-and-big-round.html

Personnel: Ed MacEachern (guitar); Matt Blostein (alto saxophone, tenor saxophone); Bunny Beck (piano); Tom Hubbard (acoustic bass); Vinnie Sperrazza (drums)

Sunday, September 7, 2014

The Greg Hatza Organization - To A New Place

Size: 147,7 MB
Time: 63:42
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Jazz: Hammond Organ
Art: Front

01. The Station At 7th And Franklin (6:46)
02. To A New Place (5:04)
03. Samurai Express (7:59)
04. A Little Honey On The Toast (5:45)
05. A Reflection Of Su (5:50)
06. Noodles (4:56)
07. Flight Of Dreams (5:39)
08. Stinky (5:11)
09. Night Walker (5:41)
10. One For Prime Time G.E (5:26)
11. When I Couldn't See...You Carried Me (5:21)

Back on track with a new album of original compositions - straight ahead and contemporary, former Jimmy Smith protege, Greg Hatza is back behind the Hammond B3, with a sound still unsullied by what's trendy.

This nostaligic for a return to the classical jazz lines created by the eminent professionals of today, will revel in the vanguard performances of Greg Hatza. As agile and ingenious a performer as ever - plus posessed with fiery technique for jazz phrasing, Greg Hatza has brought new life to the saying "everything old is new again." Baltimore native and notably one of the few white Americans to carve a notch among the legends of musicality on jazz organ; Hatza's early inspirations came from Ray Charles and later Jimmy Smith.

To A New Place

Antonia Bennett - Embrace Me

Size: 76,9 MB
Time: 32:44
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. All Of You (2:43)
02. But Not For Me (2:28)
03. Embraceable You (3:46)
04. All The Things You Are (4:08)
05. I Can't Give You Anything But Love (3:40)
06. The Man I Love (3:55)
07. Teach Me Tonight (2:54)
08. Nice Work If You Can Get It (2:38)
09. Yesterdays (2:20)
10. The Nearness Of You (4:08)

“Liza Minnelli. Natalie Cole. Norah Jones. Now, Antonia Bennett can be added to the list of second-generation vocalists with the potential to rival an iconic parent’s pizzazz.” —Jazz Times

Antonia Bennett “…conjures echoes of Billie Holliday and Rickie Lee Jones, with a hint of Betty Boop.” — The New York Times

Antonia Bennett, daughter of legendary singer Tony Bennett has been performing alongside her father since she could walk and talk. Some of her early performances were shared with legendary American icons such as Rosemary Clooney, Count Basie, Regis Philbin, Don Rickles, and growing up with the likes of Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, and Gene Kelly. It was inevitable that she would inherit a genuine passion for the arts. For the past10 years she has what she considers the distinct honor of opening for her father performing all over the world. She can be heard in a duet with her Dad on Tony Bennett “A Swingin’ Christmas” on the track "I’ve got my love to keep me warm". She continues developing her craft while performing in a myriad of venues from prominent jazz clubs, casinos, amphitheaters and stadiums, including Radio City Music Hall, the Hollywood Bowl, the Umbria Jazz Festival, the Newport Jazz Festival, The Greek Theatre, Royal Albert Hall in London and Caesars Palace. This extensive and invaluable experience is irreplaceable and has in a large part been the greatest single contribution to her command of her voice, and her comfortable demeanor on stage. She studied and performed at the Lee Strasberg Theater Institute, and is an alumnus of the esteemed Berklee College Of Music in Boston. Her latest release, “Embrace Me” produced by Holly Knight dedicated to the great American songbook features songs including “Embraceable You” and “The Man I Love”, performed in an intimate classic trio format. Enjoy the vocal prowess of this unique singer of great distinction, who endeavors to cultivate new musical horizons.

Embrace Me

Chuchito Valdes - Reflections

Size: 170,9 MB
Time: 73:48
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz: Latin Jazz, Afro Cuban Jazz
Art: Front

01. You're My Hope (5:01)
02. Estefano (9:01)
03. Para Monica (9:51)
04. El Alkadur (8:40)
05. In Memory Of Nelson Mandela (4:47)
06. Povolotty Isi (7:29)
07. Bossa Para Recordar (6:39)
08. La Guajira (5:47)
09. Glassfro (7:21)
10. Bossa Para Recordar (Bonus Track) (6:46)
11. 2374 (2:20)

Born and raised in Havana, Cuba, pianist, composer, and arranger Jesus "Chuchito" Valdés, Jr. is the third-generation manifestation of a Cuban jazz piano dynasty that includes his father, Chucho Valdés, and grandfather, Bebo Valdés. The oldest of five siblings, Valdés was a child prodigy, attending and graduating from La Escuela de Musica Ignacio Cervantes. He had his first professional gig at the age of 16, working with Cuban singer and trumpeter Bobby Carcasses, and also accompanied singers Pello El Afrokan and Anibel Lopez for a time. In the mid-'80s Valdés was a member of the Cuban jazz combo Sonido Contemporáneo, and by the late '90s he had taken his father's spot in the renowned Irakere band when the elder Valdés opted to go solo. Eventually Chuchito followed suit, leading his own band and touring behind his fiery brand of Afro-Cuban jazz. He released a debut album, Encantado, in 2002 on Town Crier Records, following it with La Timba in 2002 and Herencia in 2004, both on J&N Records, and Keys of Latin Jazz in 2007 from Sony BMG International. Valdés continues to tour and record, making his home in Cancun, Mexico. ~by Steve Leggett

Reflections

Judith Owen - Ebb & Flow

Size: 98,6 MB
Time: 41:30
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz/Pop/Rock Vocals
Art: Front

01. Train Out Of Hollywood (3:32)
02. I Would Give Anything (3:29)
03. In The Summertime (4:20)
04. Hey Mister, That's Me Up On The Jukebox (3:21)
05. Under Your Door (2:36)
06. About Love (3:04)
07. I've Never Been To Texas (3:11)
08. You're Not Here Anymore (3:30)
09. One In A Million (3:36)
10. You Are Not My Friend (3:27)
11. Sweet Feet (2:58)
12. Some Arrows Go In Deep (4:21)

Judith Owen’s new album Ebb & Flow (her 10th studio release) evokes the spirit of the halcyon days of the great 1970s troubadours. Ebb & Flow features the great Russ Kunkel (drummer), Leland Sklar (bassist) and Waddy Wachtel (guitarist). Judith remains an unflinching singer-songwriter, bearing her soul as the core of her creativity.

British singer/songwriter Judith Owen's eclecticism has seen her records shelved in the rock, folk, and jazz sections of record stores. She was born the daughter of an opera singer and began writing songs as a teenager. Becoming a professional musician, she met and married actor/musician Harry Shearer and contributed vocals and keyboards to his 1994 album, It Must Have Been Something I Said. Her debut solo album, Emotions on a Postcard, was released on her own Dog on the Bed label in 1996. Among its songs was "Hand on My Heart," which was featured in the 1997 film As Good as It Gets and appeared on the soundtrack album. Owen befriended singer/songwriter Julia Fordham and appeared on Fordham's albums East West and That's Live. Another musical association was struck up with Richard Thompson, which led to Owen's appearances on the Thompson albums Mock Tudor, 1000 Years of Popular Music, and Old Kit Bag.

She released her second solo album, Limited Edition, in 2000. "Creatures of Habit" and "Get into It" from the album were featured in the film Olive Juice. 12 Arrows (2003), her third album, boasted guest appearances by Fordham and Thompson, and it featured Owen's cover of Soundgarden's "Black Hole Sun." It earned her an opening slot on a k.d. lang tour. In 2004, Owen released a holiday EP, Christmas in July, including her cover of "Christmas with the Devil," a song by her husband's fictional group Spinal Tap. She also placed her song "Dreaming" in the film P.S., then used it on her fourth album, Lost and Found, released on her newly formed Courgette Records label in 2005. Her cover of the Kinks' "I Go to Sleep" was featured in the TV movie Mrs. Harris, and she then included it on her fifth album, Here, released August 8, 2006. Happy This Way appeared a year later in 2007, with Mopping Up Karma following the next year. The compilation Beautiful Damage was issued in 2010, while a new studio album, Ebb & Flow, arrived four years later in 2014.

Ebb & Flow

David Basse - The Hero & The Lover

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 49:55
Size: 114.3 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[4:57] 1. That's Life
[3:25] 2. Sins Of The Father
[4:28] 3. Easy The Hard Way
[4:45] 4. Gravy Waltz
[5:19] 5. I Concentrate On You
[5:15] 6. The Hero
[4:07] 7. Vacation From The Blues
[4:01] 8. Sixteen Tons
[4:37] 9. Let's Go Back In Time
[4:49] 10. Katrina
[4:08] 11. Trio

The working title of David Basse’s 2013 recording project is, “The Hero And The Lover, The Hermit, The Dictator, The Wise Woman And The Fool.” a quote from Jack Kornfield. This is a very long title, and Basse does not try to be all things to all people; his music simply incorporates jazz and blues. Basse’s band included veteran bassist Curtis Lundy, pianist Richard Johnson, saxophonist Stacey Dillard, and drummer Neil Smith.

Today, Basse’s ninth recording, “The Hero and the Lover…” is a culmination of over forty years of trial and error, serendipitous miscalculation and a powerful and undying love of art and music. It is a testament to the tenacity that it takes to survive in the face of an international recession and continue to create worthwhile art.

The Hero & The Lover

Janice Harrington - Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow: A Tribute To Dinah Washington

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 41:36
Size: 95.3 MB
Styles: Jazz blues vocals
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[2:40] 1. I Thought About You
[3:22] 2. Makin' Whoopee
[4:22] 3. New Blowtop Blues
[3:15] 4. My Old Flame
[3:14] 5. Salty Papa Blues
[2:40] 6. Love Walked In
[3:07] 7. I Wanna Be Around
[3:03] 8. I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart
[2:27] 9. Teach Me Tonight
[2:24] 10. Lean Baby
[3:50] 11. Bye Bye Blues
[3:04] 12. Olé
[4:03] 13. Willow Weep For Me

Janice Harrington - vocals; Lloyd Mayers - piano; Keter Betts - bass; Jimmy Cobb - drums. Special Guests:Hans Malte Witte - tenor sax (on 05 and 09); Nat Adderley - cornet, vocals (on 13); Billy Mitchell - tenor sax (on 13); Mike Hennessy - piano (on 13). Recorded on July 9, 1988 at Alantis Studio, Stockholm, Sweden.

"A special thank you to Bosse Steinhammer for bringing the band over. And I will always be grateful to Keter Betts for making this happen. Also a million thanks to Lloyd and Jimmy. Hugs to Sabine." ~Janice Harrington

Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow: A Tribute To Dinah Washington

The Doobie Brothers - Toulouse Street

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 34:25
Size: 78.8 MB
Styles: Album rock
Year: 1972/2006
Art: Front

[3:46] 1. Listen To The Music
[3:18] 2. Rockin' Down The Highway
[2:27] 3. Mamaloi
[3:18] 4. Toulouse Street
[3:39] 5. Cotton Mouth
[2:40] 6. Don't Start Me To Talkin'
[4:31] 7. Jesus Is Just Alright With Me
[2:27] 8. White Sun
[6:41] 9. Disciple
[1:34] 10. Snake Man

Toulouse Street was the album by which most of their fans began discovering the Doobie Brothers, and it has retained a lot of its freshness over the decades. Producer Ted Templeman was attuned to the slightly heavier and more Southern style the band wanted to work toward on this, their second album, and the results were not only profitable -- including a platinum record award -- but artistically impeccable. Toulouse Street is actually pretty close in style and sound at various points to what the Eagles were doing during the same period, except that the Doobies threw jazz and R&B into the mix, as well as country, folk, and bluegrass elements, and (surprise!) ended up just about as ubiquitous as the Eagles in peoples' record collections, especially in the wake of the singles "Listen to the Music" and "Jesus Is Just Alright." But those two singles represented only the tip of the iceberg in terms of what this group had to offer, as purchasers of the album discovered even on the singles -- both songs appear here in distinctly longer versions, with more exposition and development, and in keeping with the ambitions that album cuts (even of popular numbers) were supposed to display in those days. Actually, "Listen to the Music" (written by Tom Johnston) offers subtle use of phasing and other studio tricks that make its seemingly earthy, laid-back approach some of the most complex and contrived of the period. Johnston's "Rockin' Down the Highway" shows the band working at a higher wattage and moving into Creedence Clearwater Revival territory, while "Mamaloi" was Patrick Simmons' laid-back Caribbean idyll, and the title tune (also by Simmons) is a hauntingly beautiful ballad. The band then switches gears into swamp rock for "Cotton Mouth" and takes a left turn into the Mississippi Delta for a version of Sonny Boy Williamson II's "Don't Start Me Talkin'" before shifting into a gospel mode with "Jesus Is Just Alright." Johnston's nearly seven-minute "Disciple" was the sort of soaring, bluesy hard rock workout that led to the group's comparison to the Allman Brothers Band, though their interlocking vocals were nearly as prominent as their crunching, surging double lead guitars and paired drummers. And it all still sounds astonishingly bracing decades later; it's still a keeper, and one of the most inviting and alluring albums of its era. ~Bruce Eder

Toulouse Street

Manhattan Jazz Orchestra - Hey Duke!

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 60:37
Size: 138.8 MB
Styles: Modern big band
Year: 1999/2009
Art: Front

[ 6:53] 1. It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)
[ 9:01] 2. Prelude To A Kiss
[ 9:02] 3. Mood Indigo
[ 6:03] 4. Come Sunday
[ 6:58] 5. Satin Doll
[ 4:49] 6. Song For Edward
[ 7:00] 7. Cotton Tail
[10:48] 8. In A Sentimental Mood

Pianist/arranger David Matthews turns his pen to the classic music of Duke Ellington on Hey Duke!, the latest release featuring the adroit talents of the Manhattan Jazz Orchestra. Matthews came up during the 1970s, when straight-ahead jazz was about as cool and mainstream as a buzz cut and pegged pants. College jazz programs were barely in their infancy but, despite the general cultural malaise regarding the music, there was still a sense that more could be done with what Bird, Monk, and Coltrane had given the world. Creativity could flow unimpeded by draconian notions of the "tradition." Granted, this didn't always produce the most lasting and desirable music, but for every Spyro Gyra there is a Weather Report. Matthews keeps this vision alive on Hey Duke! Influenced by the progressive, angular, and modern work of Stan Kenton and Chick Corea, Matthews reworks some of Ellington's songs in a respectful, albeit liberal manner. "It Don't Mean a Thing" screams itself to life, eventually laying into a speedy swing featuring the immense post-bop lines of soprano saxophonist Aaron Heick and Manhattan man about town trumpeter Ryan Kisor. One of the most compelling departures from traditional style is the police drama funk of "Mood Indigo," featuring bright horn hits and a dirty, wah-wah plunger trumpet over a driving hi-hat. Conversely, "Come Sunday" is given a pastoral, West Coast gospel feel à la Gerald Wilson, and features the operatic soprano of vocalist Christine Sperry. Matthews also pays tribute to Duke with his original "Song for Edward," a mid-tempo ballad featuring the soul-inflected alto sax of Chris Hunter. These are thoroughly invigorating and unconventional interpretations of Ellington's work. ~Matt Collar

Hey Duke!  

Erika Matsuo - True Colors

Styles: Latin Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:35
Size: 175,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:23)  1. Sina
(3:25)  2. Without a Song
(4:20)  3. Encontros E Despedidas
(3:33)  4. Beyond the Sky
(5:31)  5. Bilhete / Ticket
(5:15)  6. What a Difference a Day Made
(5:51)  7. Vera Cruz
(5:49)  8. Song for Elena
(5:51)  9. Sunny
(5:45) 10. True Colors
(4:54) 11. Smoke Gets in Your Eyes
(6:37) 12. Skindo Le-Le
(3:08) 13. Kachofugetsu
(4:08) 14. Cicatrizes
(3:45) 15. Smile
(4:13) 16. Meguriai

"Her singing is heartfelt and honest. She sings with depth and passion. What a joy to hear her” - Sheila Jordan

"Erika's voice is filled with sentiment and warmth. She integrates both passion and gentle emotion into her lyrics” ~  Dr. Lonnie Smith

"Obsession is a promising debut...beautifully produced, finely performed” ~ All About Jazz

Erika celebrates the release of her new CD True Colors this fall with a tour of Japan and a CD release party at the famed New York Blue Note Club! The CD features an all-star cast of a wide variety of stellar musicians from younger sidemen in high demand to leaders with international fame: Dr. Lonnie Smith, Gil Goldstein, Romero Lubambo, Dana Leong, Gregoire Marret, Juancho Herrera, Yosvany Terry, Helio Alves, Paulo Levi, James Zollar, Jorge Continentino, Garrett Fishbach, Meg Okura, Essiet Essiet, Leo Traversa, Willard Dyson and Keita Ogawa. The beautiful arrangements cover some classic American and Brazilian standards: Sunny, What a Difference a Day Made, Without a Song and Smile by Charlie Chaplin...Milton Nacimento's Vera Cruz, Djavan's Sina, Ivan Lins' Bilheteand two catchy sambas Cicatrizes and Skindo Lele. Erika expands the colors of this musical palette with two Japanese themes, Erika's original,Kachofugetsu, Meguriai by Toru Takemitsu and Song for Elena by Ennio Morricone touchingly performed with strings, guitar and accordion as well as an original song by Erika, Beyond the Sky. The title cut by Cindy Lauper, True Colors is a final touch that shows Erika's true expansive range that finds meaning, beauty and rhythm in songs from around the world. 

Erika's CD celebration started with a tour of Japan with guitarist, Freddie Bryant in August and September. This was just a few months after she recorded Bilhete by Ivan Lins on James Zollar's new CD where she met Gregoire Marrett. This was the beginning of the creative process that gave birth to True Colors. She continues her celebration at the Blue Note with a full band, Helio Alves, Freddie Bryant, Ben Zwerin,Yosvany Terry,Willard Dyson and more on November 25th. A native of Japan, Erika showed love for music at an early age when she started studying classical piano in her pre-teenage years. By the time she reached her late teens, she was a member of an all-girl rock group, Tear Drops, that had won first prize in Japan’s most respected teen music competitions, the Yamaha Teen Music Festival. Through a chance meeting with Quasimode pianist Yusuke Hirado, Erika was invited to New York to tour as the lead vocalist of his jazz group. After relocating to New York City, she immersed herself in the city’s jazz scene, exploring everything from straight-ahead to Brazilian jazz. She was accepted in the jazz voice program at the City College of New York where she studied with Sheila Jordan and received her BFA and music award, ''The Pro Musica Award'' in 2003. 

She has performed at venues such as BB Kings, Sweet Rhythm, Kitano and S.O.B.’s, and has regularly toured in Japan. In March 2007, Erika won first prize in the Asakusa Jazz Contest, Japan’s number one jazz contest. Later that year, she was featured in Coca Cola’s So-Ken-Bi Cha TV commercial - her voice became one of the most recognized in the nation. Erika Matsuo’s debut album, Obsession was also supported by a dynamic team of musicians including Romero Lubambo, Carlton Holmes, Freddie Bryant, Paulo Levi, Yosvany Terry, Essiet Essiet, Willard Dyson and Nanny Assis. OBSESSION takes the listener on a journey of love traveling between jazz and Brazilian Popular Music melting with Erika's original compositions. A special treat for world music lovers and jazz fans!  http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/erika5

True Colors