Friday, May 13, 2016

Bobby Hutcherson - Wise One

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:45
Size: 123.0 MB
Styles: Vibraphone jazz
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[7:51] 1. Wise One
[5:48] 2. Like Sonny
[5:08] 3. Aisha
[5:28] 4. Equinox
[6:58] 5. All Or Nothing At All
[4:34] 6. Nancy (With The Laughing Face)
[6:40] 7. Spiritual
[6:16] 8. Out Of This World
[4:58] 9. Dear Lord

Bobby Hutcherson: vibes; Anthony Wilson: electric guitar; Joe Gilman: piano; Glenn Richman: bass; Eddie Marshall: drums.

Recently named NEA Jazz Master, Bobby Hutcherson has an extensive discography, though opportunities to record as a leader have slowed a good bit since the dawn of the 21st century. Hutcherson is still very much an important vibraphonist, as this excellent tribute to John Coltrane reveals. All nine songs were either written or recorded by Coltrane, though Hutcherson's choice of instrumentation deliberately moves away from the jazz master's typical groups. Guitarist Anthony Wilson takes the place of a second reed instrument while pianist Joe Gilman and drummer Eddie Marshall both have a lighter style of playing in comparison to McCoy Tyner and Elvin Jones respectively. Bassist Glenn Richman is not as well known as his fellow musicians on the date, though he establishes himself as a solid player from the onset. Hutcherson, who, despite being active in jazz for the last seven years of Coltrane's life, never recorded with him, offers interpretations that provide a striking contrast to those heard on the late saxophonist's albums.

The four Coltrane pieces, for the most part, are infrequently explored by other jazz musicians. The brooding, powerful "Spiritual" retains its tension, though the vibes are much lighter than Coltrane's soprano sax, as is Wilson's guitar in place of Eric Dolphy's piercing bass clarinet. The breezy Latin setting of "Like Sonny" contrasts with the reflective interpretation of the title track and the gently swinging "Dear Lord."

Although Coltrane was a prolific composer during the 1960s, he took time out to explore compositions by others. Two standards, "Nancy (With the Laughing Face)" and "All or Nothing at All," appeared on the Ballads album, rumored to have been a rebuttal to critics who thought Coltrane was no longer capable of playing a great melody without an avalanche of notes. Hutcherson takes the former in a reserved fashion while the latter is played as a brisk bossa nova, with delightful comping by the rhythm section. Tyner's "Aisha" is a rarity because Coltrane rarely recorded his sidemen's originals. Hutcherson's spacious, shimmering arrangement does much to unveil its beauty, an early work that is deserving of greater exploration by others. ~Ken Dryden

Wise One

Solveig Slettahjell - Slow Motion Orchestra

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:32
Size: 120.3 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2001
Art: Front

[4:30] 1. All The Way
[5:41] 2. Comes Love
[5:14] 3. Blame It On My Youth
[6:46] 4. My Heart Belongs To Daddy
[3:06] 5. What A Little Moonlight Can Do
[4:17] 6. Little Girl Blue
[4:32] 7. I've Got A Crush On You
[5:34] 8. I Remember Clifford
[3:05] 9. Reaching For The Moon
[6:45] 10. Beatiful Love
[2:59] 11. Wild Is The Wind

Solveig Slettahjell: vocals; Sjur Miljeteig: trumpet, alto and barytone horns, electronics, vocals; Even Hermansen: guitar, vocals; Morten Qvenild: grand piano, synthesizers, harps, marxophone, programming, vocals; Andreas Ulvo: organ, vocals; Jo Berger Myhre: bass, baritone guitar, vocals; Per Oddvar Johansen: drums, percussion, electronics, musical saw, vocals.

From a simple idea, great things can sometimes come. When Solveig Slettahjell formed Slow Motion Orchestra for a 2001 performance that became the 15-piece group's eponymous first recording on Norway's Curling Legs, the premise was simple: take a collection of songs from the Great American Songbook, and slow them down. Way down. But over the course of three albums and an eye-opening performance at Kristiansand's 2007 Punkt Festival, the Norwegian singer and her trimmed-down quintet proved that slow, powerful and dramatic need not be mutually exclusive terms. ~John Kelman

Slow Motion Orchestra                

Horace Parlan - Hi-Fly

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:32
Size: 163.8 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Piano jazz
Year: 1997
Art: Front

[6:55] 1. Hi-Fly
[7:27] 2. Round Abour Midnight
[4:43] 3. Once I Loved
[6:59] 4. Darn That Dream
[5:30] 5. Who Cares
[4:41] 6. West Coast Blues
[6:33] 7. Hi-Fly
[7:25] 8. Round Abour Midnight
[4:46] 9. Once I Loved
[6:51] 10. Darn That Dream
[5:12] 11. Who Cares
[4:25] 12. West Coast Blues

This Horace Parlan session is a bit different from most of his albums for Steeplechase. First, he utilizes a drummerless trio with guitarist Doug Raney and bassist Wilbur Little. Second, it was recorded initially via direct-to-disc, which meant no editing was possible and an entire album side had to be recorded in one take without stopping. The short-lived revival of this process produced albums of exquisite sound, but they had to be limited edition due to the limited wear the few disc masters could endure in the manufacturing process. Fortunately, the masters were either in great condition or the session was also taped on reels as well, because the identical six songs (played in the same order) are heard in alternate versions on this expanded CD reissue. The ease with which Parlan and Raney handle "Hi-Fly" over Little's walking bass is the mark of masters, while the bittersweet air of the bossa nova "Once I Loved" is carried by the guitarist. The alternate takes are just as viable as the masters, so it must have been difficult for producer Nils Winther to choose between them when the original LP was being prepared. ~Ken Dryden

Hi-Fly

Sergio Pires & Bobby Broom - Passport Not Required

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:54
Size: 128.0 MB
Styles: Brazilian jazz, Latin rhythms
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[7:18] 1. A Tua Presenca
[4:50] 2. Zoom Zum
[7:57] 3. Dragao
[5:19] 4. Nove Meses
[3:47] 5. Tempo De Estio
[8:10] 6. Boipeba
[6:26] 7. Baton
[5:54] 8. Beira Do Mundo
[6:08] 9. Tarde Em Itapua

Sergio Pires was born in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, self taught songwriter, playing original musical since his early twenties back in Brazil. Met Bobby Broom while living in Chicago around 1992 and since then they have been playing together around town. Bobby Broom is a gifted guitarrist, who played with Miles Davis, Stanley Turrentine, Sonny Rollins, among others. Currently on tour with Sonny Rollins, Bobby has a strong following all over the world and he is also a part of the Deep Blues Trio and his own trio.

Passport Not Required was produced by Sergio Pires and Bobby Broom in 2007, it has 9 songs blending from Brazilian music to jazzy organic grooves. Besides the original material written by Sergio Pires, it has two songs written by Cateano Veloso and Tarde em Itapua written by Toquinho and Viniicius de Moraes.

Passport Not Required

Joey Calderazzo - Secrets

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:46
Size: 107,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:42)  1. Secrets
(4:32)  2. No One Knows I'm Here
(6:07)  3. Aurora
(4:55)  4. Scriabin
(7:36)  5. Echoes
(5:13)  6. Filles De Kilimenjaro
(5:34)  7. Last Visit Home
(7:03)  8. ATM

Joey Calderazzo may not have achieved the acclaim of some of the pianists of his generation like Benny Green and Bill Charlap, but he has consistently created CDs that stand the test of time. These 1995 sessions for Audio Quest feature him leading a variety of different ensembles ranging from trios to octets with potent arrangements by Bob Belden. Six of the eight tracks are Calderazzo's compositions, highlighted by the infectious horn lines in his rhythmic "Echoes" and the wistful air of "Last Visit Home." His trio with bassist James Genus and drummer Clarence Penn are afire in his driving "No One Knows Why I'm Here" and the explosive "ATM." Belden's setting of Miles Davis' "Filles de Kilimenjaro" has an exotic air with the addition of guitarist Fareed Haque and Charles Pillow's English horn. This is a rewarding disc that deserves to be more widely known.~Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/secrets-mw0000645669

Personnel: Joey Calderazzo (piano); Tim Ries (soprano saxophone, flute); Charlie Pillow (tenor saxophone, English horn, bass clarinet); Tim Hagans (trumpet, flugelhorn); Earl McIntyre (bass trombone, tuba); John Clark (French horn); Tomas Ulrich (cello); Fareed Haque (guitar); James Genus (bass); Clarence Penn (drums).

Secrets

Archie Shepp & Horace Parlan - Goin' Home

Styles: Saxophone And Piano Jazz
Year: 1977
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:15
Size: 118,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:10)  1. Goin' Home
(4:43)  2. Nobody Knows The Troubles I've Seen
(4:21)  3. Go Down Moses
(6:14)  4. Steal Away To Jesus
(4:51)  5. Deep River
(4:40)  6. My Lord What A Morning
(4:22)  7. Amazing Grace
(5:20)  8. Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless Child
(2:43)  9. Swing Low, Sweet Chariot
(7:48) 10. Come Sunday

Archie Shepp's two duet albums with pianist Horace Parlan on SteepleChase (the other one is 1980's Trouble in Mind) both find the innovative avant-garde tenor in relaxed and melodic form, respectfully interpreting music of the 1920s and before. Goin' Home features Shepp (who doubles on soprano) and Parlan playing tasteful versions of nine ancient black folk melodies including "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot," "Nobody Knows the Troubles I've Seen" and "Deep River." Those listeners only familiar with Shepp's earlier Fire Music will find these compelling performances to be a revelation.~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/goin-home-mw0000192507

Personnel: Archie Shepp (soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Horace Parlan (piano).

Goin' Home

Thursday, May 12, 2016

Dave Stryker Quartet - Blue Degrees

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:07
Size: 153.7 MB
Styles: Blues/jazz guitar
Year: 1993
Art: Front

[10:54] 1. Blue Degrees
[ 8:17] 2. Scorpian Dance
[ 5:29] 3. Alfie
[ 7:56] 4. Out Of Bounds
[ 9:40] 5. Spirit In The Wind
[10:39] 6. Talkin' About J.C.
[ 7:12] 7. Stella By Starlight
[ 6:57] 8. Blues For Brother Jack

Whether you’ve heard guitarist Dave Stryker leading his own group (with 26 CD’s as a leader to date), co-leading The Stryker/Slagle Band, or as a featured sideman with Stanley Turrentine, Jack McDuff, and many others, you know why the Village Voice calls him “one of the most distinctive guitarists to come along in recent years.”

Early on Stryker realized that as much as he loved playing standards and the jazz repertoire he had to have something of his own to give to the music. He feels that his writing combined with his playing is what shapes his musical expression. He has recorded and published over 150 of his own compositions and has released “The Dave Stryker Songbook” with most of his original music. Also 18 of the compositions (from the first five SteepleChase CD’s) are compiled in the book: “The Music of Dave Stryker”.

Blue Degrees

Ranee Lee - Ranee Lee Lives Upstairs

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:21
Size: 142.7 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[3:37] 1. I Just Found Out About Love
[6:01] 2. In Love In Vain
[6:26] 3. A Time For Love
[8:49] 4. A Crooked Road
[5:30] 5. Four
[9:36] 6. Gershwin Medley
[6:09] 7. Fire And Rain
[4:42] 8. Beautiful Love
[6:05] 9. The Storm
[5:21] 10. Dearly Beloved

Ranee Lee has been Canada's most enjoyable, reliable jazz singer for many decades running, and shows no signs of slowing down over nearly a dozen albums. This live effort at the nightclub Upstairs in Montreal, Quebec, shows Lee still loves standards done her way, and adds a few tunes with a more contemporary tag placed on them. Her voice still holds the perfect tonal values of her idol Sarah Vaughan, shaded with soulful phrasings closely linked to Ernestine Anderson. But Lee has always been her own woman in personalizing whatever song she sings with only a hint of drama, bravado, or vibrato. She's as strait-laced a singer in jazz as anyone worldwide, and swings with the best alongside her band of local heroes, including her husband/guitarist Richard Ring. When Lee sings "In Love in Vain," you know the spirit of Vaughan is present and accounted for, while her take on "Four" is a bit more elongated, not as clipped as the staccato notes of the melody line. Her unusual choice of Pat Metheny's "A Crooked Road" contrasts in an underground, mysterious manner unlike the other selections, while her lone original, "The Storm," is a blues that only foreshadows the clouds, rain, and thunder. Ring's guitar provides supple support, but is much more resonant during "Beautiful Love," showing a dexterity that perhaps should be showcased on his own date. It's somewhat criminal that Ranee Lee is not ranked among the best jazz singers in the world by polls and record sales, but Lives Upstairs proves beyond a doubt she belongs in that upper echelon. ~Michael G. Nastos

Ranee Lee Lives Upstairs

Clark Terry - Daylight Express

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:52
Size: 146.2 MB
Styles: Bop, Trumpet jazz
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[2:00] 1. Caravan
[2:20] 2. Candy
[2:28] 3. Clark's Expedition
[4:04] 4. Trumpet Mouthpiece Blues
[3:01] 5. Phalanges
[4:31] 6. Blues For Daddy-O's Jazz Patio Blues
[2:43] 7. Basin Street Blues
[2:15] 8. Daylight Express
[2:18] 9. Taking A Chance On Love
[6:52] 10. Festival
[3:36] 11. Clark's Bars
[2:14] 12. Daddy-O's Patrio
[4:58] 13. Blues
[4:18] 14. Impeccable
[2:46] 15. Paul's Idea
[3:16] 16. Phat Bach
[2:31] 17. Milli Terry
[4:00] 18. Funky
[3:31] 19. The Girl I Call Baby

Bass – Jimmy Woode; Drums – Sam Woodyard; Flute, Saxophone – Mike Simpson (5) (tracks: 1 to 9); Guitar – Remo Biondi (tracks: 1 to 9); Piano – Willie Jones (7); Tenor Saxophone – Paul Gonsalves (tracks: 10 to 19); Trumpet – Clark Terry.

Two obscure but very enjoyable and complementary former Lps are reissued in full on this generous CD. The first half of the disc is primarily a showcase for trumpeter Clark Terry who is joined by Mike Simpson (on tenor and flute) in a sextet. C.T. sounds a bit more influenced by Dizzy Gillespie at this time than he would but he was already quite distinctive on such numbers as "Candy," "Blues For Daddy O's Jazz Patio Blues" and "Basin Street Blues." "Phalanges" is a hot bop line (by Louie Bellson) that deserves to be revived while "Trumpet Mouthpiece Blues" sounds like an ancestor of "Mumbles." The second half of the album matches Terry with tenor-saxophonist Paul Gonsalves (who is actually the leader) and a rhythm section that features some surprisingly advanced piano from Willie Jones that sometimes hints strongly at both Cecil Taylor and Sun Ra! Terry and Gonsalves (who were both with Duke Ellington at the time) always made for a good team. The tenor revisits the 1956 Newport Jazz Festival with his long solo on "Festival" and other tunes (all originals by one of the horn players) are basic and swinging; a previously unissued ballad, "The Girl I Call Baby" closes the rewarding and memorable set. Highly recommended. ~Scott Yanow

Daylight Express

Abdullah Ibrahim - Cape Town Flowers

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:57
Size: 118,9 MB
Art: Front

(2:52)  1. Excursions
(4:22)  2. Eleventh Hour
(2:38)  3. Kofifi Blue
(3:59)  4. Chisa
(3:28)  5. Song For Aggerey
(3:20)  6. The Stride
(4:45)  7. The Call
(5:25)  8. African Marketplace
(9:30)  9. Joan - Cape Town Flower
(4:35) 10. Maraba Blue
(6:02) 11. Monk In Harlem

Cape Town Flowers is an enchanting effort from Abdullah Ibrahim, finding the pianist in a trio setting performing 11 original compositions. With the exception of the nine-minute title track and "Monk In Harlem," most of the album's songs clock in at under five minutes, many under four. Each of the pieces is understated, lovely, and nearly dreamlike. The length of the tracks may make Cape Town Flowers seem like a slight record, but the truth is, that very brevity and the way the songs form a sonic tapestry is exactly what makes the record a modest gem.
~Stephen Thomas Erlewine http://www.allmusic.com/album/cape-town-flowers-mw0000025041

Personnel: Abdullah Ibrahim (piano); Marcus McLaurine (bass); George Gray (drums).

Cape Town Flowers

Nick Colionne - Feel The Heat

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:22
Size: 97,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:30)  1. Some Funky
(3:32)  2. The Windy Dance
(4:24)  3. Let's Spend Some Time
(4:55)  4. The Connection
(3:39)  5. There It Is
(4:39)  6. Midnight And You
(4:02)  7. It's Gonna Be Alright
(5:06)  8. Wessin'
(4:13)  9. Can't Let Go
(4:18) 10. Po' House

In 2006, guitarist Nick Colionne released an album called Keepin' It Cool; five years later, this one is called Feel the Heat. (In between came one called No Limits.) The alternating temperature descriptions are not so much an indication of different styles as of a similarity in conceiving clichés and a way of suggesting that Feel the Heat is a collection of more of the same from Colionne. Happily, that is no bad thing. Though lumped in with smooth jazz musicians, Colionne actually harks back to earlier styles. His hero is Wes Montgomery, and he demonstrates that by putting a Montgomery-like track on every album and labeling it as such. This time there's a tune called "Wessin'." Colionne hails from Chicago, and he usually finds a way of indicating that, too. (Another number is called "The Windy Dance.") The importance of his hometown lies in his musical influences. He is quite cognizant of the city's blues and R&B heritage, and he employs a Chicago funk style to open ("Some Funky") and close ("Po' House") the disc, in between applying himself to a straight electric blues on "Can't Let Go." Keyboard player James Lloyd brings in a pop influence on compositions such as "It's Gonna Be Alright." And when he isn't playing, Colionne is singing in a grainy baritone, contributing vocals to four of the ten tracks, most memorably the loverman ballad "Let's Spend Some Time." There are passages during the album that sound like smooth jazz, but most of the time this sounds like another diverse and rootsy Nick Colionne album, one that ranks with its predecessors.
~William Ruhlmann http://www.allmusic.com/album/feel-the-heat-mw0002155308

Feel The Heat

Cleo Laine & Tubby Hayes - Palladium Jazz Date

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:31
Size: 97,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:53)  1. Old Devil Moon
(3:29)  2. Just A-Sittin' And A-Rockin'
(2:46)  3. Mean To Me
(4:17)  4. 'Round Midnight
(2:37)  5. Hand Me Down Love
(3:03)  6. I'm Gonna Sit Right Down And Write Myself A Letter
(7:39)  7. Ah-Leu-Cha
(7:55)  8. Young And Foolish
(6:47)  9. All Members

With a multi-octave voice similar to Betty Carter's, incredible scatting ability, and ease of transition from a throaty whisper to high-pitched trills, Cleo Laine was born in 1927 in the Southall section of London, the daughter of a Jamaican father and English mother. Her parents sent her to vocal and dance lessons as a teenager, but she was 25 when she first sang professionally, after a successful audition with the big band led by Johnny Dankworth. Both Laine and the band recorded for Esquire, MGM and Pye during the late '50s, and by 1958, she was married to Dankworth. With Dankworth by her side, Laine began her solo career in earnest with a 1964 album of Shakespeare lyrics set to Dankworth's arrangements, Shakespeare: And All That Jazz. Laine also gained renown for the first of three concert albums recorded at New York's Carnegie Hall, 1973's Cleo Laine Live! At Carnegie Hall. She also recorded two follow-ups (Return to Carnegie and The 10th Anniversary Concert) the latter of which in 1983 won her the first Grammy award by a Briton. She has proved a rugged stage actress as well, winning a Theater World award for her role in the Broadway musical The Mystery of Edwin Drood, (in addition to Tony and Drama Desk nominations as well). In 1976 she recorded a jazz version of Porgy and Bess with Ray Charles, and also recorded duets with James Galway and guitarist John Williams. Laine and Dankworth continued to tour into the 1990s, and she received perhaps her greatest honor when she became the first jazz artist to receive the highest title available in the performing arts: Dame Commander.
John Bush https://itunes.apple.com/nz/artist/cleo-laine/id2214762#fullText

Palladium Jazz Date

Archie Shepp - Live In San Francisco

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1966
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:02
Size: 172,8 MB
Art: Front

( 1:18)  1. Keep Your Heart Right
( 7:31)  2. The Lady Sings The Blues
( 5:37)  3. Sylvia
( 2:56)  4. The Wedding
(10:25)  5. Wherever June Bugs Go
( 6:17)  6. In A Sentimental Mood
( 7:59)  7. Things Ain't What They Used To Be
(32:54)  8. Three For A Quarter, One For A Dime

A great counterpart to some of Archie Shepp's studio albums for Impulse a live date recorded in San Francisco, with a slightly freer, sharper edge! The sound is almost free at times, but always with that strong sense of focus that Archie brought to his brilliant work of the time and the group's a well-honed ensemble who really understand each others motivations and inspirations Roswell Rudd on trombone, Donald Garrett and Lewis Worrell on bass, and Beaver Harris on drums all almost working at an ESP level together. Shepp plays a bit of piano on the record in sharply angular tones that are almost more modern than his tenor and titles include "The Wedding", "Wherever June Bugs Go", and "Keep Your Heart Right". https://www.dustygroove.com/item/742818

Personnel: Archie Shepp (tenor saxophone, piano); Roswell Rudd (trombone); Donald Garrett, Lewis Worrell (bass); Beaver Harris (drums).

Live In San Francisco

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Sammy Price - S/T

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:46
Size: 75.0 MB
Styles: Jazz/blues piano
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[3:14] 1. Jazzland Boogie
[2:45] 2. Ox-Tail Blues
[2:30] 3. Ivory Coast Blues
[2:41] 4. Play The Blues For J.J.
[2:29] 5. Memory Of The Schweizerhof Hotel In Bern
[2:15] 6. Go Denis Go
[2:35] 7. The Swiss Boogie
[3:37] 8. Sako-Anoh Bush Boogie
[3:58] 9. Yesterday
[2:49] 10. Walkin' Down The Champs-Elysées
[3:48] 11. Valetta's Dream

Price has been largely overlooked, despite his key role arranging, accompanying, and directing sessions during the 1930s and ‘40s for Decca's extensive Blues catalog. Even less well-known are his achievements outside of music in the 1950s and ‘60s as a progressive political activist campaigning for Democrats Adam Clayton Powell, President LBJ and Bobby Kennedy . . . not to mention his success as a businessman and entrepreneur.

Sammy Price

João Gilberto - João

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:58
Size: 114.4 MB
Styles: Bossa Nova, Latin jaz
Year: 1991
Art: Front

[4:07] 1. I Really Samba
[4:11] 2. Go On
[3:50] 3. Little Rose
[5:00] 4. Malaga
[3:41] 5. Woman
[5:11] 6. My Heart And I
[2:38] 7. You Do Something To Me
[3:52] 8. Unhappy Remark
[4:14] 9. Ave Maria On The Hill
[5:01] 10. Sampa
[3:05] 11. Smiled At Me
[5:02] 12. I Wish You Love

Recent but classic jazz-bossa is played by one of its defining spirits. Vocally, Gilberto is in fine muttering form, communicating intensely with somebody in his breast pocket, and his guitar is as delicate as ever. This recording expresses the close links of bossa nova and jazz. Joao has Clare Fisher arranging and on some cuts playing keyboards, along with one of those saccharin string-sections even the most avant-garde Brazilians love. ~John Storm Roberts

João

Tim Hagans - Alone Together

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:48
Size: 120.9 MB
Styles: Trumpet jazz
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[7:05] 1. See You Again
[7:59] 2. Not Even The Rain
[6:54] 3. Sweet Peach Tree
[7:29] 4. Over And Back
[8:40] 5. You Don't Know What Love Is
[8:46] 6. Alone Together
[5:52] 7. Stella By Starlight

Tim Hagans: trumpet; Marc Copland: piano; Drew Gress: bass; Jochen Ruckert: drums.

On the surface, Tim Hagans' Alone Together looks more like a Marc Copland disc with trumpeter Hagans as the leading voice. The rhythm section is Copland's longstanding trio, responsible for albums that include the pianist's resplendent Some Love Songs (Pirouet, 2005). The set list, like many of Copland's, is a mix of re-imagined standards and the pianist's own writing, which (while undeniably mainstream) occupies a position left of center, the result of a uniquely ambiguous and sophisticated harmonic aesthetic.

But Alone Together belongs to Hagans by virtue of its greater propensity for fiery swingers. Hagans' first Pirouet disc, the sublime Beautiful Lily (2005), more clearly inhabited Copland's stylistic territory, with greater emphasis on impressionistic writing and playing, though the trumpeter contributed four of that album's eleven tracks, alongside two Copland tunes, one standard, and four spontaneous duet inventions. To be sure, while Copland has never been averse to pulling out some stops, as he did on his Both / And (Nagel-Heyer, 2006), his albums invariably lean towards introspection. Alone Together does gaze inward occasionally, but is largely brighter and more boisterous than most of Copland's discography. ~John Kelman

Alone Together

Anita O'Day & The Three Sounds - S/T

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:23
Size: 126.8 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1962/2007
Art: Front

[3:28] 1. When The World Was Young
[4:23] 2. Someday My Prince Will Come
[3:18] 3. All Too Soon
[3:36] 4. My Heart Stood Still
[4:32] 5. My Ship
[4:15] 6. Leave It To Me
[2:56] 7. Whisper Not
[4:39] 8. Blues By Five
[3:52] 9. Fly Me To The Moon
[2:38] 10. You And The Night And The Music
[3:00] 11. Let Me Off Uptown
[3:43] 12. My Heart Stood Still
[6:32] 13. Leave It To Me
[4:26] 14. Blues By Five

This strange (and strangely compelling) album is the most controversial of all O'Day's Verve Records releases, popular among O'Day's hardcore fans for the showcase that the Three Sounds' near-minimalist accompaniment affords her singing. On a lot of levels, however, it wasn't a successful record. The album was a one-shot collaboration that happened in the narrowest possible window-of-opportunity. The Three Sounds, having left Blue Note, were passing through the Verve roster, where they would be active for about a week in October of 1962, cutting two albums in that time including this one with Anita O'Day, who was leaving the label after 10 years there. Anita O'Day & The Three Sounds is as much a Three Sounds record as it is an Anita O'Day recording -- the group is represented by four instrumentals, including "Someday My Prince Will Come," "My Heart Stood Still," and "Blues By Five," cut at the same time as their album Blue Genes, while O'Day sings five songs. She is amazingly restrained and low-key throughout most of her work here; on songs like the sultry "All Too Soon," that works out fine, but elsewhere the fit between singer and group seems uncomfortable. There's very little excitement or tension to give her songs energy, and O'Day never interacts with the trio in any discernable way. Additionally, she seems uninspired in terms of any inventiveness, with long stretches of silence where one would have expected her to improvise. What is here is fine, her husky yet playful voice a wonder to hear on "When The World Was Young" (where Gene Harris's piano does come to life), but there's amazingly little life to the procedings. The one exception is "Whisper Not," which also has the distinction of featuring O'Day's Gene Krupa-era collaborator Roy Eldridge on trumpet and is the most successful cut here, as what one would look for on a more conventional Anita O'Day album. [Some reissues feature a second, previously unissued Eldridge cut from the same sessions, a hot remake of his and O'Day's Gene Krupa-era hit "Let Me Off Uptown," with the two of them in a duet on their old 1940's hit.] ~Bruce Eder

Anita O'Day & The Three Sounds

Red Garland - When There Are Grey Skies

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:07
Size: 89.6 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Piano jazz
Year: 1992/2014
Art: Front

[ 5:11] 1. Sonny Boy
[ 3:36] 2. My Honey's Lovin' Arms
[ 6:36] 3. St. James Infirmary
[ 3:51] 4. I Ain't Got Nobody
[ 4:04] 5. Baby Won't You Please Come Home
[11:56] 6. Nobody Knows The Trouble I've Seen
[ 3:50] 7. My Blue Heaven

This set was pianist Red Garland's 25th session as a leader since 1956, but it would be eight years before his next record. Garland's influential style had been fully formed since the mid-'50s and his chord voicings were immediately recognizable. With the assistance of bassist Wendell Marshall and drummer Charlie Persip, Garland explores and updates seven veteran songs (including a previously unreleased "My Blue Heaven") dating from the '20s era. This fine LP is highlighted by such unlikely material as "Sonny Boy," "St. James Infirmary," "Baby Won't You Please Come Home," and a 12-minute "Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen." ~Scott Yanow

When There Are Grey Skies

Tubby Hayes Orchestra - 100% Proof

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1966
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:34
Size: 97,7 MB
Art: Front

(14:13)  1. 100% Proof
( 6:31)  2. Night In Tunisia
( 7:43)  3. Milestones
( 4:39)  4. Sonnymoon For Two
( 5:06)  5. Bluesology
( 4:19)  6. Nutty

"But being as this is 100% Proof, the most powerful big band album in the world, and would blow your head clean off, you've got to ask yourself one question: Do I feel lucky? Well, do ya punk? As a jazz fan himself, I'm sure Clint 'Dirty Harry' Eastwood wouldn't object too much to the plagiarising and adaptation of one of his most famous lines, but it does seem strangely appropriate to apply it to one of the best big band albums ever made. But, "and I know what you're thinking , why all the hype? Well, maybe hype is what's needed in order to get folks to listen to something of outstanding quality and originality that's been sadly overlooked for nearly forty years. 100% Proof represented the pinnacle of modern British jazz in the '60s. The stellar line-up of musicians employed on the record underpinned its sumptuous and gloriously overstated arrangements. In order to assess the album in terms of the canon of outstanding jazz recordings, it is important to avoid the all-too ubiquitous stereotyping of Brit-jazz or 'British ness' (whatever this means) as applied to Tubby Hayes. Although certainly one of the UK's most famous jazz musician by a mile, (perhaps second only to his friend and one time fellow Jazz Courier, Ronnie Scott who was undoubtedly the most famous jazz musician in Britain, probably because he owned one of the greatest jazz clubs in the world, although Scott himself, like Hayes was a world-class tenor player and indeed played and soloed on 100% Proof) Hayes was also England's most accomplished musician and arranger. His fame was not limited to the parochial shores of the sceptered isle. Tubbs travelled on more than one occasion to the USA where he played as part of a musician exchange deal. He recorded with many of the greats of jazz including, amongst others, Clark Terry, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, James Moody, Louis Hayes, Horace Parlan, Eddie Costa, and had already recorded in the UK with the likes of Dizzy Reece, Victor Feldman and John Dankworth. He even famously sat in with the Ellington band on one of their concerts in London, with virtually no notice.

So without doubt, Tubby Hayes was a global player who, had he lived longer than his 38 years and been in good health, which had steadily deteriorated over the latter part of his life, would have been recognised as the most significant and talented musician to emanate from the United Kingdom, even in comparison to other later eminences from Britain including the redoubtable John McLaughlin, John Surman and Dave Holland. By the beginning of the '60s, Hayes had moved from the small British Tempo label to the Philips-owned Fontana label which had international connections and other prestigious jazz stars recording for it, such as John Dankworth. 100% Proof, recorded in London on 10, 12 and 13 May 1966, was a follow-up to Hayes' previous big-band album Tubbs' Tours recorded in 1964. Tubbs' Tours was a very successful session with some wonderful tracks which drilled deeply into the memory banks of the brain. Perhaps the most notable, though least vaunted, of these tracks was Tubbs' own composition, the elegant "In the Night on which he played flute. Other standout tracks include "Pedro's Waltz and "The Killers of W1. Tubbs' Tours really has to be heard to appreciate the dynamism of Tubbs' big band arrangements. 100% Proof was different to Tubbs' Tours in that there were fewer tracks and a warmer sound, perhaps due to being performed by a more well-rehearsed big band that had played together for quite a while.

The arrangement of the title track was Tubby Hayes own work. He also did a fine job arranging "Milestones and "Bluesology. Trumpeter Ian Hamer did a superlative job arranging "Sonnymoon for Two and especially "Night in Tunisia transforming it into something extremely different, volatile and very powerful, and arguably one of the best arrangements ever heard of this terrific number. The final track "Nutty was arranged by Stan Tracey, who was an excellent arranger as well as a superb pianist with a unique style. All the arrangements are so good that they transform what might otherwise be a predominantly 'standards' type album into a totally novel one. To a certain extent it's the arrangements of these standards that push the boundaries of this recording into unchartered waters of cohesion, dynamics and originality. The personnel on the album comprised some of the most talented jazz musicians in Britain at that time and included Roy Willox, Ray Warleigh, Ronnie Scott, Bob Efford, Ronnie Ross and Harry Klein on saxophones. Kenny Baker, Ian Hamer, Greg Bowen, Les Condon and Kenny Wheeler played trumpets. Keith Christie, Nat Peck, Johnny Marshall and Chris Smith were on trombones. The rhythm section was made up of Gordon Beck on piano, Jeff Clyne on bass and and Ronnie Stephenson/Johnny Butts on drums. Tubbs plays with equal confidence and ability tenor, flute and vibes and positively tears up a storm on "100% Proof with his trusty tenor sax deployed in his typically shaken not stirred style, although paradoxically leaving the listener both shaken and stirred. Interestingly there are a couple of short phrases in Tubbs' solo here that seem to have influenced at least a couple of other British sax players of the next generation.

His sensitive flute playing is heard on Dizzy Gillespie's "Night in Tunisia and Miles Davis' "Milestones where Gordon Beck has a good piano solo too followed by further Tubby tenoring. Sonny Rollins' "Sonnymoon for Two has further typically coruscating Hayes tenor and on the penultimate track, Milt Jackson's "Bluesology he demonstrates his outstanding ability on vibes which is closely followed by an excellent Ronnie Scott tenor solo. The recording concludes with Thelonius Monk's "Nutty where Tubbs takes a step back to allow Ray Warleigh and Les Condon to shine on the solos whilst Hayes can be heard on flute in the orchestra. Perhaps the defining 'proof' of the success of 100% Proof was its success in the Melody Maker jazz polls of 1968 where it came top in the LP of the year section. Also in that poll Hayes won first position in the top musician, flute, tenor and vibes categories. Although originally issued in both mono and stereo on the Fontana label and a few years ago disappointingly issued in mono only on a Japanese CD reissue, it really is important to hear this album in stereo. Produced at a time when stereophonic recording was still something of a novelty, it clearly demonstrates how essential it is to have big band jazz spread out over a wide aural spectrum, and the mono and stereo versions of the album do sound different, the former distinctly less effective. One of the ironies of Hayes dying so young was that his fame was based primarily on his playing and his recordings, yet during the '60s, the last full decade of his career, his composing abilities had begun, albeit in a modest way, to burgeon. It was only with his penultimate Fontana studio album Mexican Green that he had composed an entire album of material. 

Listening to the BBC recording that was posthumously released as 200% Proof on the Mastermix label, it was clear that his compositional skills were on an upward trajectory. It is quite probable that the main obstacle to his composing hitherto was the fact that he was kept so busy with playing both live gigs and as an in-demand session musician and ironically, only when he, perforce, started to slow down due to ill-health did he have more time to write. As it states on the LP's original sleevenotes, written by Terry Brown, it was without hesitation and a unanimous decision by all concerned that when they heard the playback tapes of 100% Proof the only title that could possibly be used for the LP title was indeed 100% Proof. This was surely not merely a measure of loyalty but a gauge of the strength of the music Hayes had composed and arranged. 100% Proof will certainly 'blow your head clean off.'~Roger Farbey http://www.allaboutjazz.com/tubby-hayes-100-proof-by-roger-farbey.php 

Personnel: Tubby Hayes (tenor sax, flute, vibes); Roy Willox, Ray Warleigh, Ronnie Scott, Bob Efford, Ronnie Ross and Harry Klein (saxophones); Kenny Baker, Ian Hamer, Greg Bowen, Les Condon and Kenny Wheeler (trumpets); Keith Christie, Nat Peck, Johnny Marshall and Chris Smith (trombones); Gordon Beck (piano); Jeff Clyne (bass); Ronnie Stephenson, Johnny Butts (drums).

100% Proof

Morgana King - Wild Is Love

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1966
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:55
Size: 73,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:21)  1. Anything Goes
(2:47)  2. Nobody Else But Me
(2:33)  3. I Thought of You Last Night
(3:07)  4. You Are a Story
(3:18)  5. Don't Explain
(2:55)  6. Bee-Bom
(2:25)  7. You Fascinate Me So
(3:38)  8. The Moment Of Truth
(3:56)  9. The Shadow Of Your Smile (Love Theme Form The MGM Motion Picture "The Sandpiper")
(2:57) 10. The Best Is Yet To Come
(1:53) 11. Wild Is Love

The title hints at exotica and there's some of that here in the layered arrangements of Torrie Zito, who worked with this fine vocalist on several albums. But Wild Is Love is really one of Morgana King's swingier albums; the uncredited musicians, bless them whoever they are, know how to walk a bassline, lightly brush over a snare drum, or honk the line. King's vocals are also less-flamboyantly nonsensical, although there are still a couple of moments where one would have to be a relative of hers not to wince in the high register. For the most part she really concentrates on a lush sound and swinging timing, establishing her mastery of the latter with the soul-defining opener, a cover of "Anything Goes" that will wipe the memory clean of all other versions, especially the horrid ones. "The Shadow of Your Smile," likewise, is interpreted in a manner simultaneously graceful and perfect. Zito often can be credited with little touches that set the arrangement up perfectly; in "Don't Explain," the way the tempo seems to be slowing down and speeding up like summer canyon winds, and in "You Fascinate Me," turnarounds in which an instrument or an entire section will perform casual acrobatics. 

It was pretty much standard practice in the '60s to back a singer up with a lavish production, complete with full orchestra. That went even for the vocalists who would have been better-served by a small combo. King was an adept enough performer to handle either situation, and this Reprise offering includes the best examples of her in spectacular, technicolor accompaniment mode.
~Eugene Chadbourne http://www.allmusic.com/album/wild-is-love-mw0000573660

Wild Is Love