Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Greetje Kauffeld - Young Girl Sunday Jazz

Size: 96,5 MB
Time: 40:14
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Almost Like Being In Love (Version 1) (2:17)
02. Saturday Night (2:10)
03. Fever (2:55)
04. Handful Of Soul (2:27)
05. Orange Coloured Sky (2:29)
06. Love For Sale (2:04)
07. Shiny Stockings (4:01)
08. Deed I Do (2:01)
09. My Kinda World (2:30)
10. My Blue Heaven (2:14)
11. Day In Day Out (2:49)
12. Makin' Whoopee (2:00)
13. You And I (2:12)
14. It's Alright With Me (1:23)
15. Who Knows Why (4:20)
16. Almost Like Being In Love (Version 2) (2:16)

This new compilation "Young Girl Sunday Jazz" makes Greetje Kauffeld's lost jazz songs from the 1960s available on CD and vinyl LP. Mainly included are recordings from the private vaults of the singer or from musicians' and collectors' archives, with music performed between 1960 and 1969 at concerts, in the studio or at sessions for radio and tv. Greetje in top form, accompanied by some of the most excellent Dutch and German jazz musicians! Moreover, all four tracks of her first and only jazz EP from 1960, entitled "Makin' Whoopee", are reissued here for the first time.

The 16 remastered songs fill a major gap in her discography. Not even one jazz record by Greetje Kauffeld was released during the course of the 60s, although she regularly performed on stage as a truly gifted jazz singer. Her story of a recorded but never released Bossa Nova album, produced 1967 with Oscar Castro Neves in Los Angeles, and its corresponding master tape that somehow landed in the trash bin, fits well into the picture: Until today, she remains one of the great European jazz voices of the 1960s, but without accompanying releases from that period.

Young Girl Sunday Jazz

George Freeman & Chico Freeman - All In The Family

Size: 185,8 MB
Time: 78:54
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Dark Blue (George Freeman) (5:47)
02. Interlude V-2 (Chico Freeman) (0:47)
03. Latina Bonita (George Freeman) (5:29)
04. Interlude V-6 (Chico Freeman) (1:08)
05. My Scenery (George Freeman) (4:21)
06. Interlude V-9 (Chico Freeman) (0:47)
07. Five Days In May (Chico Freeman) (4:04)
08. Vonski (George Freeman) (6:15)
09. Interlude V-8 (Chico Freeman) (1:43)
10. Inner Orchestrations (Chico Freeman) (6:43)
11. Percussion Song Two (Reto Weber) (1:00)
12. Chico (George Freeman) (7:54)
13. Interlude V-5 (George Freeman) (1:40)
14. What's In Between (Chico Freeman) (7:46)
15. Essence Of Silence (George Freeman) (7:54)
16. Interlude V-4 (Chico Freeman) (1:24)
17. A Distinction Without A Difference (Chico Freeman) (4:43)
18. Interlude V-10 (George Freeman) (1:31)
19. Angel Eyes (Chico Freeman) (3:45)
20. Percussion Song One (Reto Weber) (0:28)
21. Marko (George Freeman) (2:35)
22. Chico & George Introductions (George Freeman) (1:01)

"All In The Family" brings together two members of Chicago's Freeman family that have never been recorded together until now: legendary guitarist George Freeman (who celebrated his 88th birthday on April 10th, 2015) and world-renowned saxophonist Chico Freeman (George's nephew and Von Freeman's son.) The musical legacy of Chicago's Freeman Family continues on with "All in the Family." Certainly, the late, great leader of the family, tenor saxophonist Von Freeman is smiling somewhere today!

All of the tracks are original songs (with the exception of the haunting "Angel Eyes") and feature compositions from George Freeman "My Scenery" & "Vonski"; and from Chico Freeman "Latina Bonita" & "Essence of Silence"; along with several short Improvisations, that provide a compelling flow to the recording. "Five Days in May" features percussionist Reto Weber on the 'hang' - a track that should have everyone up and dancing with joy!

A lifetime of music, from playing with Charlie Parker to Gene Ammons and his many fine recordings, George Freeman was recently selected as Chicagoan of the Year in Jazz by Tribune Arts Critic Howard Reich! Chico Freeman's career has taken him from his early years with Chicago's AACM to Earth, Wind and Fire to performing and recording with legendary musicians in New York, including Elvin Jones, to today's International Jazz Festivals.

Musicians featured on the recording are: Kirk Brown, piano; Harrison Bankhead, bass; Hamid Drake, drums; Mike Allemana, guitar; Joe Jenkins, drums; and special guest Reto Weber, hang and percussion.

Recorded in September of 2014 at Sparrow Sound Design Recording Studio, Chicago. Produced by Joanie Pallatto & Bradley Parker-Sparrow. Recording Engineer is Todd A. Carter. Mastered by Joanie & Sparrow. Liner Notes by Neil Tesser. Graphic Design by Al Brandtner.

All In The Family

Stevie Holland - Life Goes On

Size: 99,7 MB
Time: 39:30
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. Life Goes On (3:16)
02. Not While I'm Around (4:37)
03. 99 Miles From L.A (4:24)
04. Tomorrow's Looking Brighter Today (2:52)
05. April Snow (4:31)
06. Another Grey Morning (4:04)
07. Never (4:25)
08. Tea For Two (3:09)
09. Out Of This World (4:27)
10. Skylark (3:42)

New York native Stevie Holland will release a new album, Life Goes On, on June 30. The release is a collection of contemporary pop and American Songbook classics, along with lesser-known songs. The album also includes original tracks written by the jazz singer and award-winning composer Gary William Friedman, who also did the arrangements on Life Goes On.

The 10-track album begins with Johnny Mercer and Hoagy Carmichael’s, “Skylark,” and continues with “Out Of This World” (Harold Arlen/Johnny Mercer), “Tea For Two” (Vincent Youmans/Irving Caesar, with a nod to vocalist/bandleader Joe Mooney), “Never” (Friedman/Holland), “Another Grey Morning” (James Taylor), “April Snow” (Sigmund Romberg/Dorothy Fields), “Tomorrow’s Looking Brighter Today” (Friedman/Holland), “99 Miles From L.A.” (Albert Hammond/Hal David), “Not While I’m Around” (Stephen Sondheim) and “Life Goes On” (Benard Ighner). Grammy Award-winning producer Todd Barkan shaped the album, which features musicians Randy Ingram (piano), Peter Brendler (bass), and Jeff Davis (drums). Guest musicians include renowned trumpeter Nicholas Payton, and a string quartet.

Holland recorded Life Goes On-- her fifth release of standards and original material on 150 Music-- in January 2015. A prior album, Before Love Has Gone, was a USA TODAY top critics’ CD pick of the year, and an All Music Guide Album Pick. In addition to her 20+ year recording career, Holland starred in a one-woman, Off-Broadway musical, "LOVE, LINDA: THE LIFE OF MRS. COLE PORTER," created by Holland and her longtime collaborator Gary William Friedman. The play was directed by Tony-winner Richard Maltby Jr., and enjoyed a successful run at the York Theater in 2013-2014. The musical's popularity led to a licensing deal with theater publisher Tams-Witmark.

Holland has toured nationally for decades, and has performed at New York's Iridium Jazz Club, Jazz at Lincoln Center, The Town Hall, and other venues. In 2004, she received Back Stage Magazine's Bistro Award for Outstanding Vocalist of the Year. ~by Brownie Marie

Life Goes On

Twin Danger - Twin Danger

Size: 125,7 MB
Time: 54:11
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Crossover Jazz, Pop Rock
Art: Front

01. Pointless Satisfaction (5:11)
02. Coldest Kind Of Heart (4:36)
03. I Love (Loving You) (4:05)
04. Just Because (4:06)
05. Save It (4:43)
06. When It Counts (4:13)
07. Sailor (4:15)
08. In Many Ways (4:09)
09. Past Yet Untold (2:46)
10. You're Everything (3:02)
11. No One Knows (4:04)
12. Take It From My Eyes (4:43)
13. Missing Her (4:12)

Twin Danger's 2015 self-titled debut showcases the Brooklyn duo's smoky, neo-noirish jazz- and R&B-infused sound. Formed in 2013, Twin Danger is a collaboration between longtime Sade guitarist/saxophonist Stuart Matthewman and vocalist/guitarist Vanessa Bley. The daughter of jazz pianist Paul Bley, Vanessa Bley has a yearning yet cherubic vocal style that's matched with subtle precision by Matthewman's sophisticated horn arrangements and nuanced instrumental accents. In some ways, their languid, stylish aesthetic does bring to mind the distinctive pop Matthewman helped craft with Sade in the '80s and '90s. However, Twin Danger also have eclectic, wide-ranging tastes that — while certainly steeped in the moody, midtempo, brushes-on-snare-drum swing of jazz — can surprise, as on their torchy, theatrical reworking of Queens of the Stone Age's "No One Knows." Elsewhere, on cuts like "Pointless Satisfaction," "Coldest Kind of Heart," and "When It Counts," you can also hear the influence of legendary cool jazz trumpeter/vocalist Chet Baker and idiosyncratic singer/songwriter Rickie Lee Jones. In fact, backing Twin Danger on most of the tracks is longtime Baker associate bassist Larry Grenadier. Also joining Twin Danger at various times are such virtuosic jazz and crossover pop sidemen as pianist Gil Goldstein (Billy Cobham, Miles Davis, Sting), trumpeter Michael Leonhart (Steely Dan, Jens Lekman, Rufus Wainwright), drummer Joe Bonadio (Sting, Grover Washington, Jr., Chris Botti), and others. While Twin Danger are by no means a straight-ahead jazz group, the inclusion of such experienced jazz musicians proves how much care Matthewman and Bley have taken in shaping an album that works as much more than a genre-bending conceit. Ultimately, with Bley cooing at you through a half-lidded smile, and Matthewman blowing smoke rings around her with his saxophone, Twin Danger have crafted a jazz album perfect for the boozy, late-night afterglow of a rock club, a sound so besotted with heartache, you'll want to close your eyes in reverie.

Twin Danger

Charles Brown - Boss Of The Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:33
Size: 118.0 MB
Styles: Early R&B, Urban blues
Year: 1963/1991
Art: Front

[3:57] 1. Driftin' Blues
[4:05] 2. Through The Courtesy Of Love
[4:08] 3. Since I Fell For You
[2:48] 4. You Are My First Love
[3:42] 5. To You My Love
[3:15] 6. Not In My Wildest Dreams
[2:20] 7. Pledging My Love
[3:10] 8. Tomorrow Night
[3:26] 9. I'm Just Fooling Myself
[2:31] 10. The Glory Of Love
[2:49] 11. Blueberry Hill
[2:52] 12. I Won't Cry Anymore
[2:30] 13. I Miss You So
[2:59] 14. Harbor Lights
[3:38] 15. I Know
[3:16] 16. Cottage For Sale

More 1963-1964 Mainstream sides with some duplication -- the first six tracks here also appear on the DCC compilation. Tracks 7-16 find Brown surrounded by strings as he smoothly intones "Pledging My Love," "Blueberry Hill," and "Cottage for Sale" (they didn't even let him sit down at the keyboard at all for these dates!). ~Bill Dahl

Boss Of The Blues

Carlos Barbosa-Lima - Carioca

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:27
Size: 140.7 MB
Styles: Latin jazz, Guitar jazz
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[2:50] 1. Cochichando
[2:43] 2. Passeio No Rio
[4:22] 3. Carioca
[3:36] 4. Carinhoso
[2:31] 5. Samba De Orfeu
[3:10] 6. Um Amor De Valsa
[3:09] 7. Um A Zero
[3:52] 8. Desafinado
[5:01] 9. Romance
[2:32] 10. Brejeiro
[2:33] 11. Renunciar
[2:50] 12. Entre Guitarra Y Voz
[3:35] 13. Soy
[2:53] 14. Odeon
[4:35] 15. Poema De Amor
[3:34] 16. Samba De Uma Nota Só
[5:47] 17. Lorena
[1:47] 18. La Voz Del Güiro

A national treasure in his native Brazil since launching his recording career as a teenager, guitarist Carlos Barbosa-Lima has a unique dual sense of history which he conveys beautifully on this heartfelt tribute to classic Brazilian music forms choro, chorino, and samba. One of his teachers was the great Andres Segovia, so he's always integrated a sense of classical grace into even his samba and jazz playing. No less than 13 of the 18 pieces on Carioca (meaning "native of Rio de Janeiro") have been arranged by the guitarist in a characteristic style which honors the integrity of various masters but also makes the pieces very much his own. These legends include choro composer Ernesto Nazareth (1863-1934), who composed the gentle title track, the brisk and lively "Odeon," and folkloric romp "Brejeiro" originally for piano. The hour-plus set also includes classics by Alfredo da Rocha Vianna Filho (1897-1973) and more recognizable popular composers Luiz Bonfá ("Samba de Orfeu") and, of course, Barbosa-Lima's close friend and colleague Antonio Carlos Jobim. The guitarist creates subtle but emotionally intense takes on "Samba de uma Nota Só" (One Note Samba) and the instantly familiar "Desafinado." Barbosa-Lima's intention is obviously to create a sweeping sense of the development of the music that has long inspired his own artistry and the world's love of Brazilian music. But the set is engaging enough so that more casual fans of music from that country can enjoy it even without knowledge of the overall concept and the history that drives it. ~Jonathan Widran

Carioca

Charles Earland - Organomically Correct

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:56
Size: 169.3 MB
Styles: Organ jazz
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[ 3:43] 1. The Dozens
[ 4:41] 2. Red, Green And Black Blues
[ 7:36] 3. Undecided
[ 5:22] 4. Old Folks
[ 3:45] 5. A Prayer
[ 7:24] 6. Organic Blues
[ 6:13] 7. Three Blind Mice
[ 5:03] 8. We Are Not Alone
[11:47] 9. Blues For Rudy
[ 7:09] 10. The Thang
[ 6:15] 11. Infant Eyes
[ 4:53] 12. Is It Necessary

Organist Charles Earland recorded nine albums for the Muse label between 1977 and 1995. None stand out particularly, but each had its share of solid, organ-combo swing and programs of mostly blues and ballads. Organomically Correct compiles some of the early highlights in Earland's Muse output: four of the six tracks from Mama Roots (1977), three of the five tracks from Pleasant Afternoon (1978) and all five tracks from Infant Eyes (1978). This music was all recorded between Earland's more commercial (and less memorable) outings on Mercury and Columbia and catch the organ grinder in a kind of Jimmy Smith bag (reinforced even more when paired with Wes-like guitarist Jimmy Ponder on half of the CD's tracks). While the funk and the fire in Earland's playing had been missing since at least his last Prestige record (1974), there's an insistently melodic and appealing groove throughout this set. Another advantage is that two thirds of the tunes here are Earland originals: slow burners that really let the organist cook nicely on a low flame. There are several nice features for George Coleman on tenor sax and Frank Wess on flute too. A surprisingly cohesive set with an enjoyable after-hours feel. ~Douglas Payne

Charles Earland: organ; George Coleman, Houston Person, Mack Goldsbury: tenor sax; Frank Wess: flute and tenor sax; Bill Hardman: trumpet; Jimmy Ponder, Melvin Sparks: guitar; Walter Perkins, Bobby Durham, Grady Tate: drums; Ralph Dorsey, Lawrence Killian: percussion.

Organomically Correct

Deborah Winters - Lovers After All

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:28
Size: 145,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:49)  1. Lovers After All
(7:48)  2. How Am I To Know
(6:16)  3. Get Out Of Town
(5:56)  4. Body and Soul
(5:51)  5. I Love Being Here With You
(6:44)  6. For All We Know
(5:38)  7. Haunted Heart
(5:58)  8. The End of a Love Affair
(4:02)  9. Come Sunday
(5:29) 10. How Deep Is the Ocean
(5:52) 11. I'll Close My Eyes

Placing vocalists under a specific, descriptive heading can be limiting in some ways, but it also shines a light on their greatest strengths. Singer Joe Williams of Count Basie fame resented being labeled as a "blues singer," since he possessed great range and felt that this tag had suggestions of racism behind it; few would argue, however, that his strongest body of work falls into that category. Vocalist Deborah Winters like Williams and any singer worth their weight in sound is no one-trick pony, but she also has one special talent that overshadows her other gifts. On Lovers After All, the Bay Area-based vocalist establishes herself as a ballad singer with which to be reckoned. She can sing over swing with confidence ("Get Out Of Town") and sway to the subtle sounds of the bossa nova ("Haunted Heart"), but her ballad work eclipses all else. Her voice has depth and warmth that instantly soothes and seduces; her use of vibrato is rare and judicious, and her pacing, clarity and diction are perfectly suited to this particular style of song.

While plenty of singers that thrive in softer environments perform romantic fare with minimalistic backing, Winters' winning performances are a bit more dressed up. Trumpeter Peter Welker provides the band arrangements on this project, and his ability to cushion Winters' voice, while still creating music of interest, is key to the album's success. He fleshes out some rich chords with five horns ("Lovers After All"), paints silken saxophone sounds into the body of a classic ("Body And Soul"), and steps into the spotlight with horn-in-hand on an intimate vocal-piano-flugelhorn take on "I'll Close My Eyes." 

Notable instrumental solos from the likes of trombonist Scott Whitfield, tenor saxophonist Roberts Brothers, and several others adds weight to these performances, and several tracks also benefit from the addition of Pete Levin's synthesized string work, which sounds remarkably real, adding substance in subtle ways. The Achilles heel on this album comes in the form of a blues-leaning take on "I Love Being Here With You" with a less-than-comfortable Winters working over a stiff and mechanical-sounding band that includes an organ which doesn't blend well but the other ten tracks suffer no such weaknesses. On Lovers After All, Deborah Winters proves to be an adept singer of songs, teller of timeless tales, and craftswoman of classy musical concoctions. ~ Dan Bilawsky  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/lovers-after-all-deborah-winters-jazzed-media-review-by-dan-bilawsky.php
 
Personnel: Deborah Winters: vocals; Doug Morton: trumpet (1-5, 9, 10); Peter Welker: trumpet (1-5, 9, 10), flugelhorn (11); Charlie McCarthy: alto saxophone (1, 4, 7, 9, 10); Rob Roth: tenor saxophone (1-5, 8-10); Scott Petersen: baritone saxophone (1-5, 9, 10); Mark Levine: piano (1, 4, 8, 9, 10); Chris Amberger: bass (1-4, 6-10); Kevin Dillon: drums (1, 4, 8-10); Andrew Speight: alto saxophone (2, 3, 5); Fred Lipsius: alto saxophone (2, 6); Scott Whitfield: trombone (2, 3, 6, 7); Dave Mathews: pianos (2, 3, 6, 11), Hammond B3 organ (5); Celso Alberti: drums (2, 7); Randy Vincent: guitar (2, 3, 7); Pete Levin: string synth (2, 4, 6); Kendrick Freeman: drums (3, 6); Garth Webber: guitar (5); Tim Haggerty: bass (5); James Preston: drums (5).

Conrad Herwig - New York Breed

Styles: Trombone Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:02
Size: 149,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:12)  1. Code Mode
(7:39)  2. Search for Peace
(6:09)  3. Cousin Mary
(6:50)  4. For Heaven's Sake
(6:47)  5. Gatekeeper
(5:42)  6. 40 Bars
(6:51)  7. Deluge
(4:21)  8. In the Wee Small Hours
(6:04)  9. New Breed
(8:23) 10. I'll Take Romance

Conrad Herwig is one of New York's more prominent progressive/mainstream trombonists. He has recorded and/or performed with a number of famous leaders, including but not limited to Joe Henderson, Jack DeJohnette, and Paquito d'Rivera. Herwig is an alumnus of the famous University of North Texas jazz program, an experience that obviously prepared him well as a big-band player. He began his professional career in the early '80s with Clark Terry's big band; stints with Buddy Rich, Toshiko Akiyoshi, Mel Lewis, and others were to follow. Herwig became an increasingly in-demand sideman in the '90s. He is an accomplished pedagogue, having taught clinics and workshops around the world. Herwig is on the faculty at Rutgers University, Mason Gross School of the Arts.

His seventh album as a leader, The Latin Side of John Coltrane, emphasized an affinity for South American idioms. Heart of Darkness (inspired by the short stories of Joseph Conrad) followed in 1998 on Criss Cross, and a year later Herwig resurfaced with Osteology. The 21st century found Herwig bursting with energy and new projects. He finally issued E o Trio de Barnardo Sassetti in April of 2000 (though it was recorded in 1993). He then released Unseen Universe, a new session, on Criss Cross in the fall and still found time to record with Andy LaVerne; the latter album was issued in 2002 as Shades of Light on Steeplechase. Land of Shadow was issued on Criss Cross in 2003; the band on the date included David Kikoski, Tim Hagans, Ben Schachter, James Genus, and Jeff "Tain" Watts. In 2004 Herwig released Another Kind of Blue on Half Note. It was recorded live in 2003 at the famed Blue Note club, where he and a nonet that included Paquito d'Rivera performed Miles Davis' Kind of Blue in its entirety. The same year, his second Latin-infused Coltrane tribute, Que Viva Coltrane, was issued on Criss Cross. Obligation was released by the same label in 2005.

In 2006, Half Note released the other half of Herwig's 2003 Davis tribute as Sketches of Spain y Mas; the program consisted solely of the late trumpeter's compositions. A quintet studio date entitled A Jones for Bones Tones was issued by Criss Cross in 2007. In 2008, Herwig recorded another live date, and released it as The Latin Side of Wayne Shorter, with the trombonist and arranger fronting a septet for Half Note. Pianist Eddie Palmieri guested on three of the set's nine cuts. Another installment in this series appeared in 2010 as The Latin Side of Herbie Hancock, with guests Palmieri and Randy Brecker. In 2014, Herwig returned with yet another entry into his Latinized jazz homage series with Latin Side of Joe Henderson; recorded live at the Blue Note in N.Y.C. and featuring saxophonist Joe Lovano. ~ Chris Kelsey & Thom Jurek, Rovi  https://itunes.apple.com/gb/artist/conrad-herwig/id54707892#fullText

Personnel: Conrad Herwig (trombone); Dave Leibman (soprano & tenor saxophones); Richie Beirach (piano); Rufus Reid (bass); Adam Nussbaum (drums).

Walt Weiskopf - Song For My Mother

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:43
Size: 121,0 MB
Art: Front

(7:09)  1. Outsider
(5:18)  2. Three Armed Man
(6:41)  3. Barebones
(5:26)  4. End of the Year So Soon
(7:10)  5. Song for my Mother
(5:40)  6. High Noon
(5:26)  7. You Won't Forget Me
(4:06)  8. Where Is Love?
(5:42)  9. Turncoat

Weiskopf's talent broadens into the arranging field on this excellent album. The tenor saxophonist, a graduate of the Eastman School of Music and a veteran of the big bands of Buddy Rich and Toshiko Akiyoshi-Lew Tabackin, employs a nonet: four woodwinds, trumpet, trombone, piano, bass and drums. His charts put you in the mood of Gil Evans, Herbie Hancock and Duke Pearson. His tenor, reminiscent of Trane, Charles Lloyd and a cooler Mike Brecker, threads through the arrangements in integral fashion.

Anders Bostrom's virtuosic flute and alto flute are prominent in solo on three Weiskopf originals. Here and elsewhere, the flutes and alto flutes (all the reedmen double) color the band, giving it a pastel or glowing character. Jim Snidero (alto saxophone) and Scott Robinson (baritone saxophone) cook in their respective solos. Trumpeter Joe Magnarelli and trombonist Conrad Herwig complete the horns, with Joel Weiskopf (piano), Peter Washington (bass) and Billy Drummond (drums) in the rhythm section. ~ Owen Cordle  http://jazztimes.com/articles/8386-song-for-my-mother-walt-weiskopf

Personnel: Walt Weiskopf (tenor saxophone, flute, alto flute); Jim Snidero (alto saxophone, flute, alto flute); Scott Robinson (baritone saxophone, flute, bass clarinet); Joe Magnarelli (trumpet); Conrad Herwig (trombone); Anders Bostrom (flute, alto flute); Joel Weiskopf (piano); Peter Washington (bass); Billy Drummond (drums).

Denise Perrier - East Meets West

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:18
Size: 122,5 MB
Art: Front

(6:10)  1. Fool On The Hill
(6:11)  2. Don't Explain
(4:18)  3. Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans?
(5:26)  4. Day Dream
(7:07)  5. What A Difference A Day Made
(5:23)  6. Drinking Again
(5:34)  7. Bewitched, Bothered & Bewilder
(6:42)  8. I'm Just A Lucky So And So
(6:22)  9. Besame Mucho

Denise Perrier has spent most of her thirty-year career performing in the San Francisco Bay  Area and touring    Europe,  Latin America and Asia. With her latest CD, "Denise Perrier and the Novosibirsk Philharmonic Orchestra," she has moved to  a higher level of artistry and popularity.  Harkening back to the time when a singer told the story and left the rest to the instrumentalists, Denise has a very  welcoming straight-ahead style, concentrating on the standards and adding blues and Latin for variety. Her  musical configuration, Denise connects with audiences that’s her forte.

She is known as  “the voice with a  heart.” Blessed with a rich contralto voice and the ability to sing ballads and blues with equal artistry, Denise has performed in the theatrical revue "In the House of the Blues,"  portraying Bessie Smith; and the vaudeville “One Mo’  Time.”  She was featured in the Grammy-nominated CD, "Color Me Blue," with Brother Jack McDuff and, in addition to the latest one,  has produced four CDs: "The Second Time Around" (2008),  "I Wanna Be Loved" (1997), also with Houston Person, and  "East Meets  West" (2001) which includes sides performed in Russia.  In 2004, she came out with "Live at Yoshi's; Blue Monday Party," which received much critical acclaim and reached high on the jazz charts.   Denise was born in Louisiana but moved to the East Bay Area with her family at the age of five.  Denise didn't sing extensively in church, but her family had a jukebox, and she heard records by Billie Holiday and the other great early jazz singers.  Denise started singing in public when she was in a Haitian and Afro-Cuban dance group, obtaining her first professional engagement with a vocal ensemble called the Intervals.  Louis Armstrong saw the group and put them in his entourage for a performance in Las Vegas.  Shortly afterwards, Denise was recruited for a three-month gig in Australia, which turned into an extended stay in the Far East.

She performed in Hong Kong, the Philippines, Taiwan,    Formosa, Japan, Guam, and other Asian cities, staying for    almost five years with Hong Kong as her home base. She also spent a year and a half in Vietnam during the war touring military bases. Denise returned to the United States, lived in New York for five years, and then settled in San Francisco, where she became one of its most popular performers. She performs extensively in the San Francisco Bay Area's most prestigious venues as well as touring Latin America and Europe. ~ Bio  http://www.deniseperrier.com/BIO.htm

Personnel: Denise Perrier (vocals); Tammy Hall, Andrei Kondakov (piano); Jimmy Robinson (drums); Raul Ramirez (percussion)

Claude Tissendier Quartet - The Liquorice Stick

Styles: Clarinet Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:27
Size: 129,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:03)  1. The Liquorice Stick
(5:00)  2. Begin The Beguine
(4:49)  3. Stompin' At The Savoy
(3:56)  4. Rue des Lavandières
(5:07)  5. Frenesi
(4:55)  6. It Had To Be You
(5:08)  7. Runnin' Wild
(4:00)  8. Memories Of You
(5:30)  9. Carioca
(4:19) 10. Broadway Song
(5:11) 11. Midnight At The Bayou
(4:22) 12. Sing, Sing, Sing

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. http://www.allmusic.com/artist/claude-tissendier-quintet-mn0000391438/biography

Personnel: Claude Tissendier (clarinet); Bernard Rabaud (vibes); Jacques Schneck (piano); Sylvain Clevarec (drums)

Monday, June 29, 2015

Georgie Fame & Madeline Bell - Singer

Size: 124,6 MB
Time: 53:43
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz/Blues Vocals
Art: Front & Back

01. Prelude (The Game Of Life) (Orchestra) (3:01)
02. Small Town (Sung By Georgie Fame) (3:35)
03. My Second Home (Sung By Madeline Bell) (5:25)
04. Singer (Sung By Georgie Fame) (3:39)
05. Learning (Sung By Madeline Bell) (5:57)
06. Big Town (Sung By Georgie Fame) (4:46)
07. That's How Hit Records Are Made (The Crap Song) (Sung By Madeline Bell) (3:56)
08. The Blues And Me (Sung By Madeline Bell) (4:32)
09. Where Do You Go From Here (Sung By Georgie Fame) (3:46)
10. Isn't It Strange (Sung By Georgie Fame & Madeline Bell) (3:52)
11. Be True To Yourself (Sung By Georgie Fame & Madeline Bell) (4:24)
12. From Now On (Sung By Georgie Fame & Madeline Bell) (3:35)
13. Epilogue (The Game Of Life) (Sung By Georgie Fame) (3:10)

In the autumn of 1984 composer and arranger Steve Gray and myself were involved in a concert for Dutch radio, with the renowned Metropole Orchestra with whom we had both worked individually in the past. Another member of that production was the well known Dutch entertainer Edwin Rutten. The three of us went to supper after the concert and Edwin suggested that Steve and I might compose an original work which could be performed with the Metropole Orchestra. We were flattered and a little excited by the prospect but nothing further was discussed. In January 1985 I was on one of my regular tours of Australia when Steve called me in Sydney to say that he'd heard from Holland and the project was on!. Furthermore the proposed recording dates were March 3rd/4th and 5th. I wasn't due back in England until mid-February but Steve said he would make a start with some ideas until I returned. We lived not that far from each other and I went over to his place as soon as I got back from Australia. Steve had prepared a handful of melodies and it was decided that the work should be about a female singer's life story-in a nut shell. We had agreed that the subject of the story should be played/sung by one of our great friends and favourite artist's Madeline Bell. I was to be the narrator and we had barely three weeks to complete the project. Steve had the added responsibly of scoring the ten or so songs for a big band and orchestra of over 60 pieces plus a 30 piece choir and we met constantly. I personally made many trips from the bedroom to the music room in the middle of the night pursuing ideas and lyrics. I had never been put under such pressure to meet a deadline but I am eternally grateful to Steve Gray for dragging me out the lyricist's closet. I had also never been involved in an artistic work of such magnitude. Things progressed well and we all met up in Hilversum with the orchestra which was conducted by our good friend the late, great Rogier Van Otterloo. I was still writing some lyrics during the actual recordings and Madeline herself helped out with one line of the song 'My Second Home'. Drama ensued on the last day when I developed 'mental block' in completing the lyric's for the final song 'The Game of Life' which I was also meant to sing but thanks to the patience and understanding of all concerned, I was given a little 'extra time'. I emerged after about 20 minutes in 'solitary confinement' and sang the final piece to everyone's relief (and satisfaction). We were all immensely pound to have pulled it off and the orchestra invited us back 20 years later for a repeat performance. Better since, in 2004 we were given the opportunity to present the work in a matinee concert at Tilburg, Holland where Steve Gray was present in the audience. Thanks to the Dutch Radio Authorities we are proud to be able to make the 'live concert' version available to the general public on CD. The whole story is told through music and song and there is not one spoken word. We sincerely hope that you enjoy sharing the emotions and experience that come with this work which we dedicate to the memory of Steve Gray.

Singer

Pete Levin - Iridium Live 008 4-18-2012

Size: 134,3 MB
Time: 58:13
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Might Have Been ( 4:53)
02. Shades Beyond ( 8:31)
03. Little Sunflower ( 9:36)
04. Back In The Schoolyard (12:41)
05. Little Wing ( 8:47)
06. Old Wine, New Bottles (13:42)

Organist Pete Levin, a former member of the Gil Evans Orchestra, reunites in a live setting with fellow ex-bandmates at the Iridium in 2012. The set list includes modern big-band arrangements from the Gil Evans songbook, two of Levin’s compositions, and cover versions of Freddie Hubbard’s “Little Sunflower,” the Lenny White penned “Old Wine, New Bottles” and the Jimi Hendrix classic “Little Wing.”

Bio:
Pete Levin (born December 20, 1942) is an American jazz keyboardist, composer and horn player.

Levin grew up in Brookline, Massachusetts. His first instrument as a teenager was the French horn. He studied at Boston University and received a master's degree from Juilliard School of music in New York City. In the early 1970s he joined the Gil Evans Orchestra as a French horn player. At the time, Levin was experimenting with synthesizers. Over time Gil Evans incorporated Levin's synthesizer sound into the compositions and Levin's role changed to a full-time keyboardist. His fifteen-year association with the Gil Evans Orchestra was followed by an eight-year association with Jimmy Giuffre.

Levin plays the hammond organ, clavinet and moog synthesizer. He has produced several albums as a band leader including the 2007 Deacon Blues. In 2014 he released a collaborative album with his brother, bassist Tony Levin, titled Levin Brothers. The album is a tribute to and styled after the works of Oscar Pettiford and Julius Watkins. Levin has performed for film and television scores including Missing in Action, Lean on Me, Silver Bullet, Red Scorpion, The Color of Money, Maniac, Spin City, America's Most Wanted and Star Trek. He has written scores of his own for Zelimo and The Dybbuk. He was awarded the Army Commendation Medal for writing the official military band arrangement of the U.S. Infantry song.

He has worked with a wide range of artists including Carla Bley, Brubeck Brothers, Hiram Bullock, Jimmy Cobb, Billy Cobham, Willie Colón, Miles Davis, Rachelle Farrell, Bryan Ferry, Gregory Hines, Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Band, Annie Lennox, Chuck Mangione, Charles Mingus, Gerry Mulligan, Jaco Pastorius, Robbie Robertson, Salt-n-Pepa, David Sanborn, John Scofield, Wayne Shorter, Paul Simon, Lew Soloff, Vanessa Williams, and Lenny White.

Regarding his creative work, Levin stated that "All my arranging and orchestrating work is grounded in what I experience in live performance (...) My best and most creative ideas come from playing live."

Iridium Live 008 4-18-2012

Stephanie Porter - Radio Theatre

Size: 105,7 MB
Time: 45:17
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz/Soul Vocals
Art: Front

01. He Thinks That I'm Wonderful (4:29)
02. Into November (4:43)
03. Around The World (3:43)
04. Come Back To Me (2:59)
05. Poor Little Child (5:07)
06. No More Blues (4:13)
07. Gone (6:51)
08. Right On Time (4:20)
09. Day Dreams (3:50)
10. I'm Afraid The Masquerade Is Over (4:56)

Stephanie Porter - Vocalist (1-10)
Marius Nordal - Piano /arranger (1-2-5-6-7)
Bill Anschell - Piano /arranger (4-9-10)
Craig Hoyer - Piano/ Electric /arranger (3 & 8)
Dan O'Brien - Bass (1-10)
Steve Yusen - Drums (1-10)
Dan Adams - Percussion (3 & 6)
Mike West - Saxophone / flute (3-6-7-8)
Steve Madaio - Trumpet (1 & 5)

Stephanie Porter is a premier jazz vocalist who has truly made her mark on the Northwest scene. Musically inspired at an early age. Stephanie found herself mesmerized by music and the many layers of interpretations of songs by both instrumentalists as-well-as vocalists. Moved particularly by jazz and it's progression of energy combined with cool. A stylist that has been influenced by music ...music and its many styles.

Stephanie said “It’s difficult to define a specific artist as a major influence... Music is like a painting of a vast garden. I am inspired by each organic note and phrase. I am always searching for more and more colors to add. I strive to be true to the songs I sing, honest with the audiences listening and enveloped in creativity with my band."

Nick Morrison, of KPLU describes her as “a favorite not only among Jazz listeners, but among Jazz artists as well”.

Her voice has taken her to France, England, Canada, and other parts of the world. Locally, she has entertained audiences at the Triple Door, The Pampas Room, Tula’s Jazz Club as well as Benaroya Hall and Jazz Alley. Whether singing with a symphony or in a duo she pours her heart and soul in to the music. Her recordings have received air play both nationally and internationally. Editor’s Picks CDBaby stated "I am in total awe with this woman’s voice."

Her latest album, Radio Theatre, is a brilliant showcase of her amazing talent as a vocalist, Porter delivers each note with purpose and honesty.

Radio Theatre

The Everly Brothers - The Everly Brothers Show

Size: 116,5 MB
Time: 49:22
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1970/2005
Styles: Pop Rock
Art: Front

01. Introduction (1:31)
02. Mama Tried (2:03)
03. Kentucky (2:43)
04. Bowling Green (2:34)
05. ('Til) I Kissed You (1:57)
06. Wake Up Little Susie (1:43)
07. Cathy's Clown (1:23)
08. Bird Dog (1:57)
09. Maybellene (2:16)
10. Baby What You Want Me To Do (4:52)
11. All I Have To Do Is Dream (3:11)
12. Walk Right Back (2:09)
13. Medley Susie Q - Hey Jude (5:24)
14. Lord Of The Manor (4:12)
15. I Wonder If I Care As Much (3:11)
16. Love Is Strange (3:59)
17. Medley Let It Be Me - Give Peace A Chance (4:09)

On Wednesday, July 8, 1970, at 9 p.m. EDT, the ABC television network broadcast the first of 11 weekly episodes of The Everly Brothers Show, a one-hour musical variety program that was the summer replacement for The Johnny Cash Show. The same month, Warner Bros. Records released a double LP (later reissued as a single CD) also called The Everly Brothers Show. But the album was not a soundtrack to the TV series; it was a live recording that had been made five months earlier at the Grand Hotel in Anaheim, CA, at which the duo of Don and Phil Everly, backed by an electric guitar/bass/drums trio, played a mixture of their old hits, some newer songs, and various cover material. There was a sort of autobiographical structure to the show, at least at first, as Don Everly began with a spoken introduction that harked back to the brothers' youth, leading into a series of songs loosely related to that youth -- "Mama Tried," "Kentucky," and "Bowling Green" -- followed by a batch of their hits. After a cover of Chuck Berry's "Maybellene," there was a lengthy medley of rock & roll songs, then a string of ballads. But, as Don Everly's sardonic remarks suggested, it was all taken in a simultaneously off-hand and dismissive manner. The brothers' fast numbers "('Til) I Kissed You," "Wake Up Little Susie," "Cathy's Clown," and "Bird Dog," were taken at breakneck tempos, as if to get them out of the way, while the ballads that came toward the end, "All I Have to Do Is Dream," "Walk Right Back," "I Wonder If I Care as Much," and "Let It Be Me," were slowed down. The strangest section was the rock & roll medley, eighteen-and-a-half minutes of seemingly random snatches of songs including Berry's "Rock and Roll Music," the Beatles' "The End," "Aquarius" from Hair, "If I Were a Carpenter," the Everlys' own "The Price of Love," "The Thrill Is Gone," and "The Games People Play," with riffs from other songs thrown in, and including drum and bass solos (a standard indulgence of the time, admittedly). The duo displayed a bizarre Beatles obsession that included appending the coda from "Hey Jude" to "Susie Q" and even turning "Let It Be Me" into "Give Peace a Chance" at the end. Their harmonies were as attractive as ever, but this was not a live album that showed off their stage talents to advantage. ~by William Ruhlmann

The Everly Brothers Show

Johannes Faber Quartet - I Gotta Right To Sing The Blues

Size: 154,6 MB
Time: 67:05
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2010/2015
Styles: Jazz Blues, Vocals
Art: Front

01. Westend Blues (5:25)
02. Istanblues (4:33)
03. Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless Child (5:58)
04. Venerdis Blues (3:18)
05. Die Biberratte (6:32)
06. Heart Of Stone Blues (4:26)
07. Tuesday Bluesday (8:53)
08. Bangalore (5:07)
09. Drum Line (7:42)
10. I Gotta Right To Sing The Blues (8:57)
11. Two Blues Or Not Two Blues (6:09)

Johannes Faber was born in Munich in 1952 and studied trumpet and composititon in Munich, Graz and Boston.
He worked with the Radio Big Band Stuttgart (1980-90) and the Radio Big Band Hamburg (1990-96) as a trumpet soloist, composer and arranger.
Faber composed the soundtrack for the movie "Rally Paris-Dakar“ and founded the jazzrock-band CONSORTIUM with Billy Cobham dr, Christof Lauer sax, Joerg Reiter p, Dave King e-b.
He had a professorship at the Hochschule für Musik und darstellende Kunst in Hamburg. The trumpeter played - amongst many others - with Chaka Khan, Anthony Jackson, George Adams, Charlie Mariano Dado Moroni, Konstantin Wecker, dem UNITED JAZZ & ROCK ENSEMBLE und Peter Herbolzheimer’s RHYTHM COMBINATION AND BRASS, composed for Michael Ende (author of the NEVERENDING STORY) and was given the Jazz Award Baden-Württemberg (1985) .
He played on several jazz festivals as in Montreux, at the Jazzfest Berlin, the Deutsches Jazzfestival Frankfurt and so forth.

In 1998 he composed the music for the theatreplay HIAS in which he also played the main role in a production of the Staatstheater am Gärtnerplatz(Munich). Since the year 2000 he organizes the jazzprogram "Jazz im Gärtnerplatz“ for the same theatre and sings and acts the Orator (Staatstheater am Gärtnerplatz) and Sarastro (Operafestival Gut Immling) in THE MAGIC FLUTE by Mozart. 2003 he composes the piece "4“ for the BALLETTTHEATER MÜNCHEN under the direction of Philip Taylor also for the Staatstheater am Gärtnerplatz. 2006 he teaches jazz history at the Conservatorio Nicolo Paganini in Genova(Italy).
2012 Professorship at the "Conservatorio Nicolò Paganini"

I Gotta Right To Sing The Blues

Lee Morgan - Standards

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:57
Size: 96.1 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Trumpet jazz
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[5:01] 1. This Is The Life
[7:17] 2. God Bless The Child
[5:49] 3. Blue Gardenia
[6:00] 4. Lot Of Livin' To Do
[5:48] 5. Somewhere
[6:06] 6. If I Were A Carpenter
[5:53] 7. Blue Gardenia

This session headed by trumpeter Lee Morgan was not initially released until this 1998 CD. Morgan is joined by an all-star cast of James Spaulding on flute and alto, tenor saxophonist Wayne Shorter, baritonist Pepper Adams, pianist Herbie Hancock, bassist Ron Carter and drummer Mickey Roker, but the music overall is not all that memorable. Most of the selections, although allegedly "standards," were of more recent vintage (like "A Lot of Livin' to Do" and "If I Were a Carpenter"), and even if Morgan and the other musicians play well, nothing too exciting occurs. Although not a dud, it was not a major loss that this recording stayed in the vaults. ~Scott Yanow

Standards

Randy Weston - Portraits Of Duke Ellington

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:17
Size: 122.0 MB
Styles: Post bop, Piano jazz
Year: 1990/2006
Art: Front

[12:03] 1. Caravan
[ 5:30] 2. Heaven
[11:31] 3. Sepia Panorama
[ 8:58] 4. Limbo Jazz
[ 7:24] 5. C Jam Blues
[ 7:48] 6. A Chromatic Love Affair

On the second of three quartet recordings (with bassist Jamil Nasser, drummer Idris Muhammad and percussionist Eric Asante) recorded on three consecutive days, pianist Randy Weston plays six Duke Ellington compositions. Other than "Caravan" and "C Jam Blues," the tunes are rarely performed ("Limbo Jazz" and "Chromatic Love Affair" are far from standards), allowing Weston to construct inventive improvisations that do not borrow from the original recordings; even "Caravan" sounds fresh. All three of these releases (the others are a set of originals and a program of Thelonious Monk tunes) are easily recommended to Randy Weston's fans. ~Scott Yanow

Portraits Of Duke Ellington

Raphaële Atlan - Inner Stories

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:28
Size: 111.0 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[5:10] 1. Dienda
[4:54] 2. So Much Better
[7:24] 3. Sinking
[4:33] 4. When You Dream
[3:49] 5. Deep Blue Song
[2:12] 6. Chega De Saudade
[1:28] 7. Father And Son
[6:00] 8. Again
[5:13] 9. Funny Voices
[3:23] 10. Vanished And Gone
[4:15] 11. Take My Time

Raphaële Atlan: vocals, piano; Romain Pilon: guitar; Nicolas Charlier: drums; Zacharie Abraham: double bass.

The qualities of pianist and composer Raphaële Atlan have been noticed as soon as her first album, “Inner Stories”, was published in 2011. It offers a variety of warmer colors and more aerial tonalities, in a blend of jazz, pop, folk, and Brazilian musics. Her compositions and texts evoke a luminous universe, into which enthusiasm and melancholy pierce by turns. The sensibility of the voice, the delicacy of the piano and the softness of the guitar intermingle and improvisation arises freely!

Inner Stories