Monday, January 26, 2015

Jennifer Sheehan - You Made Me Love You

Size: 127,3 MB
Time: 54:50
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2010
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. All The Things You Are (3:04)
02. Some Of These Days (2:48)
03. You Made Me Love You (1:41)
04. In The Still Of The Night (3:21)
05. How Long Has This Been Going On (3:36)
06. Do You Miss Me (3:39)
07. If You Hadn't, But You Did (3:38)
08. I'll Be Seeing You (2:32)
09. Take Me To The World - Take The Moment (3:07)
10. Two For The Road/What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life (4:44)
11. When October Goes (3:41)
12. I Can't Be New (2:42)
13. Movie Of My Life (3:09)
14. What'll I Do/Unexpressed (5:12)
15. Some Enchanted Evening - Fable (5:34)
16. Love Is Here To Stay (2:15)

It's time to celebrate! The Great American Songbook is celebrating its 100th birthday and multi-award winning vocalist Jennifer Sheehan has created a critically-acclaimed show (and now an album of songs from that show) that recognizes this milestone and celebrates the phenomenal music that has moved and delighted generations.

While the Great American Songbook is widely considered to be a collection of standards from the 1920s until about 1960 (when rock 'n' roll and other genres began to dominate the airwaves), Jennifer shows how the Songbook actually began about 100 years ago, with the recording of the first true modern American standard, "Some of These Days." And, while the Songbook may have lost the spotlight in the '60s, the second chapter of the Songbook- just as glorious as the first- continues to be written!

Passionate about classics from the Songbook’s Golden Era, as well as more contemporary masterpieces, Sheehan sings the songs—and the praises—of America’s finest lyricists and composers—from Berlin to Bucchino and Gershwin to Guettel. And she shares how their songs have taken hold of the hearts and imaginations of generations, including her own!

The show (and album) includes songs by Jerome Kern, George & Ira Gershwin, Cole Porter, Rodgers & Hammerstein, Stephen Sondheim, Jule Styne, Betty Comden and Adolph Green, Henry Mancini, Alan & Marilyn Bergman, Michel Legrand, Barry Manilow, Susan Werner, Adam Guettel and more!

You Made Me Love You

Paul Shinn Trio - Easy Now: Live At The Green Lady Lounge

Size: 128,1 MB
Time: 55:18
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz: Contemporary Jazz, Piano Jazz
Art: Front

01. Lucidity (Live) ( 6:23)
02. Handful Of Keys (Live) ( 5:06)
03. Spin Cycle (Live) ( 3:30)
04. Ton Of Simple (Live) (10:01)
05. High Five Blues (Live) ( 6:45)
06. A Desolate Cath (Live) ( 7:30)
07. Easy Now (Live) ( 6:15)
08. The Birth Of The Blues (Live) ( 9:45)

The Paul Shinn Trio was formed in the summer of 2013. After first filling in a few dates at Kansas City's Green Lady Lounge, the band was asked by owner John Scott to perform a weekly Sunday evening engagement there. The positive reception from audiences and fellow musicians alike only encouraged the creative spirit of the group and by the end of that summer their debut album "Reason Pure" was released. Featuring solely Paul’s original compositions and arrangements, this album was deemed an “essential souvenir of his time in Kansas City” (PlasticSax.com) and characterized as “having a unique Shinn Trio stamp” (JAM Magazine). This album chronicles a young trio well on its way towards carving out its own unique 'sound' which simultaneously seeks to maintain a healthy respect for the lineage of jazz piano trios while continuously pushing past conventional boundaries of all sorts. With a release date of January 11th, 2015, the trio's newest album Easy Now: Live at the Green Lady Lounge presents a brand-new set of exciting original compositions and arrangements captured with all the energy the band presents in its live performances.

Easy Now

Dottie Warner - A Serenade In Blue

Size: 194,0 MB
Time: 83:19
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz/Blues Vocals
Art: Front

01. Streets Of November (2:02)
02. But Beautiful (2:44)
03. It Ain't Necessarily So (3:29)
04. Since I Fell For You (3:39)
05. Feelin' Good (3:33)
06. Fine & Mellow (4:08)
07. Lover Man (3:24)
08. It's A Lonesome Old Town (2:40)
09. Speak Low (3:33)
10. Baltimore Oriole (3:21)
11. Atlanta Blues (3:10)
12. Street Of Dreams (3:37)
13. Blue Prelude (3:03)
14. Serenade In Blue (2:13)
15. Beale Street Blues (2:23)
16. I Get Along Without You Very Well (2:26)
17. Ain't Misbehavin' (3:43)
18. Weepin' Willow Blues (3:26)
19. Summertime (4:26)
20. Singin' The Blues (3:44)
21. Somewhere Over The Rainbow (2:50)
22. Pennies From Heaven (2:30)
23. Angel Eyes (3:41)
24. What Cha Gonna Do When There Ain't No Jazz (2:52)
25. Natchez Mama's Wail (4:14)
26. The Joint Is Jumpin' (2:16)

Have been singing at Arnold's Bar and Grill in Cincinnati for over 30 years and this is the first CD we have produced. The music, from the 20's, 30's and 40's (and even going back to the teens), is a rich repertoire in which to become submerged. For this 2 CD set, we chose to keep it very simple, with just piano and vocals and just little trumpet thrown in here and there.

Ricky Nye fans who know him for his "Boogie Woogie and Blues" piano style will enjoy hearing Ricky play in a different genre and hearing him sing several duets on the album. Also included are Wayne Shannon (one of the few pianists around with a great stride left hand) and Roy Tate who plays beautifully on the trumpet.

The first CD of the 2-CD set is titled "A Serenade In Blue" and is mostly ballads and a few blues tunes, including a wonderful Billie Holiday tune called "Fine & Mellow Blues". The second CD is titled "Thursday's At Arnold's" and includes a variety of jazz and blues classics from Fat's Waller to Harold Arlen, George Gershwin, and Hoagy Carmichael.

A Serenade In Blue

Ali Neander - This One Goes To Eleven (Feat. Hellmut Hattler)

Size: 164,8 MB
Time: 70:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz Rock
Art: Front

01. A Thrill From Over The Hill (5:16)
02. This One Goes To Eleven (4:17)
03. Nine Lives (4:47)
04. A Salty Dog (4:15)
05. Lionel's Joint (4:30)
06. Settlement Seventeen (4:44)
07. Gloombox (7:46)
08. Ghostnotes (4:00)
09. The Dance Of Maya (5:15)
10. Eightball (4:28)
11. Chord Of Doom (5:19)
12. Slomo Gizmo (5:02)
13. Mysterious Leftover (6:16)
14. The Day With Sensuous Vibes (4:51)

Ali Neander from Frankfurt/Germany is a great guitar player . He has been one of the few who can consistently make you leap off your seat and whoop. Neander is not only a virtuoso improviser who doesn't seem to know what a cliche is, he is a natural contrarian who bucks prevailing trends and still trying to recall the passion of early jazzrock and combine it with contemporary sounds. There`s a little prog and kraut and ambient included his time for your enjoyment. Starting with german rockband Rodgau Montones more then 30 years ago, he is now one of Germany’s most requested studio cats.

Again with Hellmut Hattler on bass (Kraan, Tab Two), Martin Kasper Keyboards and Moritz Müller on drums Neander has recorded his second solo outing.. The dynamic of this well-seasoned band depends greatly on the interaction of Neander and his fellows.
Special guests are Paul McCandless (from the band Oregon), Joo Kraus formerly with Tab Two and fusion legend Clive Stevens.

"Hello everybody and welcome to my second journey into the wild and wonderous world in between jazz and rock.The first CD had a little more of a „hunters and collectors“-style soundwise , the new one could well be called a band effort.In the last years we had the opportunity to play enough gigs to develop more of a band sound and I´m glad we`re able to put that on CD now together with the phantastic contributions by our distinguished guests Paul McCandless,Joo Krauss and Clive Stevens. I`m still trying to recall the passion of early jazzrock and combine it with contemporary sounds.There`s a little prog and kraut and ambient included his time for your enjoyment.Bon appetit!" Ali

This One Goes To Eleven

Elizabeth Shepherd - The Signal

Size: 121,3 MB
Time: 52:04
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. Willow (Feat. Lionel Loueke) (4:41)
02. What's Happening (3:30)
03. B.T Cotton (6:21)
04. The Signal (6:46)
05. Lion's Den (5:07)
06. This (Feat. Lionel Loueke) (6:46)
07. On Our Way (4:20)
08. I Gave (3:59)
09. Another Day (5:40)
10. Baby Steps (4:49)

Montreal-based singer Elizabeth Shepherd gently stirs jazz with an underground pop aesthetic in Signal. Similar to the fresh styles of contemporaries such as Esperanza Spalding and Gretchen Parlato, Shepherd's appeal is heard in her multifaceted gifts as a songwriter, musician, and composer; attributes which garnered her a Juno Award nomination for Best Vocal Jazz Album for her 2012 release Rewind (Linus Entertainment).

Signal takes a soulful groove-centric stance with tight rhythmic hooks and beats that would fit comfortably in a club-like setting as some tracks segue into one another like a DJ set mix. The music is on point with strong performances from Shepherd's band and the noticeable inclusion of guitarist Lionel Loueke who brings his signature West African styling on select tracks starting with the hypnotic opener "Willow."

First the music grabs you, Shepherd's keyboard skills providing groovy Fender Rhodes accents or trippy MOOG synth tones in "Lion's Den" a tune which develops into a serious groove with a Miles Davis Tutu-esque trumpet solo. Second, there are no syrupy love ballads or party-like-there's-no-tomorrow songs. Instead, these lyrics poetically address a range of social issues such as the exploitation of farmers ("B.T.Cotton"), gun violence/racial profiling ("Another Day") and a tribute to the perseverance of Mother Teresa ("I Gave").

Shepherd's inventive way with composition, words, and ideas is equally balanced throughout the album, heard in the way a funky acoustic bass vamp sways with a melodic vocal arrangement, sampled voices of historic figures in songs, or the tropical sound of steel pans. The title song based on a sampled loop creates Déjà vu lyric sequence between Shepherd and vocalist Alex Samaras as the two rich voices intricately intertwine and articulate an unconventional love story.

Shepherd'sSignal seductively draws you into its world and delivers music for both the mind and body. ~Mark F. Turner

Personnel: Elizabeth Shepherd: vocals, Fender Rhodes, kalimba, sampling, piano, modified piano, MOOG; tuned bottles; Scott Kemp: bass, vocals (3, 6, 7, 8 ); Colin Kingsmore: drums (2-5, 9); Larnell Lewis: drums, vocals (6, 7, 9); Lionel Loueke: guitar, vocals (1, 6, 9); Ross MacIntyre: bass (1, 4, 5, 9, 10); John Maclean: clapping, flute, ngoni (1, 8, 10); Mark Mosca: steel pans (3); Alex Samaras: vocals (4 ); Scott Kemp: bass (2 ,3, 6-8); Yvette Tollar: vocals (9); Roman Tome: acoustic roar machine (5), drums (1, 10); Kevin Turcotte: trumpet (5, 10); Joshua Van Tassel: drums (8).

The Signal

Kenny G - Brazilian Nights (Deluxe Edition)

Size: 180,9 MB
Time: 77:44
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz: Smooth Jazz, Brazilian Rhythms
Art: Front

01. Bossa Antigua (3:45)
02. Corcovado (Quiet Nights Of Quiet Stars) (7:28)
03. Bossa Real (7:33)
04. Brazilian Nights (6:31)
05. April Rain (6:45)
06. Menina Moça (5:55)
07. Bu Bossa (4:23)
08. Clouds (5:35)
09. Girl From Ipanema (5:31)
10. Summer Love (6:12)
11. Loving You (Live) (3:23)
12. G Bop (Live) (4:18)
13. Forever In Love (Live) (5:41)
14. Heart And Soul (Live) (4:39)

The biggest selling instrumental musician of the modern era and one of the best-selling artists of all-time returns with Brazilian Nights, his all-new salute to Bossa Nova. This Deluxe Edition features 4 bonus live tracks!

Kenny G has had one of the most eclectic and dominant careers the music business has ever seen. He’s maintained a high level of creative excellence through decades of unprecedented commercial success by never allowing himself to stay in one place too long. That reputation for musical curiosity stays well intact on his fourteenth studio album Brazilian Nights, set for release on January 27th, 2015 via Concord Records.

“I’ve been in love with bossa nova my whole life,” says the saxophonist in the album’s liner notes. “I think the first song that ‘won me over’ was Cannonball Adderley’s version of “Quiet Nights.” And more recently I’ve been listening (non-stop!) to Stan Getz’s album called Getz For Lovers. I think I've listened to that record almost every day for the past 5 years and it really was the inspiration in making this album. My goal was not only to make a bossa nova album that pays tribute to the “Masters” who I’ve been listening to (Cannonball Adderley, Paul Desmond and Stan Getz) but also to write and record original bossa novas that I hope can ‘hold their own’ in this distinguished company. I humbly say that I feel we’ve succeeded.”

Starting with melodious sounds of “Bossa Antigua,” the ten-song set is a mixture of classics and Kenny G originals. Writing five of the ten tracks with longtime collaborator (and co-producer) Walter Afanasieff, the veteran performer plays alto, tenor and soprano sax and dazzles on such cuts as “Bossa Real, ”the gently pulsating “April Rain,” and the relaxed yet dramatic flair of the title cut.

He admits that he took his time making Brazilian Nights, as he wanted to immerse himself into the light and melodic sounds of music from across the globe. “I spent a year and a half studying and embracing the style of the bossa novas from decades ago. I had fun and learned a lot during my "wonderful labor of love” and I truly hope you get the same pleasure from this album that I have experienced when I sit down after a long day and put on my “bossa nova” sounds. Words can’t describe that feeling but hopefully the melodies that I’ve played here will.”

Melodies and music have long been a signature part of Kenny G’s life. Since releasing his self-titled debut disc in the fall of 1982, Kenny G has become the biggest selling instrumental musicians of the modern era and one of the best selling artists of all-time with global sales totaling more than 75 million records. His biggest album was 1992’s Breathless, which sold a staggering twelve million copies in the United States alone. In addition, his 1994 Christmas disc Miracles: The Holiday Album ranks as one of the most successful Yuletide albums ever, with sales of over eight million copies. Seven of his singles have hit the Top-40 on the Billboard Hot 100. He has also been ranked as one of the most-played artists in the Adult Contemporary format with nine top ten singles. His biggest hit came with 1987’s “Songbird,” which peaked at #4 on the Hot 100. Kenny G continues to play to sold out houses both here and abroad, with dates on his calendar already filled through mid-2015.

Brazilian Nights

Art Farmer - The Company I Keep: Art Farmer Meets Tom Harrell

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:37
Size: 141.0 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Trumpet jazz
Year: 1994/2006
Art: Front

[ 7:01] 1. Sunshine In The Rain
[ 8:15] 2. Song Of The Canopy
[10:37] 3. Santana
[ 5:29] 4. Beside Myself
[ 6:02] 5. Beyond
[ 6:59] 6. Tgtt
[ 8:22] 7. Who Knows
[ 8:48] 8. Turn Out The Stars

Flugelhornists Art Farmer and Tom Harrell meet up on this 1994 Arabesque CD, and although few fireworks occur (the two brassmen mostly sound pretty complementary and mellow), the music is tasteful, enjoyable advanced hard bop. With Ron Blake (doubling on tenor and soprano), pianist Geoff Keezer, bassist Kenny Davis and drummer Carl Allen completing the group, Farmer and Harrell explore group originals, a song by Fritz Pauer, Duke Ellington's "TGTT" and Bill Evans's "Turn Out the Stars." ~Scott Yanow

The Company I Keep: Art Farmer Meets Tom Harrell

Sarah Vaughan - You're Mine You

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:37
Size: 95.3 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 1962/2010
Art: Front

[3:58] 1. You're Mine You
[2:59] 2. The Best Is Yet To Come
[2:54] 3. Witchcraft
[2:52] 4. So Long
[3:39] 5. The Second Time Sround
[2:21] 6. I Could Write A Book
[3:10] 7. Maria
[3:38] 8. Baubles, Bangles And Beads
[2:53] 9. Fly Me To The Moon
[2:27] 10. Moonglow
[2:15] 11. Invitation
[3:01] 12. On Green Dolphin Street
[2:45] 13. One Mint Julep
[2:39] 14. Mama, He Treats Your Daughter Mean

This CD reissue finds Sarah Vaughan backed by big-band and string arrangements from Quincy Jones that could easily have been used for a Frank Sinatra date. Vaughan's voice is typically wondrous and sometimes a bit excessive on the ballads (some may find her slightly overblown version of "Maria" a bit difficult to sit through) but in top form on the more swinging numbers. In the repertoire are such tunes as "The Best Is Yet to Come," "The Second Time Around" and "Baubles, Bangles and Beads." More of a middle-of-the-road pop date than a creative jazz session (the personnel is not given), the set is not essential but should please those who love the sound of Sassy's remarkable voice. The final two "bonus" numbers ("One Mint Julep" and "Mama, He Treats Your Daughter Mean") were originally released as a single. ~Scott Yanow

You're Mine You

Chuck Brown & The Second Chapter Band - Timeless

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:57
Size: 118.9 MB
Styles: Jazz-blues
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[4:31] 1. Nature Boy
[4:41] 2. Never Make Your Move Too Soon
[4:55] 3. I Only Have Eyes For You
[5:50] 4. Wild Is The Wind
[5:02] 5. Autumn Leaves
[3:52] 6. Love Won't Let Me Wait
[3:46] 7. Blue Skies
[3:41] 8. A Foggy Day
[2:49] 9. Tenderly
[3:51] 10. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
[4:36] 11. Hey There
[4:18] 12. Caravan

Chuck Brown will always be the godfather of go-go, but six years ago he made longtime fans aware of another aspect of his musical range with "The Other Side," a collection of pop, jazz and blues standards done as duets with Eva Cassidy. The two established a wonderfully warm rapport in the tradition of Ray Charles and Betty Carter. The project was clearly a liberating one for Brown and a chance for him to shine the spotlight on the immensely gifted but unrecorded Cassidy.

"Timeless," the new album by Chuck Brown and the Second Chapter Band (Raw Venture/Liason), is dedicated to Cassidy, who died two years ago after the sudden onset of cancer. Brown has credited Cassidy with giving him the courage to sing and record this type of material in the first place, and, perhaps in honor of Cassidy's spirit, the album is generally upbeat. Even its romantic plaints tend to the bittersweet, from the sage counsel of Richard Adler and Jerry Ross's "Hey There" (from "The Pajama Game") to the smooth surrender of the Al Dubin/Harry Warren chestnut "I Only Have Eyes for You."

Brown clearly has a genuine affection for, and an easygoing approach to, well-worn standards like "Autumn Leaves," "Blue Skies," "A Foggy Day" and "Tenderly." His smooth vocals recall the cool bravado of Billy Eckstine and Joe Williams, and there's the bluesy elegance of Charles Brown and Ray Charles. Brown, who provides some seamless fills on guitar, also benefits from the empathetic support of the Second Chapter Band, notably pianist Lenny Williams and bassist Chris Biondo, who co-produced the album. There are a few top-notch guests as well: Keter Betts, whose walking bass lines enliven "You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To" and "Nature Boy," and Ron Holloway, whose saxophone burnishes the smoky comeuppance blues "Never Make Your Move Too Soon" and the yearning "Wild Is the Wind."

Brown is silky on the seductive "Love Won't Let Me Wait," virile on "Autumn Leaves" and jubilant on a sinewy reading of the Ellington/Tizol standard "Caravan." If the material occasionally strays to lounge fare, Brown's voice and engaging personality convey both the burdens of experience and the release of expectations in a consistently ingratiating manner.

Timeless

New York Trio - Stairway To The Stars

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:49
Size: 132,7 MB
Art: Front

(6:18)  1. Lover Come Back to Me
(5:36)  2. Stairway to the Stars
(6:39)  3. Lullaby OfThe Leaves
(6:43)  4. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
(2:11)  5. I'll Be Seeing You
(5:03)  6. Can't Help Loving Dat Man
(7:05)  7. Body and Soul
(7:18)  8. Man I Love
(6:21)  9. Sleeping Bee
(4:34) 10. Stella by Starlight

The New York Trio has produced a series of enjoyable session for Venus since the beginning of the 21st century. Consisting of pianist Bill Charlap, bassist Jay Leonhart and drummer Bill Stewart, their fifth CD together is similar to earlier efforts, concentrating on accessible treatments of selections from the Great American Songbook. The opening track, "Lover, Come Back to Me," is a swinging affair, with lots of amusing quotes inserted into the mix. "Stairway to the Stars" is suitably a dreamy interpretation, full of romance and gorgeous voicings by Charlap. The bittersweet ballad "I'll Be Seeing You" (forever associated with World War II films where the soldier leaves his love) is a solo feature for Charlap, played with tenderness. "Body and Soul" is one of the most recorded songs in jazz history, but the trio's rendition is worthwhile, even if little new ground is broken. This well-played collection of timeless ballads is perfect for unwinding at the end of the day. ~ Ken Dryden  http://www.allmusic.com/album/stairway-to-the-stars-mw0000311278

Personnel: Bill Charlap – Piano; Jay Leonhart – Bass;  Bill Stewart – Drums

Johnny Griffin, Eddie 'Lockjaw' Davis - Tough Tenors

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1960
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:19
Size: 92,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:30)  1. Tickle Toe
(7:09)  2. Save Your Love For Me
(6:35)  3. Twins
(9:17)  4. Funky Fluke
(4:29)  5. Imagination
(7:17)  6. Soft Winds

The appeal of a good cutting session is similar to that of a good boxing match: we all enjoy watching two competitors locked in combat, pushing themselves to new boundaries and discovering untapped resources. Johnny Griffin and Eddie “Lockjaw” Davis went so far as to establish a quintet which allowed them repeated opportunities to duke it out over a series of recording sessions and club dates. 1960's Tough Tenors is their first meeting on record, and as one might expect it features plenty of fire-breathing dynamics and bombast. Leaving the more complex material from the time by the wayside, Griffin and Davis make good use of popular songs from the swing era, a move which allows them to burn through solos without worrying about tricky changes. Griffin, once called the world’s fastest tenor player, is certainly well-suited to set a fearsome tempo, yet Davis, no slouch, is surprisingly fleet-fingered as well. The quintet rips through “Tickle Toe” at a scorching pace, using far more notes than Lester Young would ever have dreamed possible. 

They catch their breath on the bluesy swagger of “Save Your Love For Me” before re-establishing a rapid gait on “Twins” and scarcely letting up after that. Obviously the rhythm section carries the grunt work, content to stay out of the way of the gymnastics. The two hornmen were a terrific match; Davis’s and Griffin’s horns blend together with razor-sharp precision on the heads, yet diverge dramatically during their solos, Davis identifiable by a fluttery cascade of notes, Griffin by robust, slippery passages. Both musicians have proved their worth on several other occasions, yet the endless dazzle quickly grows tiresome and one longs for something a little more substantial than listening to these two guys lock horns. The sole ballad, “Imagination,” seems almost like an afterthought and only features Davis anyway; the last track, “Soft Winds,” allows the quintet to indulge in a more relaxed groove these players should have explored to a greater extent. Sure, these guys can play, but one longs for a little more nuance and finesse, and in the end the quintet could have worked toward a better balance between showmanship and artistry. ~ David Rickert  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/tough-tenors-johnny-griffin-jazzland-recordings-review-by-david-rickert.php

Personnel: Johnny Griffin - tenor saxophone; Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis - tenor saxophone; Junior Mance - piano; Larry Gales - bass; Ben Riley - drums.

Tough Tenors

Vivian Buczek - Curiosity

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:25
Size: 137,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:04)  1. Lighthouse
(5:05)  2. I'm Strong
(4:05)  3. Indian Love Song (Cherokee)
(6:19)  4. Goodbye Pork Pie Hat
(5:11)  5. It Might as Well Be Spring
(6:09)  6. Once You Love
(5:13)  7. Curiosity
(5:59)  8. How Deep Is the Ocean?
(5:46)  9. You're Everything
(5:08) 10. Nica's Dream
(5:21) 11. For All We Know

Vivian Buczek is blessed with a glorious voice warm, emotional, engaging and a talent for sophisticated interpretations of established but not over-worked songs. Curiosity, the Swedish singer's fifth album, places her in the company of a piano trio led by the excellent pianist and arranger Martin Sjöstedt. It's company she clearly relishes and in which she shines brightly.Buczek has put together a group of songs that draw on the American Songbook ("How Deep Is The Ocean," "For All We Know"), bop and post-bop standards ("Goodbye Pork Pie Hat," "Nica's Dream") and a few numbers from Scandinavian writers including her own "Once You Love," co-written with her father Bruno. Mostly these are songs of love, but it's not always the romantic kind and the lyrics tell many different stories. Whatever emotion or image the words aim to evoke, Buczek delivers. She captures the self-deprecation of "It Might As Well Be Spring," gives the romance of "How Deep Is The Ocean" an added touch of sensuality and lets her voice float over Sjöstedt's lovely arrangement of "For All We Know" with a perfect combination of longing and wistfulness. 

On "Goodbye Pork Pie Hat" Charles Mingus and Rahsaan Roland Kirk's eulogy for Lester Young she celebrates the saxophonist's legacy just as much as she mourns his passing. The tune's impact is itself heightened by a bluesy solo from guest guitarist Elias Källvik. Johan Björk's "Lighthouse" celebrates a relationship, the trio at its punchiest and most upbeat. Claudia Campagnol's "I'm Strong" reflects on the loss of a relationship: the album's most poignant song, backing vocals from the composer and Källvik's understated guitar help to create a smooth '80s soul vibe. Alongside these numbers the arrangement for Ray Noble's "Cherokee" sounds fresh, but Noble's lyrics seem archaic and clichéd although Buczek's performance is once again impeccable. Curiosity is delightful, thanks to the song choice, the arrangements, the instrumentalists and, of course, Buczek's vocals. ~ Bruce Lindsay  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/curiosity-vivian-buczek-volenza-review-by-bruce-lindsay.php

Personnel: Vivian Buczek: vocals; Martin Sjöstedt: piano, Fender Rhodes, organ; Niklas Fernqvist: bass; Johan Löfcrantz Ramsay: drums, percussion, backing vocals; Elias Källvik: guitar (2, 4, 7); Claudia Campagnol: backing vocals (2).

Ralph Sutton & Jay McShann - Last of the Whorehouse Piano Players

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:32
Size: 141,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:50)  1. Honey
(6:23)  2. Old Fashioned Love
(3:10)  3. 'Fore Day Rider
(5:25)  4. On the Sunny Side of the Street
(3:43)  5. Sweet Georgia Brown
(3:53)  6. Do Wah
(3:56)  7. Indiana
(4:48)  8. 'Deed I Do
(4:18)  9. Crazy Rhythm
(6:19) 10. Cherry
(3:54) 11. Pretty Baby
(3:55) 12. I've Found a New Baby
(6:53) 13. JazzSpeak - a spoken interview


Not to be confused with the CD reissue of the same name (Chiaroscuro 206) recorded in 1979, this reunion encounter by pianists Ralph Sutton and Jay McShann (in a quartet with bassist Milt Hinton and drummer Gus Johnson) is up to the same level of the original dates, with plenty of heated moments on songs such as "Old Fashioned Love," "Sweet Georgia Brown," "Cherry," and "I've Found a New Baby." While Sutton is the definitive stride pianist of the past half-century, McShann (who also takes a couple of vocals) finds space to infuse the music with a strong dose of blues and Kansas City swing. A seven-minute "Jazzspeak" wraps up the enjoyable outing with some reminiscing about the sessions. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/last-of-the-whorehouse-piano-players-mw0000269534

Personnel: Ralph Sutton (piano); Jay McShann (piano); Gus Johnson (drums).

Sunday, January 25, 2015

Stan Getz - Cool Velvet: Stan Getz And Strings

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:05
Size: 165.0 MB
Styles: Post bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1960/1995
Art: Front

[4:59] 1. The Thrill Is Gone
[4:03] 2. It Never Entered My Mind
[4:41] 3. Early Autumn
[3:56] 4. When I Go I Go All The Way
[2:38] 5. A New Town Is A Blue Town
[3:03] 6. Round Midnight
[3:50] 7. Born To Be Blue
[5:00] 8. Whisper Not
[4:22] 9. Goodbye
[2:57] 10. Nature Boy
[2:47] 11. Once
[3:24] 12. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
[3:52] 13. Nica's Dream
[2:26] 14. Little Rio
[3:58] 15. Keep Me In Your Heart
[3:05] 16. Zigeuner Song
[2:53] 17. I Want To Live
[3:03] 18. Where Flamingos Fly
[2:09] 19. Midnight Samba
[2:05] 20. Infinidad
[2:45] 21. Darling Joe

After a decade establishing himself as one of the premiere tenor saxophonists in jazz with a slew of top Verve albums, Stan Getz began the '60s with this first foray into the world of strings. This, of course, would not be his last album with strings; later milestones like the Eddie Sauter-arranged Focus and lesser bowing dates like the Michel Legrand collaboration, Communications '72, would follow. And while certainly not on the same level as Focus, Cool Velvet still finds Getz at his melodic best over the course of ten tracks. Like earlier strings dates by Charlie Parker and Clifford Brown, Cool Velvet's slinky charts bring out the best in Getz's already romantic and liquid-toned approach. Recorded in Germany with a local combo, the album features Russell Garcia's (Louis Armstrong, Mel Tormé, Anita O'Day) relatively tame charts on a program that includes such highlights as "Early Autumn" and "Born to Be Blue." A very pleasant outing that trades in the cinematic atmospherics of Focus for some straightforward ballad dreaminess. Cool Velvet is also available as a two-fer with 1966's Voices album. ~Stephen Cook

Cool Velvet: Stan Getz And Strings

Louise Baranger Jazz Band - Trumpeter's Prayer

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:55
Size: 137.2 MB
Styles: Big band, Trumpet jazz
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[2:17] 1. Well Git It!
[3:44] 2. Buttercup
[4:38] 3. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
[2:59] 4. All The Things You Are
[5:05] 5. I Only Want Some
[6:23] 6. Mood Swings
[3:54] 7. Alexander's Ragtime Band
[4:23] 8. Hip Hep Hop
[4:30] 9. Chitlins
[3:32] 10. The Way She Makes Me Feel
[4:29] 11. Not Tonight I Have A Headache
[5:05] 12. If You Remember Me
[2:52] 13. Girl Meets Horn
[3:02] 14. A Turmpeter's Prayer
[2:55] 15. A Royal Firework

Louise Baranger’s economy–sized big band (basically four trumpets including her own, three saxophones, one trombone and rhythm) is at its best when unencumbered by guest artists, a string section or other commercially–oriented considerations. While such moments are too infrequent on Trumpeter’s Prayer, Baranger’s bandleading debut, when they do arrive (as on “Alexander’s Ragtime Band,” “Chitlins,” “A Royal Firework,” for example) they are almost persuasive enough to redeem the others. Baranger is an excellent player with a pristine tone and admirable technique, as she shows on the title selection (one of several on which strings are used to amplify the core ensemble) and her many other appearances, all uncredited. The band, when given room to maneuver, is able–bodied and industrious. Saxophonists Don Shelton (“Mood Swings,” “Firework”) and Steve Wilkerson (“Ragtime Band”), trombonists Bob McChesney (“Hip Hep Hop”) and Alex Iles (“Ragtime Band”), flugel Warren Luening (Neal Hefti’s “Buttercup”) and pianist Linda Martinez (“Firework,” “Not Tonight, I Have a Headache”) spearhead a corps of topnotch soloists. Among the guests, Tom Kubis (who arranged seven of the 15 selections) unlimbers his keen–edged soprano while trombonist Carl Fontana trades rapid–fire salvos with Baranger on Steve Allen’s “Chitlins” (which Allen introduces), but Baranger and guest Arturo Sandoval are unable to ignite any sparks on Sy Oliver’s “Well, Git It!” (which suffers greatly in comparison to Tommy Dorsey’s original version). There are two nondescript vocals by Frank Sinatra Jr. (“I Only Want Some,” “The Way She Makes Me Feel”), another by Gisele Jackson (“I Didn’t Know What Time It Was”). “Headache” is Kubis’s contemporary look at Glenn Miller’s “In the Mood,” while “Firework” is Georg Friedrich Handel’s “Music for the Royal Fireworks” updated by Don Gillis. Baranger has three handsome showcases in a row for her trumpet, David Raksin’s “If You Remember Me,” Duke Ellington’s “Girl Meets Horn” and Tutti Camarata’s “Trumpeter’s Prayer,” leading to the explosive finale. A sometimes admirable session that would have been enhanced by more straight–ahead swinging and fewer detours. ~Jack Bowers

Trumpeter's Prayer

Sonny Davis - Djangology

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:55
Size: 146.3 MB
Styles: Gypsy jazz guitar
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[6:10] 1. Wave
[3:18] 2. Avalon
[2:24] 3. Blue Bossa
[2:40] 4. Blues En Mineur
[3:15] 5. Body And Soul
[2:56] 6. Claire De Lune
[3:09] 7. Danube
[2:41] 8. Djangology
[4:27] 9. Donna Lee
[4:16] 10. Limehouse Blues
[3:55] 11. Nuages
[4:11] 12. Perdido
[4:37] 13. Satin Doll
[2:19] 14. Shine
[5:17] 15. Take Five
[4:14] 16. Tears
[3:58] 17. There Will Never Be Another You

Sonny Davis (real name is Alex Davidson)was born & raised in Niagara Falls, Ont.After 13 years on the road playing Rock, country, jazz & blues he settled into session life. The studio experience was great so I applied it to creating the 13 CD's (of mine) to date. Musically, I enjoy composing & improvising and for guitar playing I enjoy GYPSY JAZZ (the music of Django Reinhardt).Such beautiful melodies & chord progressions & passion!

Djangology

Yvonne Sanchez - Invitation

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:21
Size: 152,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:48)  1. Old Devil Moon
(3:12)  2. The Way You Look Tonight
(5:46)  3. In A Mellow Tone
(5:10)  4. Feitico de Irena
(3:24)  5. My Romance
(6:28)  6. Invitation
(4:33)  7. Nica's Dream
(5:07)  8. All of Me
(3:02)  9. I'll Remember April
(6:11) 10. Lover Man
(5:47) 11. Well You Needn't
(8:25) 12. Dindi
(3:21) 13. Autumn Leaves

Yvonne Sanchez first album Invitation (Cube Metier) was produced and released in 2002 by Yvonne Sanchez and Robert Balzar. This album received a music award nomination and was well embraced by fans and critics. Ranging from Jazz Standards which were rearranged by Yvonne Sanchez and Robert Balzar (Bass), Yvonne Sanchez also presents her first original composition Feticio de Irena. After the release Yvonne Sanchez received an award for best Jazz Singer of the Year by the Jazz Association.  http://yvonnesanchez.eu/yvonne-sanchez-invitation-2002.html

Personnel: Yvonne Sanchez (vocals); Ernesto Chuecos (guitar); Radek Zapadlo (tenor saxophone); Filip Jelínek (trombone); Stanislav Macha (piano); Robert Balzar (double bass); Jiri Slavicek (drums).

Dave Pike - Times Out of Mind

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 1975
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:15
Size: 97,1 MB
Art: Front

(7:27)  1. Dance of the Grebes
(4:13)  2. Wee
(8:40)  3. Times Out of Mind
(9:20)  4. Djalma
(7:10)  5. Morning in the Park
(5:23)  6. I Love My Cigar

Vibraphonist Dave Pike's debut for Muse (which has been reissued on CD) has generally strong individual playing although the material (five group originals plus a brief version of the bop standard "Wee") and use of electronics sound a bit dated. Pike teams up with keyboardist Tom Ranier (who also plays some alto and tenor), guitarist Ron Eschete, either Luther Hughes or Harvey Newmark on bass, drummer Ted Hawke and (on three of the six numbers) guitarist Kenny Burrell. Nothing all that memorable occurs during this lesser effort. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/times-out-of-mind-mw0000612796

Personnel:  Bass – Harvey Newmark (tracks: 2, 3, 5), Luther Hughes (tracks: 1, 4, 6); Drums, Percussion – Ted Hawke; Guitar – Kenny Burrell (tracks: 2, 3, 5), Ron Eschete (tracks: 1, 4, 6);  Piano, Electric Piano, Synthesizer [Arp], Alto Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Tom Ranier; Vibraphone – Dave Pike

Saturday, January 24, 2015

Peggy Lee - Jump For Joy

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:11
Size: 78.3 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 1959/2010
Art: Front

[2:02] 1. Jump For Joy
[2:24] 2. Back In Your Own Back Yard
[1:57] 3. When My Sugar Walks Down The Street
[2:06] 4. I Hear Music
[2:49] 5. Just In Time
[2:56] 6. Old Devil Moon
[2:41] 7. What A Little Moonlight Can Do
[2:31] 8. Four Or Five Times
[2:29] 9. Music! Music! Music!
[2:44] 10. Cheek To Cheek
[2:34] 11. The Glory Of Love
[2:09] 12. Ain't We Got Fun
[2:13] 13. Listen To The Rockin' Bird
[2:29] 14. Baby, Baby Wait For Me

With the introduction of stereo fidelity in 1958, most albums by artists and singers were released in two formats: mono and stereo. In some cases artists recorded the same material twice. In other cases gear was in place to record both formats at once. Stereo recordings involved the special placement of musical instruments in the studio and a more dynamic recording process, enabling the left-hand side of the orchestra to predominate through the left speaker and the right-hand side in the right speaker. The result was a radically vivid and exciting sound, since stereo records and a stereo phonograph produced a much more panoramic listening experience. One artist who recorded at the dawn of stereo technology was Peggy Lee.

Her first mono/stereo effort for Capitol was Jump for Joy, with arrangements by Nelson Riddle. For years, the only CD version of the album available was the mono version released by Capitol EMI U.K. as part of its mid-1990s two-fer series. But the mono release suffered terribly from narrow fidelity, shallow depth and pinched dimension. Now DRG/EMI has issued a remastered stereo version for the first time on CD, and the mixed and mastered result by Alan Silverman is positively stunning. But not necessarily for the reasons you'd expect.

I love Lee, but I never thought Jump for Joy was her best outing from the period. In all likelihood, the new stereo technology may have compelled producer Lee Gillette to urge Lee to lay back after delivering her lyrics to allow the Riddle orchestra to come up fast in stereo behind her. So Lee rarely lingers on notes, and the result in most cases sounds a bit too relaxed, as though Lee were singing from a sofa while filing her nails. Or pulling back from the microphone. (The rare exception is Ain't We Got Fun.) By comparison, Things Are Swingin', her next Capitol release recorded six months later in 1958 with Jack Marshall arrangements, featured a much more engaged and lingering Lee. ~Marc Myers

Jump For Joy

George Cables - Looking For The Light

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:27
Size: 131.5 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Piano jazz
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[7:09] 1. Looking For The Light
[5:15] 2. Klimo
[6:52] 3. Senorita De Aranjuez
[5:08] 4. Alice Brown
[7:10] 5. Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow
[3:37] 6. Tasshi's Night Out
[5:32] 7. Mr Baggy Pants
[6:09] 8. Gymnopedie
[6:20] 9. E.V.C
[4:11] 10. Helen's Mothers Song

George Cables has long been one of the top modern mainstream pianists, developing his own voice in the straight-ahead jazz tradition. On this CD he performs eight of his originals, Erik Satie's haunting "Gymnopedie," and a trio ballad version of "Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow." Other than the latter and a solo piano piece ("Helen's Mothers Song"), all of the selections are performed by Cables in a quartet. Gary Bartz is an asset, splitting his time evenly between alto and soprano. The music is both thoughtful and swinging with the attractive jazz tango "Senorita de Aranjuez," "Alice Brown" (which sounds as if it could have been written by Horace Silver), and the attractive bop piece "Tasshi's Night Out" being highlights. Recommended. ~Scott Yanow

Looking For The Light