Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Lilly Martin - The Velvet Mission

Size: 125,1 MB
Time: 53:30
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Blues/Jazz/Soul Vocals
Art: Front

01. Closer (4:47)
02. Funny How Time Slips Away (Feat. Philipp Fankhauser) (4:07)
03. Shut Your Eyes (3:33)
04. Vicious Games (4:13)
05. Money Don't Matter 2Nite (5:12)
06. Every Night (3:55)
07. Too Much Trouble (4:59)
08. Deja Vu (4:26)
09. Wicked Game (5:03)
10. 29 Ways (3:15)
11. What Is & What Should Never Be (5:26)
12. When My Final Hour Has Come (Feat. Polo Hofer) (4:27)

Over the years, along her professional journey, Lilly has had the privilege of performing for star-studded audiences that included personalities such as Harry Belafonte and Bob Geldof. She was honored to perform backing vocals with music celebrities Michael Bublé and Phil Collins as well as a number of acclaimed Swiss performers.

On her recent CD "The Velvet Mission“ (released in 2012), the New York singer showcases her sultry vocal interpretations on many familiar songs - personalized with blends of jazz-soaked Blues and Soul. Polo Hofer and Philipp Fankhasuer are featured guests in duets with Lilly.

Lilly Martin was born and raised in the heart of New York City. She grew up in an artistically influenced Cuban family and was accepted to attend the "Fiorello La Guardia School of Performing Arts" in Manhattan. Lilly's educational foundation and life revolved around music, art and theater. But years later, with the uprooting of family and home, Lilly felt compelled to pursue academic studies and a more conventional lifestyle. But passion for music and songwriting never let go.

Only many years later did she establish her career in music. Finally coming full-circle - back to her calling - she began meaningful collaborations in both songwriting and performance. It started when she joined a small group of singers who met weekly. Her fire for music was immediately rekindled and she began singing backing vocals, live and in-studio, for a variety of recording artists in Switzerland. It was during these years of regaining ground in her musical direction that Lilly played on her gift for interpreting so many different music genres. From Gospel and Blues to Soul, Jazz and Pop – the influences were spiraling her into another level of musical expression.

Lilly Martin formed her own event band together with keyboardist, producer and band-leader Michael Dolmetsch and became a popular front singer. Together with Michael she also began a creative songwriting-team known as "the loop". Their songwriting skills would later be recognized with an honorable mention from Billboard Magazine's newcomer contest for their original composition "Goin' Greyhound".

The Velvet Mission

Joshua Breakstone - 2nd Avenue

Size: 164,2 MB
Time: 70:48
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz: Guitar Jazz
Art: Front

01. Thingin' (9:30)
02. Home (8:43)
03. I'm An Old Cowhand (6:57)
04. I Wish I Knew (6:03)
05. Evergreenish (7:03)
06. The Lamp Is Low (5:20)
07. Hit It (9:20)
08. My Conception (8:38)
09. 2nd Ave/Blues For Imahori (9:10)

A touch of nostalgia as I glanced at the sleeve - "Joshua Breakstone uses Ernie Ball strings exclusively". If I'd had a lousy dime for every set of Ernie Ball Super Slinky's I'd sold during my 30 year incarceration in Newcastle's Central Arcade I'd be worth a bob or two (well maybe one bob).
I don't suppose Joshua Breakstone ever bought any Super Slinkys from me, him being 3000 miles away, which is a pity because, if he had done, I'd have been able to claim to have had some involvement in one of the most listenable guitar albums I've heard since Charlie Christian showed the way.
This is guitar playing as cool as Stan on tenor or Chet on trumpet, music that makes you want to lay back and luxuriate in the sounds with maybe a G & T to hand.
We've also got a cello in the mix which is great. I've long advocated the cello - not as a double bass substitute - but as a frontline horn which is what we get here.
Bass players such as Harry Babasin, Oscar Pettiford and Sam Jones have dabbled with cello so it is far from being a first. Nevertheless, it's a worthy successor to these earlier efforts although I'd have preferred more arco and less pizzicato (I find I made a similar comment in my review of their previous album - With the Wind and the Rain) - still, I doubt if the boppy heads would have been as clean if the instrument had been bowed so what do I know!
The five tracks with cello are Thingin' (Konitz); Home (Cannonball); I'm an Old Cowhand (Mercer); Evergreenish (Dexter) and Hit It by bassist Atkinson..
The trio numbers are I Wish I Knew (Harry Warren/Mack Gordon); The Lamp is Low (Ravel and others); My Conception (Sonny Clark) and a Breakstone original 2nd Ave: Blues For Imahori.
Breakstone describes the quartet as A Chamber Jazz Foursome and I see no reason to quibble although I would have referred to it as The Chamber Jazz Foursome!
Recommended!

2nd Avenue

Brussels Jazz Orchestra - The Music Of Enrico Pieranunzi

Size: 140,8 MB
Time: 61:01
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Persona (6:18)
02. Within The House Of Night (7:20)
03. Fellini's Waltz (6:24)
04. Newsbreak (7:26)
05. With My Heart In A Song (8:42)
06. Coralie (7:29)
07. Distance From Departure (8:25)
08. It Speaks For Itself (8:55)

The Italian pianist and composer Enrico Pieranunzi makes music that appeals to the imagination: filmic, compelling and with the kind of frivolity you might expect from an Italian.Bert Joris succeeded in adapting these light, airy compositions for the larger forces of the BJO.

Compositions by Enrico Pieranunzi, arranged for the Brussels Jazz Orchestra by Bert Joris. Performed and recorded live at De Werf in August 2014. With Enrico Pieranunzi at the piano. All trumpet solos by Bert Joris.

The Music Of Enrico Pieranunzi

The Singer & The Songwriter - What A Difference A Melody Makes

Size: 103,2 MB
Time: 40:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. The Art Of Missing You (2:18)
02. Homebody (2:27)
03. Old Fashioned (3:17)
04. Dry Spell (3:40)
05. Out Of The Fog (3:31)
06. Half The Week (2:58)
07. Over The Town (2:23)
08. A Borrowed Room In A Borrowed House (3:09)
09. Pacific Coast Highway (3:02)
10. Unlove You (2:52)
11. Someday (2:15)
12. Summer Song (5:49)
13. A Lullaby (For Malcolm) (2:59)

Rachel Garcia and Thu Tran met in the winter of 2006, as students of San Francisco State University at an open mic night at the now defunct Canvas Gallery Café. Some years later, on a road trip up the coast of California to Oregon, on the Pacific Coast Highway, they were inspired to write their first song together, which led to the formation of the band. In the fall of 2009 they recorded their independently produced, 5-song debut EP at Amadeo Studios in the Bay Area.

Shortly after moving to Los Angeles in 2008, they began writing and performing music together (under the name Ampersand, later transitioning to The Singer and The Songwriter). Tran’s pop and folk influenced songwriting and Garcia’s jazz and blues vocal styling blend together to create TS&TS’s vibrant, sophisticated sound. Their music is a stylistic hybrid, reflecting their diverse musical and cultural backgrounds.

Rachel Garcia grew up listening to Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, Elvis and Michael Jackson. At a young age, her love of music was nurtured by performing in choirs. Her rich and nuanced vocal style draws inspiration from female vocalists old (Ella Fitzgerald, June Christy, Mama Cass) and new (FIona Apple, Laura Mvula, Melody Gardot, and Cecile McLorin Salvant).

Thu Tran is a self-taught multi-instrumentalist (guitar, piano, harmonica, ukulele, banjo) and songwriter who merges traditional styles with modern pop sensibilities. His musical style draws inspiration from the Bossa Nova sounds of Antonio Carlos Jobim, the swinging jazz guitar of Django Reinhardt, and the lyricism of modern songwriters like Sufjan Stevens and Rufus Wainwright.

In May 2012, the duo won the West Coast Songwriters International Song Contest in the Miscellaneous category for their recording of ‘The Art of Missing You.’ The competition was judged by an Executive Committee comprised of noted singer/songwriters and industry leaders. Past judges and conference guests have included hit songwriters and producers Narada Michael Walden, Steve Seskin, Andre Pessis, George Merrill and Bonnie Hayes.

The Singer and The Songwriter have performed at many Los Angeles venues such as The House of Blues, The Eagle Rock Music Festival, The Eagle Rock Center for the Arts, Levitt Pavilion and The Silverlake Lounge. Of their live show, TheEastsiderLA.com writes: “Tran’s vibrant rhythm guitar swung faster than Amanda Byne’s changing moods and his colorful playing style paired wonderfully with the dramatic and soulful voice of his partner in crime. It was clear that underneath Garcia’s cafe-jazz voice lay a rich, billowing and powerful vocal onslaught. This duo’s set of original material did clearly mine the annals of Gypsy Jazz (as well as ‘60s folk) for inspiration. However, The Singer and The Songwriter are a Los Angeles original.”

In May 2014, The Singer and The Songwriter released their debut full-length LP, What a Difference a Melody Makes, produced by Charlie Stavish (Ryan Adams, Jenny Lewis) with mixing and mastering by Brooklyn collective Mason Jar Music (Lucius, Feist and Andrew Bird).

What A Difference A Melody Makes

Kenny Burrell - Soulero

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:55
Size: 137.2 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 1966/1995
Art: Front

[4:36] 1. Hot Bossa
[4:38] 2. Mother-In-Law
[2:39] 3. People
[4:57] 4. Isabella
[3:06] 5. Girl Talk
[4:42] 6. Suzy
[4:55] 7. The Tender Gender
[3:37] 8. La Petite Mambo
[3:14] 9. If Someone Had Told Me
[3:54] 10. I'm Confessin' (That I Love You)
[3:30] 11. My Favorite Things
[3:20] 12. I Want My Baby Back
[3:29] 13. Con Alma
[3:01] 14. Soulero
[3:08] 15. Wild Is The Wind
[3:01] 16. Blues Fuse

This CD reissues the ten selections on guitarist Kenny Burrell's Cadet LP The Tender Gender, a version of "My Favorite Things" from a Christmas album and five selections from his 1967 date Ode to 52nd Street. The former set showcases Burrell with a quartet also including pianist Richard Wyands, bassist Marty Rivera and drummer Oliver Jackson, while the other numbers feature him accompanied by orchestras arranged by Richard Evans. Burrell plays typically tastefully throughout the performances, displaying a clear tone and a solid mastery of the bebop vocabulary. No real surprises occur except perhaps for the repertoire, which includes such unlikely numbers as "People," "Girl Talk" (which works quite well) and "Wild Is the Wind." ~Scott Yanow

Soulero

Lyle Lovett - Lyle Lovett & His Large Band

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:49
Size: 93.4 MB
Styles: Country-jazz
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[2:24] 1. The Blues Walk
[4:01] 2. Here I Am
[2:27] 3. Cryin' Shame
[3:13] 4. Good Intentions
[3:56] 5. I Know You Know
[3:04] 6. What Do You Do/The Glory Of Love
[3:13] 7. I Married Her Just Because She Looks Like You
[2:42] 8. Stand By Your Man
[4:08] 9. Which Way Does That Old Pony Run
[3:04] 10. Nobody Knows Me
[4:07] 11. If You Were To Wake Up
[4:24] 12. Once Is Enough

While from the outset Lyle Lovett sounded like a hard artist to pigeonhole, his sponsors at Curb Records and MCA Records seemed determined to sell him as a country artist, though the blues and retro-jazz leanings of Lovett's second album, Pontiac, suggested that strategy would only be practical for so long. With his third album, 1989's Lyle Lovett and His Large Band, Lovett seemingly sidelined any career aspirations as a mainstream country act he or his handlers may have held. The album kicks off with a lively cover of Clifford Brown's "The Blues Walk," and the next five tunes all bear the smoky, late-night vibe of a low-key jazz joint, with top marks going to the hilariously off-kilter "Here I Am," the witty scenario of potential infidelity "What Do You Do/The Glory of Love," and the marvelously sly "Good Intentions." The second half of the album is steeped in twang, but it was hardly more comforting for country radio programmers; "I Married Her Just Because She Looks Like You" is a "sweet on the outside and sick on the inside" tale of romantic obsession, "Nobody Knows Me" bears a punchline that makes "God Will" sound generous, and Lovett's straight-faced cover of "Stand By Your Man" stubbornly refuses to either announce itself as a joke or suggest another interpretation. Wherever you choose to file it, Lyle Lovett and His Large Band made it clear that Lovett was only getting better with each album; the songs are uniformly well-crafted, Lovett's vocals are full of subtle nuance, and his band is in brilliant form throughout (with special kudos to Lovett's frequent vocal foil, Francine Reed). If you're going to burn your bridges, you could hardly find a better way to do it than this. ~Mark Deming

Lyle Lovett & His Large Band

George Freeman - George Burns!

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:52
Size: 143.9 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Guitar jazz
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[4:03] 1. It's Cha Time!
[5:27] 2. Hot Box
[4:15] 3. And She Left Me
[4:58] 4. Vonski
[4:57] 5. You Are My First Love
[5:54] 6. George Burns!
[5:47] 7. Here's Bruz
[5:23] 8. Swinging Shepherd Blues
[4:35] 9. Once In A While
[4:18] 10. Hen Pie
[4:31] 11. Satin Doll
[4:14] 12. Tee-Hee
[4:24] 13. Messy

Guitarist George Freeman has long been in the shadow of his brother, tenor saxophonist Von Freeman and his nephew, saxophonist Chico Freeman. The guitarist does a fine job of generating excitement on this well-rounded and varied set, which ranges from heated blues to soul-jazz. Most of the selections feature Freeman in a quartet with pianist Lou Gregory, drummer Phil Thomas, and veteran bassist Eldee Young (who was with the Ramsey Lewis Trio in the 1960s). Brother Von sits in on "Vonski," Ron Cooper adds a so-so vocal to "And She Left Me," and the one-time vocal team of Cooper and Joanie Pallatto sound like a somewhat demented (and oddly successful) version of Jackie & Roy on "Here's Bruz." But most of the focus is on the leader, and George Freeman plays in prime form throughout. ~Scott Yanow

George Burns!

Nancy Harrow - The Beatles & Other Standards

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:26
Size: 121,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:04)  1. My foolish heart
(4:04)  2. Drive my car
(3:18)  3. Yesterday
(3:58)  4. Got to get you into my life
(4:07)  5. When the world was young
(5:23)  6. Here comes the sun
(2:55)  7. Blackbird
(4:01)  8. Nature boy
(4:00)  9. Because
(3:54) 10. Yesterdays
(6:16) 11. Something
(6:21) 12. More than you know

"The Emarcy disc comes from Japan and finds Ms. Harrow singing so well that we are beguiled into believing that Ringo, Paul, John and George are legitimate pretenders to the ranks of Jerome, Johnny, Vincent, Victor, and Otto. In the end, we are only incredulous that she has been able to make tortes out of muffins like 'Drive,' 'Got to Get,' 'Here Comes,' 'Because,' and 'Blackbird.' 'Drive' comes off sounding like something Dave Frishberg might have written in an off moment, while 'Here Comes,' enhanced by Bill Easley's pirouetting soprano, is as cheering as a Summer sunrise. 'Got to Get' is slowed down, denied its usual air of hyperventilation and made marginally meaningful. Ms. Harrow manages to make something out of next to nothing with 'Something,' and clears up considerable confusion about 'Yesterdays and 'Yesterday'. The former is a masterwork by Harbach & Kern, whose perfection of lyric ('...gay youth was mine/truth was mine/joyous free and flaming life, forsooth, was mine') wed to melody is examined in great detail in a performance abetted only by George Mraz's resolute bass. 

The latter is Lennon & McCartney's adolescent whine ('Love was such an easy game to play/now I need a place to hide away'), but this singer elevates it to a reasonable level of maturity by dint of her interpretive resourcefulness. Together with 'Yesterday', her reading of three of the other non-Beatle tunes, 'Foolish', 'World,' and 'Know' constitute the warm, pulsating marrow of this recital, the moments during which she eschews any pretension whatever, draws on the pain and pleasure of her own experience and makes confession. With only Roland Hanna's unbelievably empathic piano lighting the way on these three tracks, we emerge from the inner passages of her psyche, abashed but slightly wiser than we were."~ Alan Bargebuhr, Cadence  http://www.nancyharrow.com/rev.php

Claude Tissendier & Saxomania Starring Phil Woods - Out Of The Woods

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1991
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 50:49
Size: 93,4 MB
Art: Front

(7:14)  1. Quill
(5:59)  2. Bloomdido
(4:36)  3. Randi
(6:57)  4. Star Eyes
(6:07)  5. Eddie's Mood
(6:02)  6. Yardbird Suite
(6:04)  7. Memoir de Mes Reves
(7:48)  8. Yes There is a Coda

Born France. While studying classical clarinet and alto saxophone at Toulouse Conservatory, Tissendier began playing jazz. His interests followed a chronological path, starting with New Orleans music, passing through the mainstream into bop. In 1977 he joined the big band led by Claude Bolling and also worked with Gerard Badini and others. In the early 80s he taught at the Paris School of Jazz and in 1983 formed a sextet especially to recreate the music of John Kirby. 

In demand for club and festival dates, the band won many awards for both live performances and records. In 1987 Tissendier formed Saxomania, a seven-piece band featuring two alto saxophones, two tenors and three rhythm. Once again he won honours and gained invaluable experience and exposure accompanying visiting American jazzmen including Benny Carter, Buddy Tate, Jimmy Witherspoon and Spike Robinson, with some of whom he also recorded. Tissendier’s alto playing is striking for its intensity and driving swing and the high musical standards displayed by the Saxomania band ably demonstrate that his is a major talent. ~ Bio  http://www.allmusic.com/artist/claude-tissendier-quintet-mn0000391438/biography

Out Of The Woods

Branford Marsalis - Trio Jeepy

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:06
Size: 170,0 MB
Art: Front

( 9:28)  1. Housed from Edward
(10:33)  2. The Nearness of You
( 5:15)  3. Three Little Words
( 0:47)  4. Makin' Whoopee
( 7:13)  5. UMMG
( 6:29)  6. Gutbucket Steepy
( 8:00)  7. Doxy
( 9:07)  8. Makin' Whoopee (Reprise)
( 9:12)  9. Peace
( 7:57) 10. Random Abstract (Tain's Rampage)

Branford Marsalis clearly had a lot of fun during this set. On seven of the ten numbers included on the double LP (the CD reissue actually has one less selection), Marsalis romps on tenor and soprano in a trio with veteran bassist Milt Hinton and drummer Jeff "Tain" Watts; the remaining three numbers have Delbert Felix in Hinton's place. The performances are quite spontaneous (the occasional mistakes were purposely left in) and Marsalis really romps on such tunes as "Three Little Words," "Makin' Whoopee," and "Doxy." On the joyful outing that is also one of Branford Marsalis' most accessible recordings, Milt Hinton often steals the show. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/trio-jeepy-mw0000200678

Personnel: Branford Marsalis (soprano & tenor saxophones); Milt Hinton, Delbert Felix (acoustic bass); Jeff "Tain" Watts (drums).

Tad Shull - In The Land Of The Tenor

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:58
Size: 138,4 MB
Art: Front

(7:38)  1. Here's The Kicker
(5:14)  2. Night Horse
(8:02)  3. I Keep Going Back To Joe's
(7:39)  4. A Portrait Of Bojangles
(6:06)  5. This Is New
(7:11)  6. Pick Yourself Up
(6:55)  7. Nobody Else But Me
(5:55)  8. Angel Face
(5:15)  9. Prey-Loot

Tad Shull grew up in Westport on; during his school days at the Westport Public School, he started with the saxophone and entered the age of 13 in a swing band, also with 15 years in blues and rock and roll bands. In Westport, he studied jazz piano and improvisation at 1970/71 John Mehegan , with 16 years of saxophone and jazz improvisation with David Liebman (1971-73), with 18 years improvisation with Richard Beirach (1973-4). He attended the New England Conservatory , where he met with Gunther Schuller and Jaki Byard worked. Shull 1978 went to New York and worked in swing clubs in Midtown, as the Jimmy Ryan's and Eddie Condon's. Shull learned while musicians such as Roy Eldridge , Jimmy Rowles , Eddie Locke and Bobby Pratt know that as swing and mainstream jazz veterans were still active. 1981/82 Shull played in the Smithsonian Jazz Repertory Ensemble of Bob Wilber , from which he also received clarinet lessons. Shortly thereafter, he joined the Widespread Depression Jazz Orchestra, with whom he went in the late 1980s on numerous tours. Until 1997, Shull worked with the formation. 

1990 Shull began to play with their own formations; Here, among other things worked the pianist Mike LeDonne and Ray Gallon , bassist Dennis Irwin and drummer Kenny Washington with. He also played with Dizzy Gillespie , Milt Jackson , Joe Williams , Cab Calloway and Woody Herman . In 2002, he participated in various events tribute in honor of Billy Strayhorn in Lincoln Center and played less well-known pieces by the composer. In addition, Shull underwent a study of political science at Columbia University ; Since then he has published about politics, music and culture. Furthermore, he has worked as a marketing consultant and also in the Center for Jazz Studies at Columbia University.  Shull's game on the tenor saxophone combined influences of Coleman Hawkins , Don Byas , Lucky Thompson , Eddie Lockjaw Davis , Johnny Griffin and Sonny Rollins. ~ Bio  http://translate.google.com.br/translate?hl=en&sl=de&u=http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tad_Shull&prev=search

Personnel: Tad Shull (tenor saxophone); Kenny Washington (drums); Mike LeDonne (piano); Dennis Irvin (bass).

David McAlmont and Michael Nyman - The Glare

Styles: Vocal, Avant-Garde
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:59
Size: 161,2 MB
Art: Front

( 3:13)  1. Take the Money and Run
( 3:32)  2. Secrets, Accusations and Charges
( 3:00)  3. City of Turin
( 2:28)  4. Friendly Fire
( 2:38)  5. In Rai Don Giovanni
( 6:29)  6. In Laos
( 3:05)  7. Going to America
( 3:00)  8. Fever, sticks and bones
( 2:41)  9. A Great Day In Kathmandu
( 2:42) 10. Underneath the Hessian Bags
( 2:41) 11. The Glare
(17:24) 12. Songs for Tony

For the benefit of non-Britons, David McAlmont is a vocal sensation hailing from the U.K., noted for his work with the two-man groups Thieves, McAlmont & Butler, and as a solo artist. McAlmont's collaborations were not very long lived enterprises, partly as McAlmont is tough on collaborators, and though he is known to have mended fences with those he has broken with, it's usually long after the fact. Classical composer Michael Nyman is noted for his calm demeanor and patience; while he might seem an unlikely match for the flamboyant McAlmont, here they are together on MN's The Glare. The title work is a song cycle based on McAlmont's own poems, which are further based on news events that happened in the year 2008, though it is not always clear from the lyrics alone what McAlmont is singing about. Nyman occasionally dips into textures he has used before, such as in "In Re Don Giovanni," to find the right setting for McAlmont's words, but it is clear this is the object of dipping back into his bag, and not because Nyman is being particularly lax about the project. 

It is hard to avoid suggesting the overall effect of The Glare is rather similar to Burt Bacharach's 2004 collaboration with soul-specialist Ron Isley, though that was a very good show. So, essentially, is this, with the major differences being that the songs are original to the project and that Nyman's style is considerably tarter and employs far more economy of means than Bacharach's complex polyrhythms and tendency toward thick chords. As McAlmont's singing is so stylized, however, it would have been very useful to have on hand the lyrics, or at least a summary of their content, as it would let the listener in on what the meaning of these songs are. There is no need for the usual pop mystique in regard to the words, and clarity of purpose should have been the main consideration in the presentation of The Glare. From Nyman's end, he has adapted to McAlmont's delivery and sense of style with the same facility as in his work with German cabaret artist Ute Lemper.

Songs for Tony (1993) is scored for sax quartet and has been recorded before; here it is heard from Nyman's own sax section. The four movements of the piece are presented as one long, 17-minute track; the lack of access points for the individual movements is a bit of a disadvantage. With its liberal use of slap-tongue on the baritone and high register writing in the soprano, the first movement, titled "Aggressive" in some sources, amusingly almost sounds like "what if the Six Brown Brothers played minimalism?" The rest of the piece, however, is restrained and reflective, and suits well the music it is paired with. Apart from the minor quibbles already mentioned, overall McAlmont and Nyman's MN release represents a seamless marriage of popular idioms with classical form and results in an eminently satisfying listening experience. ~ Uncle Dave Lewis  http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-glare-mw0001872990

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Benny Goodman - The Complete Trios

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:15
Size: 133.4 MB
Styles: Big band, Swing
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[2:56] 1. Blue
[3:04] 2. After Hours
[2:19] 3. All I Do Is Dream Of You
[3:13] 4. I'll Never Be The Same
[2:26] 5. Bye Bye Pretty Baby
[2:47] 6. Shoe Shine Boy
[2:24] 7. At Sundown
[2:33] 8. When You're Smiling
[2:37] 9. Alll I Do Is Dream Of You
[2:48] 10. Stompin' At The Savoy
[2:56] 11. Mean To Me
[3:00] 12. Puttin' On The Ritz
[3:05] 13. I Never Knew I Could Love Anybody (Like I'm Loving You)
[2:58] 14. Lazy River
[3:07] 15. There'll Be Some Changes Made
[3:50] 16. Everything I've Got Belongs To You
[2:22] 17. But Not For Me
[2:39] 18. Margie
[3:53] 19. Rose Room
[3:07] 20. (What Can I Say) After I Say I'm Sorry

The Complete Captiol Trios is a long-overdue reissue of the five trio sessions Benny Goodman led for Capitol Records. The five sessions are easily broken down into two categories recordings from 1947 and recordings from 1954. The highlights of the 1947 recordings are sessions with pianist Teddy Wilson and drummer Jimmy Crawford. This provided Goodman an opportunity to reunite with Wilson who he had toured with in the late '30s in a trio with drummer Gene Krupa. Goodman and Wilson have a real ease to their interaction and the results are positively joyful. There are three other recordings from 1947, featuring pianist Jimmy Rowles and drummer Tom Romersa; these are good, but not quite as delightful as their 1947 companions. However, the 1954 recordings all featuring pianist Mel Powell, four featuring drummer Eddie Grady, and two featuring drummer Bobby Donaldson are equally wonderful, filled with good humor, elegant flair, and magical interludes. These sessions have been out of circulation for too long, but The Complete Capitol Trios is so well-done  and its fidelity is so good that the wait was certainly worthwhile. ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

The Complete Trios 

Etta James - Jazz

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:55
Size: 86.8 MB
Styles: Jazz-blues vocals
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[3:06] 1. Stormy Weather
[2:55] 2. Fool That I Am
[2:24] 3. Don't Get Around Much Anymore
[2:23] 4. Dream
[3:25] 5. One For My Baby (And One More For The Road)
[3:34] 6. Don't Take Your Love From Me
[2:21] 7. Don't Blame Me
[3:57] 8. These Foolish Things (Remind Me Of You)
[2:12] 9. Prisoner Of Love
[3:52] 10. Lover Man
[3:11] 11. Misty
[4:29] 12. I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)

This CD presents the dynamics of Etta James capabilities as a songstress. She was much more than "Tell Mama". I'm certain everyone is famillar with "At Last". This CD goes beyond that and takes you into her abilities to perform the classic jazz standards with her soulful signature voice. This is a collector's must have. ~Glen

Jazz

The Jazz Ambassadors - Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy

Styles: Jazz, Swing
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:01
Size: 103,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:40)  1. One O'Clock Jump
(3:18)  2. Don't Get Around Much Any More
(3:09)  3. Don't Be That Way
(4:18)  4. I'll Be Seeing You
(3:55)  5. Johnson Rag
(4:10)  6. Ladies of the Big Bands
(2:50)  7. Bugle Call Rag
(8:39)  8. Tribute to Glenn Miller
(3:09)  9. Song of India
(7:49) 10. Songs of World War II

Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy album for sale by Jazz Ambassadors was released Feb 25, 2008 on the Panda Digital label. Full performer name: The Jazz Ambassadors The United States Army Field Band. 

Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy CD music contains a single disc with 10 songs.  http://www.cduniverse.com/search/xx/music/pid/5654379/a/boogie+woogie+bugle+boy.htm

The Jazz Ambassadors includes: Dana Rogers (vocals); Loran McClung (alto saxophone, clarinet); Vince Norman, Pat Dillon (saxophone); Kevin Watt, Greg Reese (trumpet); Lew Chapman, Jim McFalls (trombone); Fred Hughes (piano); Tom Williams (bass).

Dara Tucker - Soul Said Yes

Styles: Vocal, Jazz Soul
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:50
Size: 125,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:38)  1. All That You Have Is Your Soul
(4:05)  2. Save Their Souls - Soul Said Yes
(4:07)  3. Tangerine
(4:59)  4. Easy To Love
(3:37)  5. Partly Cloudy
(4:06)  6. The Space
(5:31)  7. Body and Soul
(4:48)  8. Stronger Than Pride
(5:53)  9. Poinciana
(3:41) 10. Pure Imagination
(3:57) 11. (Our) Love Is Here To Stay
(5:00) 12. I Will Move On Up A Little Higher
(1:23) 13. Soul Says Yes

Jazz vocalist and songwriter Dara Tucker's third studio project, ‘The Sun Season’ is a celebration of life, energy and the human experiencer. Tucker's new project differs from her previous releases, ‘Soul Said Yes’ (2011) and ‘All Right Now’ (2009), in that ten of the twelve tracks that comprise ‘The Sun Season' (2014) are original tunes with memorable melodies, rich harmonies and strong rhythms. These sensibilities are immediately felt on such tunes as "Sometimes Love," "Beautiful Sun," "The Sun Suite" and "See It Always." Her gift of balladry, as evidenced on "Naïve", and "The Nearness of You," one of the albums two covers, reveal a mature singer with the wisdom to communicate the tender essence of love with a flair that is distinct and enveloping. “When I fall in love with a song, I fall in love with the melody first; then the lyrics," Tucker said. "If I can communicate the essence of that melody to the listener without relying on attention-grabbing melisma, and instead, focus on creating subtle yet effective embellishments that will draw the listener in, then I feel I’ve done my job.” Recorded over two days at David Stoller's Samurai Hotel Studios in Queens, New York, the project features pianist Helen Sung, drummer Donald Edwards, guitarist Peter Bernstein, bassist/producer Greg Bryant and horn men John Ellis and Alan Ferber. The resultant material is a joyful presentation with memorable contributions from the entire cast.

"The singer-songwriters of the 60’s, 70’s and 80’s were hugely influential on me, as were gospel and the Great American Songbook. What I end up producing as a writer is essentially an amalgam of all these genres. Couple those influences with one of the baddest New York jazz ensembles around, and you have the ingredients that came together to make up “The Sun Season”. During her brief career, Dara Tucker has already managed to catch the ear of some of the most significant figures in jazz such as vocalist Cassandra Wilson, organist Dr. Lonnie Smith and saxophonist Benny Golson. Within the last two years, Tucker has won audiences on such stages as The Blue Note (NYC), Smoke Jazz Club (NYC), Snug Harbor (New Orleans, LA), The San Jose Jazz Festival, Sculler’s in Boston, MA, Nighttown in Cleveland, OH and the Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame. Peeling away the layers of her diverse background sheds ample light on her unorthodox path to becoming a significant contemporary voice on the vocal jazz scene.

“I grew up singing gospel in church with my brothers and sisters. There were 7 of us, so my father (an accomplished music minister) and my mother (also a singer) had a built in choir. We traveled a lot, and we would back our parents up everywhere we went. I learned tons about harmony before I was even in the first grade. That provided me with amazing ear-training very early on. My father, a minister, didn’t allow secular music in the house. But eventually, when I began to come of age, I started to explore the sounds of big band music and the Great American Songbook. I spent many nights with my radio tucked under my pillow, surreptitiously soaking in artists like The Manhattan Transfer, The Hi-Lo’s, Rosemary Clooney, Ella Fitzgerald and Sarah Vaughn."

Tucker says writing the songs that make up “The Sun Season” was an organic process  mostly. After writing furiously for more than 7 years, she knew it was time to make her own statement. "The question in my manager’s mind was always, 'Where will your songs fit? You’re one of those in-between writers.' This was something I understood all too well. "I'm excited to share this project with everyone, and I look forward to performing the material in concert. It's my statement on what jazz is to me in the here and now. I am thankful to have been given the opportunity to shine a light on the particular Space that I choose to occupy in my singular Sun Season. ~ Bio  http://www.daratucker.com/

The Jeff Steinberg Jazz Ensemble - Jazz Blends: A Robust Blend of Instrumental Jazz With Your Coffee

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:33
Size: 107,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:05)  1. How About You
(3:50)  2. That Old Black Magic
(4:15)  3. Black Coffee
(3:16)  4. Old Devil Moon
(3:40)  5. But Not for Me
(4:17)  6. Taste Of Honey
(4:07)  7. You're the Cream In My Coffee
(4:30)  8. I'll Never Fall in Love Again
(3:56)  9. Coffee Song
(3:41) 10. You Stepped Out Of A Dream
(4:02) 11. Stars Fell on Alabama
(3:48) 12. Teach Me Tonight

After more than thirty-five years as a composer, arranger/orchestrator, pianist, producer and music educator, Jeff Steinberg's work continues to span the professional spectrum which includes spectacular Jazz, Big Band, and Orchestral recordings as well as original scores for advertising, television, and film.Upon graduating from the Berklee School in 1969, he joined The Glenn Miller Orchestra under the direction of Buddy DeFranco and toured the United States, Canada, Great Britain and Japan. Since then, he has worked with such luminaries as Maynard Ferguson, Count Basie, Stan Kenton, Perry Como, and Michel Legrand, and produced and arranged music for the advertising campaigns of General Motors, McDonald s, ALCOA, The Monsanto Company, TimeLife and others. He has arranged, conducted, and performed with and for The London Symphony, Scottish National Orchestra, London Philharmonic Orchestra, the orchestras of Nashville, Detroit and Tampa, as well as Randy Newman, Anne Murray, Art Garfunkel, Roberta Flack, Michael Feinstein, Olivia Newton-John, and Paul Anka. Steinberg currently serves as a frequent POPS Conductor for The Nashville Symphony and other orchestras. As producer/arranger of exciting up and coming artists, Jeff also front The Jeff Steinberg Jazz Ensemble on piano. ~ Editorial Reviews  http://www.amazon.com/Jazz-Blends-Robust-Instrumental-Coffee/dp/B00DPKQB0U

Personnel:  Jeff Steinberg – piano; Denis Solee - tenor sax, baritone sax & flute; George Tidwell - trumpet & flugelhorn; Jack Jezzro – guitar; Jay Patten - alto sax; Jim Ferguson – bass; Jim White - drums

Elaine Lucia - Let's Live Again

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:55
Size: 103,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:26)  1. Azure Te
(3:28)  2. The Wildest Gal In Town
(3:30)  3. All Dressed Up (With A Broken Heart)
(3:41)  4. In The Night
(3:42)  5. Perhaps, Perhaps, Perhaps
(4:29)  6. Blue Prelude
(3:27)  7. I'd Love To Make Love To You
(2:55)  8. Daddy
(4:31)  9. Don't Go
(3:46) 10. I'll Never Fall In Love Again
(3:40) 11. Let's Live Again
(4:14) 12. Sayulita

Elaine Lucia has a beautiful, high and clear voice that is versatile, quite powerful and perfectly fits her swinging style. “My goal has always been to be as great a singer as I can and really master my instrument, to soak songs with emotion while singing in a simple and straightforward style. I don’t want to sound like anyone but myself.” One listen to any of Elaine’s three CDs shows that she has already accomplished that goal and is a memorable jazz singer. She was raised in upstate New York, and was very impressed at the age of four when she saw Judy Garland and Barbara Streisand singing “Happy Days Are Here Again” on Garland’s television show. “I remember thinking: ‘I want to do that!’” When she was 12, Elaine discovered Ella Fitzgerald and that was soon followed by Peggy Lee and Lorez Alexandria. “I like singers who are powerful, musically emotive, with clean, clear tones. I was as amazed by the quality of Ella’s voice as I was of her virtuosity.” Elaine performed her first solos in seventh grade with her school choir, started singing with her choir teacher’s jazz trio on weekends when she was 13, and taught herself guitar. “I simply wanted to be “a great singer”, so I begged my father for voice lessons and started studying opera when I was 15. The training helps me to this day, allowing me the vocal stamina to sing seven nights a week, if I had to, without tiring or harming my vocal instrument. The classical training also helped me win auditions and carried me through the many musical theater productions, rehearsals and shows I was in during my teen years.”

Elaine won a summer scholarship to attend the Chautauqua Institute for the Arts and, after graduating early from high school, received a theater scholarship to the State University of New York at Binghamton (now Binghamton University). She soon switched her focus from theater back to music. Two years later, Elaine transferred to the Eastman School of Music on a vocal scholarship but, when the Reagan administration drastically cut back on college grants, she was unable to attend her fourth year of college. “I decided to take a year off from school and go to northern California. Within a month I was singing in a rock band and recording background vocals with a country group, and I never did get the money to go back to the conservatory.” Since that time, Elaine Lucia has sung in a countless number of situations, performing all kinds of music. “I would sing anything, anytime, anywhere with anyone. I had no fear! I would beg to sit in at the Jazz Workshop in San Francisco, and the veteran musicians there were so generous; they taught me a lot about jazz performance. I learned early to only sing with the very best musicians, and that has been a very educational and joyful experience. It gave me the confidence to put together my own jazz combo, and musical shows, like my Peggy Lee tribute (2002) and our “Classical Jazz to Jazz Classics” repertoire. Ultimately, the great players I have with me now have given me the freedom to experiment with a pretty eclectic song list.”

In 2001, she recorded her debut jazz CD, \"Elaine Lucia...Sings Jazz and Other Things.\" “I felt that I had arrived at an important musical place, so I simply recorded songs that I loved. On my second CD, \"A Sonny Day,\" I followed a specific musical theme, and dedicated the project to my late father, Frank “Sonny” Lucia. The CD musically depicts a day of the life of my father, starting with ‘I Love the Sunrise’ and ending with ‘Final Remembrance.’ It is a very personal project.” Elaine Lucia’s newest CD, \"Let’s Live Again,\" is a tribute to the vocal LPs that the George Shearing Quintet of the late 1950s/early ‘60s recorded with such singers as Nat King Cole, Peggy Lee, Dakota Staton and Nancy Wilson. “On \"A Sunny Day,\" I had the same instrumentation as the George Shearing Quintet that beautiful combination of vibes and guitar with the piano, bass and drums. So we just carried that same quintet into the new project.”

“My trio with pianist Jonathan Alford, bassist Pierre Archain and drummer Alan Hall has been playing and recording with me for over 12 years now. We added Gerry Grosz on vibes when we did \"A Sonny Day; Gerry really fits in very well with the band and wrote almost all of the arrangements on this new CD. And then I asked Randy Vincent to bring his wonderful, classic guitar sound into the mix. The quintet was the perfect setting for me to record some rare songs like the title track ‘Let’s Live Again’ by Nancy Wilson, ‘Don’t Go’ and ‘Azure-Te’ by Nat King Cole, and ‘In The Night’ and ‘I’d Love to Make Love To You’ by Dakota Staton.” Elaine Lucia has appeared at nightclubs and festivals in the San Francisco Bay Area, Los Angeles, San Diego, Reno and Lake Tahoe areas for many years, gathering a solid following among fans and musicians alike. “I gig several times a month, doing a lot of private parties and shows in addition to one or two nightclub dates. I look forward to performing in larger venues and traveling more. I really just want to sing as much as possible!” Her growing number of fans look forward to hearing the very appealing Elaine Lucia singing many more times in the future, adding to her already impressive musical legacy.  http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/elainelucia2

Monday, May 18, 2015

Jacqui Sutton - Billie & Dolly / Notes From The Frontier

Album: Billie & Dolly: Songs Inspired by Billie Holiday & Dolly Parton
Size: 136,3 MB
Time: 58:29
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2010
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. God Bless The Child (5:51)
02. Black Hole (5:56)
03. Lazy Afternoon (4:02)
04. Keeper Of Your Love Sweep Me Off My Feet (6:03)
05. Those Memories Of You (4:48)
06. My Man's Gone Now (5:19)
07. Risk (6:54)
08. The Moon Is Made Of Gold (5:31)
09. Mississippi Song (4:43)
10. A Sleepin' Bee (5:14)
11. Endless Stream Of Tears (4:01)

Heaven knows that contemporary jazz vocals could use a shot of sense-of-humor. The scene hosts a legion of earnest singers paying tribute to their idols, firebrands intent on extending the already stretched-taut realms of scat and vocalese, and soccer moms and dads fulfilling a vanity ambition—all so serious. Sense of humor is in order, but not just any sense of humor will do; it has to be a smart sense of humor, not cheeky or rude, only clever and coy, wafting sophistication and panache.

Appearing just in time is one Jacqui Sutton, late of Houston, Texas by way of Orlando, Rochester, San Francisco, Portland and New York, claiming that ..."Turning 50 and starting a garage band is not the usual vocalist's narrative. But that's what happened with me. It's not just any band, but an orchestra: what I call the Frontier Jazz Orchestra: a stylistic mash-up of jazz, bluegrass and orchestral/chamber music." That is a very promising beginning.

Sutton extends this genre mash-up into the core of her release Billie & Dolly, a tribute to singers Billie Holiday and Dolly Parton. Now, what was that about "earnest singers paying tribute to their idols?" Never mind and just go with it, the two singers make such strange musical bedfellows that their pairing has to meet the fun and smart definition. And in a creative way, what Sutton is trying to do makes perfect sense. She is trying to capture what she terms "frontier jazz"—music as it spreads West, incorporating Mississippi and Aaron Copland, Texas and Virgil Thompson, Louisiana and William Grant Still.

Sutton employs a middle-sized band, an octet, as her Frontier Orchestra, nominally lead by multi-instrumentalist/arranger Henry Darragh, who also provides piano and trombone support in addition to his arranging duties. Darragh made his own splash with his uniformly fine Tell Her For Me (Self Produced, 2010). The presence of cellist Max Dyer, guitarist/six-string banjo player Paul Douglas Chester and flautist Aralee Dorough lend the orchestra its frontier flavor. Sutton favors copious amounts of Chester's banjo, which he plays and solos like a guitar. The effect is digital sepia, old fashioned with a modern edge, which sharpens with Darragh playing the Fender Rhodes (hear the effervescent "Risk").

The most overt homages paid to the two singers are Sutton's Tombstone setting of "God Bless the Child" (sporting a Darragh-composed brass chorale) and a definitive reading of Parton's "Endless Stream of Tears" accented by some virtuoso banjo, fiddle and accordion playing. Sutton tends to all corners of her 40 acres of music. "Keeper of Your Love/Sweep Me Off My Feet" could have been an out take from the musical Oklahoma! (1943) and shows off Sutton's stage experience supported by duet partner Lyndon Hughes.

"The Moon is Made of Gold" (composed by Rickie Lee Jones' father, Richard Loris Jones) is one of the several disc high points, featuring bassist Anthony Sapp and trumpeter Dennis Dotson. Sapp's solo introduction is solid and commanding; Dodson's sounds like Louis Armstrong sparring with Darragh's Jack Teagarden trombone, explosive and inventive, except with softened edges, like Armstrong and Teagarden shared just enough cough syrup before playing. Chester fully quotes "The Sunny Side of the Street" in his banjo solo, before Sutton finishes off the torch with command.

Sutton and her orchestra come from all directions at once. "The Mississippi Song" provides more Broadway by way of El Paso. "My Man's Gone Now" is the Gershwins in the warm Gulf climes. "Those Memories of You" is Bill Monroe by way of Clifton Chenier. Sutton's "Frontier" sound achieves its full maturity in Parton's "Endless Stream of Tears." This is music that has no genre, belonging to all. It is uniquely American and could not have been created anywhere else.

The music on Billie & Dolly arrives fully formed and realized, sounding like the destination Cassandra Wilson has been evolving toward for the past 20 years: a bona fide, organic, earthy, fecund sound tempered with grace and good taste. Sutton's confidence and certainty are almost palpable in every selection from this beautiful and unusual recital. Had Bessie Smith met Bob Wills and recorded with him and the Texas Playboys one dusty late Texas autumn day, the results might have sounded a lot like Jacqui Sutton and her Frontier Orchestra. ~by C. Michael Bailey

Personnel: Jacqui Sutton: vocals; Paul Chester: six-string banjo, guitars; Henry Darragh: piano, trombone; Dennis Dotson: trumpet, flugelhorn; Randy Dunn: theremin; Max Dyer: cello; Ilya Janos: cajon, timbal, agogo, percussion; Anthony Sapp: basses; Aralee Dorough: flute; Lyndon Hughes: vocals; Alan Huff: accordion.

Billie & Dolly

Album: Notes From The Frontier: A Musical Journey
Size: 145,2 MB
Time: 62:27
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Summertime (7:02)
02. Lady Of The Harbor (6:02)
03. Hummingbird/Blue Rondo A La Turk (4:08)
04. Jenny Rebecca (4:04)
05. Freed (5:44)
06. One And Only (5:50)
07. Nature Boy (5:04)
08. Dear Friend (5:09)
09. Where The Music Comes From (3:12)
10. Weary Angel (6:19)
11. Blue Mountain (5:21)
12. Better Than Anything (4:26)

In America's infancy, exploration and a thirst for discovery were endemic to the human spirit. Over time, no stone went unturned, the world shrunk and people, by and large, became content with what they already knew. Something as simple as a new television program or electronic gadget now quenches the thirst-for-the-unknown that was once unquenchable in the mind of mankind, but true musical spirits aren't satisfied in this manner; they never stop searching. These musical pioneers explore the cracks and crevices between styles to find something new and meaningful to say, and vocalist Jacqui Sutton belongs to this breed.

Sutton finds the old in the new, the new in the old, and the joy in blurring lines that some refuse to blur. Her debut—Billie & Dolly (Toy Blue Typewriter, 2010)—honed in on two different figures from opposite sides of the fence, honoring Dolly Parton and Billie Holiday in unique fashion. Now, with Notes From The Frontier, she's broadening her gaze and taking a panoramic look at America.

Her aptly named style—Frontier Jazz—is synthesized through the marriage of bluegrass, musical theater, classical influences, jazz and more, but isn't purely based in any one of those categories; if record stores still existed, they'd have a hell of a time trying to file this one. A rootsy take on Gershwin's "Summertime" isn't Broadway, Appalachia, soul or jazz, but a combination of all four, while "Nature Boy" is Carnegie Hall classicism, Nat "King" Cole and Argentinean tango rolled into one. "Lady Of The Harbor" cuts to the core of the American spirit, with Emma Lazarus' famed "New Colossus" lines floating above a heavenly mixture of Irish flute, keyboard, melodion, trombone, cello, bass, percussion, banjo and guitar. An odd patriotic stirring comes to the surface on "Where The Music Comes From," which is underscored by fife and drum classicism with a modern twist. All of this music speaks to Sutton's sophisticated tastes and all-seeing eye, but she ultimately sounds best when working in neo-soul-meets-folk mode ("Summertime" and "Weary Angel") or gentle, countrified environs ("Blue Mountain"). Her true spirit roams free on this material and connects to the heart and mind in myriad ways.

Notes From The Frontier is melting pot music with a heavy emphasis on the heartland, as seen through modernistic eyes. This is music taken from the branches that sprouted from the tree trunk that grew from the roots of the American people. ~by Dan Bilawsky

Personnel: Jacqui Sutton: vocals; Paul Chester: guitar, banjo; Anthony Sapp: bass; Ilya Janos: percussion; Eddie Lewis: trumpet, flugelhorn, piccolo trumpet; Henry Darragh: keyboards, trombone, melodion; Lyndon Hughes: drums, vocals; Cindy Scott: vocals; Aralee Dorough: flute; Bob Chadwick: Irish flute; Max Dyer: cello.

Notes From The Frontier

Ruby Braff Quartet - Ruby Braff Swings

Size: 52,0 MB
Time: 22:13
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1954/2015
Styles: Jazz: Trumpet Jazz
Art: Front

01. Struttin' With Some Barbecue (2:42)
02. Mean To Me (2:59)
03. Ellie (2:25)
04. You're A Sweetheart (2:55)
05. Blue And Sentimental (2:36)
06. The Girl Friend/The Blue Room (2:46)
07. I Can't Get Started (3:11)
08. Falling In Love With Love/This Can't Be Love (2:35)

One of the great swing/Dixieland cornetists, Ruby Braff went through long periods of his career unable to find work because his music was considered out-of-fashion, but his fortunes improved by the 1970s. A very expressive player who in later years liked to build his solos up to a low note, Braff's playing was instantly recognizable within seconds.

Braff mostly worked around Boston in the late '40s. He teamed up with Pee Wee Russell when the clarinetist was making a comeback (they recorded live for Savoy), and after moving to New York in 1953, he fit easily into a variety of Dixieland and mainstream settings. Braff recorded for Vanguard as a leader, and with Vic Dickenson, Buck Clayton, and Urbie Green. He was one of the stars of Buck Clayton's Columbia jam sessions, and in the mid-'50s worked with Benny Goodman. But, despite good reviews and occasional recordings, work was hard for Braff to come by at times. In the 1960s, he was able to get jobs by being with George Wein's Newport All-Stars and at jazz festivals, but it was not until the cornetist formed a quartet with guitarist George Barnes, in 1973, that he became more secure. Afterward, Braff was heard in many small-group settings, including duets with Dick Hyman and Ellis Larkins (he had first met up with the latter in the 1950s), quintets with Scott Hamilton, and matching wits with Howard Alden. He remained one of the greats of mainstream jazz until his death in 2003. ~by Scott Yanow

Ruby Braff Swings