Wednesday, May 25, 2016

Illinois Jacquet - The Comeback

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1971
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:26
Size: 97,4 MB
Art: Front

( 5:38)  1. The King
( 4:26)  2. Easy Living
( 8:03)  3. C Jam Blues
( 5:25)  4. The Comeback
(10:19)  5. Take The Train
( 8:33)  6. I Wanna Blow Now

This is a particularly interesting if not essential set by tenor saxophonist Illinois Jacquet. While Jacquet is in superior form (and does a suprisingly effective imitation of Ella Fitzgerald singing on the humorous "I Wanna Blow Now") and drummer Tony Crombie is fine in suport, the most dominant member of the trio is organist Milt Buckner. His "accompaniment" of Jacquet is often roaring and thunderous, sounding like two big bands at once. The trio, which also explores "The King" (Jacquet's feature in the 1940s with Count Basie), "Easy Living," "C Jam Blues," Jacquet's "The Comeback" and "Take the 'A' Train," is a bit out-of-balance and it is a pity that Buckner could not have played a bit of piano or at least let up a little.~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-comeback-mw0000075924

Personnel: Illinois Jacquet (tenor saxophone, vocals), Milt Buckner (organ), Tony Crombie (drums).

The Comeback

Angela Bingham - Everything I Love

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:13
Size: 115,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:56)  1. I'm Just A Lucky So & So
(4:41)  2. Everything I Love
(4:27)  3. Dindi
(4:44)  4. Speak Low
(4:28)  5. Like Someone In Love
(5:48)  6. I Cain't Say No
(3:48)  7. How Deep Is The Ocean
(4:56)  8. Skylark
(3:27)  9. I'm Old Fashioned
(5:30) 10. But Beautiful
(3:23) 11. On The Sunny Side Of The Street

Angela Bingham is a true jazz musician who happens to be a vocalist. Her singing is characterized by the qualities of honest expression, solid swinging and an emphasis on the blues. With a clear, steady tone and a penchant for improvisation, she communicates a song's lyric “as if she were speaking to you directly, over cocktails or supper.”While in New York, Angela successfully held down a monthly residency for four years at the now (sadly defunct) Total Wine Bar, where she garnered an extremely loyal fan base. During this time, she began working with many of New York's most heavyweight jazz musicians, including Yotam Silberstein, Greg Ruggiero, Chris Higgins, Marco Panascia, Oscar Perez, Tedd Firth, Frank Longino, Deidre Rodman, Massimo Biolcati, and others. She also held down a steady performance schedule at New York's famed Bar Next Door, a coveted venue for New York jazz musicians.Angela recently relocated to North Carolina after living and working in New York City since 2005. She is currently performing at local venues and booking date nationally.
http://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/index_new.php?url=angelabingham&width=#bio-top

Everything I Love

Charles Tolliver - Live In Tokyo

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:31
Size: 113,9 MB
Art: Front

(12:16)  1. Drought
(10:44)  2. Stretch
( 7:02)  3. Truth
(10:48)  4. Effi
( 8:39)  5. 'Round Midnight

CDs led by the great and vastly underrated trumpeter Charles Tolliver are few and far between. This live set (originally released by the Japanese Trio label) finds Tolliver leading his Music Inc. group, a quartet with pianist Stanley Cowell, bassist Clint Houston and drummer Clifford Barbaro. Unfortunately the live set does have a bit of distortion in spots (particularly on some of the trumpet notes); otherwise this strong postbop set would have received a higher rating. Tolliver plays quite well, stretching out on three of his originals and Cowell's "Effi," plus an adventurous rendition of "'Round Midnight."~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/live-in-tokyo-mw0000250276

Personnel:  Charles Tolliver – trumpet;  Stanley Cowell – piano;  Clint Houston – bass;  Clifford Barbaro - drums

Live In Tokyo

Grégoire Maret - Gregoire Maret

Styles: Harmonica, Vocal
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 80:31
Size: 184,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:56)  1. Lucilla's Dream
(4:48)  2. The Secret Life Of Plants
(4:57)  3. The Man I Love
(4:54)  4. Travels
(1:37)  5. 5:37 PM (Intro)
(7:14)  6. Crepuscule
(2:48)  7. 4:28 AM (Outro)
(5:49)  8. Manhã Du Sol
(7:59)  9. Prayer
(4:28) 10. Lembra De Mim
(1:01) 11. The Womb
(6:30) 12. Children's Song
(6:16) 13. Outro
(6:12) 14. O Amor E O Meu Pais
(3:39) 15. Ponta De Areia
(7:15) 16. Toyotama No Hikui Tsuki

Gregoire Maret's first album under his own name is both more and less than a Music lover following the harmonicist's career might expect. After years of collaborating with the likes of guitarists Pat Metheny and Charlie Hunter, and vocalist Cassandra Wilson, Maret (mostly) wisely but ambitiously places his instrument in a variety of settings that highlight various aspects of his playing.The sum effect of hearing his eponymous debut is to appreciate how much Maret has brought to the music of others. "Lucilla's Dream" recalls Maret's collaboration with Metheny on The Way Up (Nonesuch, 2005), and not just so obviously with the inclusion of wordless vocals; the performance builds through a series of carefully wrought crescendos and concludes emphatically with Clarence Penn's drum break. On a leisurely stroll through Metheny's co-composition with pianist Lyle Mays, "Travels," Maret takes the time to explore its melodic nuances with exquisite patience.Maret's distinctive presence as a musician also comes forth clearly on his rendition of Stevie Wonder's "The Secret Life of Plants," written by the one-time Motown wunderkind when he'd long since left his own harmonica behind for synthesizers and a variety of other keyboards. As he does throughout the CD, Maret brings a vivid tone to his playing in the straightforward arrangement, no small achievement given that his harmonica, by its very nature, puts forth a light breezy air. "Crepuscule Suite" is one of a pair of extended pieces here, and its body offers the opportunity for Maret to vigorously improvise with the other participants, including bassist James Genus and keyboardist Federico Pena. The other is "Children's Suite," one of the three Maret originals, and it highlights the harmonicist's playing in a series of delicious contrasts with strings as well as acoustic piano. Ultimately, this becomes the gateway to the slow unfolding of the album's track sequencing that conjures up a dream-like quality. For all the indisputably impeccable musicianship and production, however, Maret's album sounds as if he was too anxious to present his definitive artistic statement in one fell swoop. The track featuring mentor Cassandra Wilson is the most representative of that labored approach: the sole cut featuring a traditional vocal, her voice is as arresting as Maret's playing but is, in the end, simply too obvious a tribute/homage to the artist with whom Maret has collaborated. More than compensating for that understandable lapse, though, are those memorable moments within the orchestrated "O Amor E O Meu Pais." Here, fellow harmonicist Toots Thielemans appears to interact fluently with Maret, and the gusto in the pair's playing is unmistakable. The sound of their instruments and their interplay is stirring, but deceptively so, as is the case through most of the tracks on Gregoire Maret. ~DougCollettehttps://www.allaboutjazz.com/gregoire-maret-gregoire-maret-eone-music-review-by-doug-collette.php

Personnel: Grégoire Maret: harmonica, vocals; Federico G Pena: piano, taicho harp, percussion, vocals; James Genus: electric bass, vocals, acoustic bass; Clarence Penn: drums, vocals; Bashiri Johnson and Mino Cinelu: percussion; Brandon Ross: soprano acoustic guitar, 6- and-12 string acoustic guitar; Jean-Christophe Maillard: acoustic guitar, taicho harp; Jeff "Tain" Watts: drums; Alfredo Mojica: percussion; Cassandra Wilson: vocals; Stephanie Decailet: violin; Johannes Rose: viola; Fabrice Loyal: cello; Marcus Miller: fretless bass; Janelle Gill, Adia Gill, Clyde Gill, Micai Gill: vocals; Toots Thielemans: harmonica; Robert Kubiszyn: acoustic bass; Krzystol Herzdin: string arrangement; Gretchen Parlato: voice. Soumas Heritage School of Music Ensemble; Sinfonia Viva Orchestra

Gregoire Maret

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Cecil Taylor Quartet - Looking Ahead!

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1958
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:16
Size: 97,0 MB
Art: Front + Back

(6:29)  1. Luyah! The Glorious Step
(5:15)  2. African Violets
(8:20)  3. Of What
(5:25)  4. Wallering
(7:43)  5. Toll
(9:02)  6. Excursion On A Wobbly Rail

One of Cecil Taylor's earliest recordings, Looking Ahead! does just that while still keeping several toes in the tradition. It's an amazing document of a talent fairly straining at the reins, a meteor about to burst onto the jazz scene and render it forever changed. With Earl Griffith on vibes, Taylor uses an instrumentation he would return to occasionally much later on, one that lends an extra percussive layer to the session, emphasizing the new rhythmic attacks he was experimenting with. Griffith sounds as though he might have been a conceptual step or two behind the other three but, in the context of the time, this may have served to make the music a shade more palatable to contemporary tastes. But the seeds are clearly planted and one can hear direct hints of Taylor's music to come, all the way to 1962 at least (the Nefertiti trio with Sunny Murray). Pieces like "Luyah! The Glorious Step" and "Of What" are so fragmented (in a traditional sense) and so bristlingly alive that one can understand Whitney Baillett's observation of crowds at a Taylor concert fidgeting "as if the ground beneath had suddenly become unbearably hot." 

The contributions of bassist Buell Neidlinger and drummer Dennis Charles cannot be understated; they breathe with Taylor as one unit and appear to be utterly in sync with his ideas. When the pianist edges into his solo on "Excursion on a Wobbly Rail," it's as though he's meeting the tradition head on, shaking hands and then rocketing off into the future. Looking Ahead! is a vital recording from the nascence of one of the towering geniuses of modern music and belongs in any jazz fan's collection.~Brian Olewick http://www.allmusic.com/album/looking-ahead-mw0000197292

Personnel:  Cecil Taylor: piano;  Buell Neidlinger: bass;  Denis Charles: drums;  Earl Griffith: vibes

Looking Ahead!

Vicky Lane With Pete Candoli - I Swing For You

Styles: Vocal And Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1959
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 31:55
Size: 59,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:26)  1. The Trolley Song
(3:23)  2. Our Very Own
(3:03)  3. My Romance
(2:06)  4. You Hit The Spot
(3:59)  5. Love Isn't Born, It's Made
(2:56)  6. My Heart Stood Still
(2:45)  7. They Say It's Wonderful
(2:39)  8. The Song Is You
(2:25)  9. Long Ago And Far Away
(2:00) 10. I Love You
(2:21) 11. Right As The Rain
(1:46) 12. This Heart Of Mine

This RCA Victor LP marked the recording debut of Vicky Lane, a native of Ireland who was also an actress. Although gifted with an attractive voice in the alto range, Lane evidently didn't make much of an impression with record buyers, as this also seems to be the only recording under her name. This doesn't mean this is a bad record; in fact, she shows a lot of promise for a first-time recording artist, assisted by Pete Candoli's swinging arrangements and a supporting cast that also includes Jimmy Rowles, Barney Kessel, Alvin Stoller, and Joe Mondragon, along with a host of additional percussionists. Perhaps her selection of all upbeat songs instead of mixing a wider variety of material worked against her, though it is impossible to tell almost a half century after these sessions were completed.~Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/i-swing-for-you-mw0000432544

Personnel:  Orchestra conducted by Pete Candoli (tp) with Barney Kessel (g), Johnny Williams (p), Joe Mondragon (b), Alvin Stoller (d), Larry Bunker, Milt Holland, Lou Singer, Ralph Hansell, Johnny Cyr, Gene Estes (perc)

I Swing For You

Donny Hathaway - Everything Is Everything

Styles: Vocal, Soul, R&B
Year: 1970
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:33
Size: 106,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:29)  1. Voices Inside (Everything Is Everything)
(3:31)  2. Je Vous Aime (I Love You)
(3:51)  3. I Believe to My Soul
(3:38)  4. Misty
(4:05)  5. Sugar Lee
(3:15)  6. Tryin' Times
(5:50)  7. Thank You Master (For My Soul)
(6:53)  8. The Ghetto
(6:43)  9. To Be Young, Gifted and Black
(4:14) 10. A Dream

Already a respected arranger and pianist who'd contributed to dozens of records (by artists ranging from the Impressions to Carla Thomas to Woody Herman), with this debut LP Donny Hathaway revealed yet another facet of his genius -- his smoky, pleading voice, one of the best to ever grace a soul record. Everything Is Everything sounded like nothing before it, based in smooth uptown soul but boasting a set of excellent, open-ended arrangements gained from Hathaway's background in classical and gospel music. (Before going to Howard University in 1964, his knowledge of popular music was practically non-existent.) After gaining a contract with Atco through King Curtis, Hathaway wrote and recorded during 1969 and 1970 with friends including drummer Ric Powell and guitarist Phil Upchurch, both of whom lent a grooving feel to the album that Hathaway may not have been able to summon on his own (check out Upchurch's unforgettable bassline on the opener, "Voices Inside (Everything Is Everything)"). All of the musical brilliance on display, though, is merely the framework for Hathaway's rich, emotive voice, testifying to the power of love and religion with few, if any, concessions to pop music. Like none other, he gets to the raw, churchy emotion underlying Ray Charles' "I Believe to My Soul" and Nina Simone's "To Be Young, Gifted and Black," the former with a call-and-response horn chart and his own glorious vocal, the latter with his own organ lines. "Thank You Master (For My Soul)" brings the Stax horns onto sanctified ground, while Hathaway praises God and sneaks in an excellent piano solo. Everything Is Everything was one of the first soul records to comment directly on an unstable period; "Tryin' Times" speaks to the importance of peace and community with an earthy groove, while the most familiar track here, a swinging jam known as "The Ghetto," places listeners right in the middle of urban America. Donny Hathaway's debut introduced a brilliant talent into the world of soul, one who promised to take R&B farther than it had been taken since Ray Charles debuted on Atlantic.~John Bush http://www.allmusic.com/album/everything-is-everything-mw0000654662

Personnel:  Donny Hathaway - lead vocals (All tracks), background vocals (tracks 1-8), pianos (including electric) (All tracks), organ (track 9), additional bass (8), keyboard bass (9);  Master Henry Gibson - conga (track 8);  King Curtis - guitar (track 3);  Phil Upchurch - bass guitar (3-4, 6-7), guitar (1-4, 6-8); John Littlejohn - guitar, vocals;  John Avant – trombone;  Johnny Board - tenor saxophone;  Oscar Brashear – trumpet;  Clifford Davis - alto saxophone;  Aaron Dodd – tuba;  Morris Ellis – trombone;  Marshall Hawkins - bass (tracks 5, 8);  Willie Henderson - baritone saxophone;  John Howell – trumpet;  Morris Jennings - drums (tracks 1-4, 6-8);  Robert A. Lewis – trumpet;  John Lounsberry - French horn;  Ethel Merker - French horn;  Don Myrick - alto saxophone;  Ric Powell - drums (track 5), percussion (1-4, 6-8);  Louis Satterfield - bass (tracks 1-3)

Everything Is Everything

Stefano Di Battista & Nicky Nicolai - Piu' Sole

Styles: Vocal And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:45
Size: 102,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:08)  1. Piu' Sole
(4:00)  2. Sei Come Sei Just How U Are
(3:14)  3. Flora
(4:55)  4. Il Ragazzo Della Via Gluck
(3:28)  5. Lontano Da Qui
(4:03)  6. River
(4:34)  7. Coles Corner
(4:35)  8. Inverno
(5:40)  9. Stella by Starlight
(2:09) 10. Il Nero E il Bacio
(3:54) 11. Vorrei Capire

Italian saxophonist Stefano di Battista has released a trio of albums as a leader, two of which were never issued in the U.S. The third, a U.S. release in 2000 from Blue Note, is self-titled and mainly features di Battista's own compositions. In addition, it includes "Song for Flavia" by Rosario Bonaccorso and a pair of songs by Jacky Terrasson, "Chicago 1987" and "Little Red Ribbon." Both bassist Bonaccorso and pianist Terrasson appear on the album, accompanied by former Coltrane drummer Elvin Jones and trumpeter Flavio Boltro. Di Battista, a native of Rome who plays both soprano and alto saxophone, took up the instrument when he was 13 to play with some friends from his neighborhood. When he heard recordings by alto saxophonist Art Pepper, he knew the sound of jazz was for him. Later he received guidance from Massimo Urbani, another influential alto saxophonist. By his early twenties, di Battista had begun performing in Paris, thanks to an invitation from Jean-Pierre Como. The two had met during the Calvi Jazz Festival.

Within two years the Italian saxophonist had established himself at the Sunset, a prominent jazz hot spot in the City of Lights. He appeared frequently on the bill with Michel Benita, drummer Stéphane Huchard, and drummer Aldo Romano. From there he proceeded to work as a soloist, which led to associations with such artists as cornetist Nat Adderley, drummers Daniel Humair and Jimmy Cobb, and the late French pianist Michel Petrucciani, among others. Petrucciani invited di Battista into a sextet he was then forming and extended the invitation to include trumpeter Boltro, who frequently accompanied di Battista. Di Battista put out his debut recording as a leader for Label Bleu in 1997. Volare kicked up a lot of attention for the saxophonist and received an award nomination in France. The following year he put out A Prima Vista. The recording of his third album in 2000 so impressed veteran jazz drummer Jones that when the album was finally wrapped up and in the vault, he scooped up di Battista for his Elvin Jones Jazz Machine tour. Di Battista released his second album on Blue Note, the Charlie Parker tribute album Parker's Mood, in 2005. https://itunes.apple.com/it/artist/stefano-di-battista/id14638702#fullText

Piu' Sole

Monday, May 23, 2016

Kirk Whalum - Roundtrip

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:38
Size: 133,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:42)  1. Courtney
(4:34)  2. Desperately
(4:55)  3. Ruby Ruby Ruby
(6:51)  4. Glow
(4:51)  5. The Wave
(4:27)  6. Big Ol' Shoes
(4:42)  7. Inside
(4:47)  8. In A Whisper
(3:48)  9. Roundtrip
(6:13) 10. Back In The Day
(6:42) 11. Afterthought

Contemporary jazz saxophonist Kirk Whalum decided to take a little trip back in time on Roundtrip, back to the Memphis club scene that nurtured him early on, and to record some of his earliest compositions and ones written expressly for him with fresh ears as well as some new ones. Recording in four different places from Memphis to Los Angeles to New York to England, Whalum asked some old pals to pop in, like Earl Klugh, Jeff Golub, Gerald Albright, and Philippe Saisse, as well as some of his stalwart rocksteady bandmates such as Rex Rideout, drummer Michael White, bassist Melvin Davis, guitarist Mark Jaimes, and trumpeter James McMillan. There are a few other surprises as well, such as the appearance of Kim Fields on "In a Whisper," Shanice on "Inside," and sons Kyle, Hugh, and Kevin making appearances as well. Issued on his own Rendezvous Music imprint, this is Whalum at his most relaxed and celebratory. That said, Roundtrip has no less polish than anything recorded over his nearly 30-year career, and the label was his idea. It's a deeply personal offering that is celebratory in nature rather than merely reflective. The pairing with Klugh on "Ruby Ruby Ruby" is on the money. The keen melodic sensibilities both men possess complement one another perfectly, and the mix is skeletal enough to let Klugh's gorgeous guitar playing stand out. Whalum's tenor playing and the light, Latin-kissed composition are sparse and in the pocket. The reading of Nat Adderley, Jr.'s "The Wave" (the original is from 1988's And You Know That LP on Columbia) doesn't work quite so well in that Saisse does all the keyboards and programming and Whalum just blows over the top. The problem is that the synthetic handclaps add nothing; in fact, they detract from what otherwise might have been a nice funkier version of the tune. "Big 'Ol Shoes," which immediately follows, however, gets right down to it. Co-written by Whalum and Rideout, it's funky in all the right places, with one of those transcendent choruses that Whalum slips into his own tunes so often. The Grover Washington, Jr./Creed Taylor/Kudu feel is all over this one, with some killer keyboard work from Rideout and tasty guitars by Darrell Crooks.

The vocal performance by Shanice on "Inside" is a beautiful urban soul and nearly gospel performance, and Whalum lets his vocalist get to it without getting in her way. Producer James McMillan (who co-wrote the cut) keeps his star back in the mix until it's time for him to blow a solo. Kim Fields speaks her track, and it works seamlessly. Rideout, who co-wrote the cut, produces it and takes the same approach with Whalum, though the saxophonist plays more fills, allowing his in-the-pocket sense of lyric improvisation to underscore the vocalist's lines. "Back in the Day" is a slick but fruitful hip-hop track with rapper Caleb tha Bridge and Albright on alto. This is positive hip-hop, with plenty of soul casting a reflective and nostalgic look at the past. Whalum and John Stoddart act as a backing chorus. It's innocent but not cloying, the groove is solid, and the saxophonists playfully entwine around one another and do call and response, ending up playing harmony in the solo break. The chorus has "single" written all over it if only the square urban and smooth jazz radio programmers would get out of their rut and test it on an actual audience. The set ends with another early Whalum composition in "Afterthought" from his debut album, Floppy Disk, in 1985. The lithe groove shimmers and swirls as White's backbeat kicks the tune just enough in contrast to the deep bassline of Alex Al and the vibes-like percussion of Kevin Ricard; Rideout's keyboards paint Whalum's backdrop brightly and he blows the tune out of memory, from that charmed place of having the gratitude and sheer lyric talent needed to look back. It's not hollow nostalgia here, but rather the quintessential taste to revisit this tune with so much soul over two decades later and play it like he means it only there's wisdom here, too: the tune means something a little different now, and his blowing near the cut's end is full of deep swelling emotion and smoking chops he didn't have in 1985. Anybody could play his old tunes, or replay them, or re-record a greatest-hits album, but Whalum didn't do that; he made something new and beautiful out of his past that points to an even brighter, more aesthetically satisfying future now that he -- instead of another record company controls it. Highly recommended.~Thom Jurek http://www.allmusic.com/album/roundtrip-mw0000584656

Personnel: Kirk Whalum (soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone, background vocals); Caleb tha Bridge (vocals, rap vocals); Kevin Whalum, Shanice Wilson (vocals); Kim "Blondielocks" Fields (spoken vocals); Mark Jaimes (guitar, guitars, bass guitar); Earl Klugh, Jeff Golub (guitar); Gerald Albright (alto saxophone); Peter Murray (piano, Fender Rhodes piano); Chris Carter (organ); Julian Crampton, Melvin Davis , Alex Al (bass guitar); Michael White , Elijah "DD" Holt (drums); Ekpe Abioto (percussion); Garry Goin, Darrell Crooks (guitar); James McMillan (trumpet, flugelhorn, piano, Fender Rhodes piano, programming); Philippe Saisse, Rex Rideout (keyboards, programming); John Stoddart (keyboards, background vocals); Simon Phillips (drums); Martin Ditcham, Kevin Ricard (percussion); Priscilla Jones-Campbell (background vocals).

Roundtrip

Jeri Southern - Southern Breeze / Coffee, Cigarettes & Memories

Styles:  Jazz, Vocal
Year: 1958
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:37
Size: 165,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:13)  1. Down With Love
(3:48)  2. Crazy He Calls Me
(3:06)  3. Lazy Bones
(3:16)  4. Who Wants To Fall In Love
(3:48)  5. Then I'll Be Tired Of You
(2:21)  6. Ridin' High
(3:15)  7. He Reminds Me Of You
(3:36)  8. Porgy
(3:42)  9. Are These Really Mine
(2:59) 10. Isn't This a Lovely Day
(2:56) 11. A Warm Kiss and a Cold Heart
(2:54) 12. I Like the Likes of You
(2:51) 13. Coffe, Cigarettes & Memories
(3:17) 14. Spring Will Be a Little Late T
(2:35) 15. This Time the Dream's On Me
(2:45) 16. Detour Ahead
(2:04) 17. The Song Is Ended
(2:33) 18. Yesterdays
(3:02) 19. Deep In a Dream
(3:01) 20. I'm Stepping Out Wit ha Memory
(2:23) 21. Maybe I Love You Too Much
(2:30) 22. Yesterdays Gardenias
(3:14) 23. I Must Have That Man
(2:20) 24. I'll Never Be the Same

In 1998, EMI released Southern Breeze/Coffee, Cigarettes & Memories, which contained two complete albums Southern Breeze (1958, originally released on Roulette) and Coffee, Cigarettes & Memories (1958, originally released on Roulette) by Jeri Southern on one compact disc.~Jason Birchmeier http://www.allmusic.com/album/southern-breeze-coffee-cigarettes-memories-mw0000528966

Southern Breeze / Coffee, Cigarettes & Memories

John Handy - The 2nd John Handy Album

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1966
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:49
Size: 137,3 MB
Art:  Front

( 5:34)  1. Dancy Dancy
( 7:30)  2. Theme X
( 6:08)  3. Blues For A Highstrung Guitar
( 4:35)  4. Dance For Carlo B
(13:45)  5. Scheme No 1
( 7:46)  6. A Bad Stroke of Luck
( 5:39)  7. Blues For A Highstrung Guitar (alt)
( 8:50)  8. Debonair

Altoist John Handy's second Columbia album was actually his fourth as a leader. Utilizing the same musicians who had joined him during his sensational set at the 1965 Monterey Jazz Festival (violinist Michael White, guitarist Jerry Hahn, bassist Don Thompson and drummer Terry Clarke), Handy performs five of his complex yet accessible originals, which include the "Theme X" (in 5/4 time), the catchy "Blues for a Highstrung Guitar," and the adventurous "Scheme #1."The CD reissue adds three previously unissued alternate takes to the earlier program. This would be the unit's only studio album, and after disbanding, they did not reunite until 1994. The memorable music is highly recommended.~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-2nd-john-handy-album-mw0000605710

Personnel: John Handy (alto saxophone, tenor saxophone); Jerry Hahn (guitar); Terry Clarke (drums).

The 2nd John Handy Album

Brian Blade & The Fellowship Band - Landmarks

Styles: Post-Bop, Straight-Ahead Jazz 
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:25
Size: 122,6 MB
Art: Front

( 0:56)  1. Down River
( 8:22)  2. Landmarks
( 1:04)  3. State Lines
(11:37)  4. Ark.La.Tex
( 1:52)  5. Shenandoah
( 5:39)  6. He Died Fighting
( 4:06)  7. Friends Call Her Dot
(13:22)  8. Farewell Bluebird
( 4:01)  9. Bonnie Be Good
( 2:21) 10. Embers

Four records in 16 years may not be prolific, but clearly Brian Blade and his longstanding Fellowship Band aren't about quantity. While a seemingly scant two years separated the drummer's leader debut (and inspiration for the group name), Fellowship (Blue Note, 1998) from its even more impressive follow-up, Perceptual (Blue Note, 2002), the group's next record, Season of Changes (Verve) came a full eight years later in 2008, and beyond a label change also reflected the trimming down of the Fellowship Band from its original septet to a sextet with the departure of pedal steel virtuoso Dave Easley. Another six years have passed, but Landmarks represents not only another label change as it returns to Blue Note, but some additional shifting on the personnel front, with the departure of Kurt Rosenwinkel, a key member since Perceptual. These days, more often than not, the Fellowship Band is, in performance, a lean but very potent quintet with five of its seven original members intact; for Landmarks, however, the group enlists guitarist Jeff Parker (making a return after being part of the group that recorded Fellowship) and Marvin Sewell to flesh out seven of the album's ten tracks. While the core quintet is absolutely capable of standing on its own—and as a fully acoustic group to boot, as demonstrated in a knock-out performance at the 2012 TD Ottawa Jazz Festival and virtual roof-raiser at Nasjonal Jazzscene Victoria, during the 2011 Oslo International Jazz Festival there's no doubt that Parker and Sewell have plenty to offer on a recording that, while retaining some of the fire that's fundamental to the group's live sets, clearly treats the studio as a different environment entirely.

For one thing, the brief opener, Cowherd's minute-long solo improvisation "Down River," is performed on that unwieldy progressive rock stalwart, the Mellotron; but here, the distinctive warbling sound of fluttering flute tapes only gives it a more strangely haunting quality that's the perfect setup for the title track, Cowherd's only other compositional contribution to Landmarks, though his unmistakable piano and pump organ work as much folk and country simplicity as it is jazz sophistication is, as ever, a strong definer of the Fellowship Band sound. "Landmarks" opens with a relatively rare solo from Thomas that, in duet with Cowherd, is the first of many demonstrations from the Fellowship Band members that it's not about individual instrumental virtuosity, though that's a fundamental anyway; it's about surrendering to the needs of the song and, in this case its simply beautiful, singable melody. As Blade enters and Butler and Walden reiterate the theme on soprano saxophone and bass clarinet respectively, the tune unfolds into a soprano solo of similar reverence, as Blade's light cymbal work is juxtaposed with more powerful runs around the kit, creating the punctuations for which he's become known, not just in Fellowship, but with Wayne Shorter and Daniel Lanois. Cowherd takes the final solo and it's a lengthy one but, like the entire album, it tells a story rather than merely demonstrating his intrinsic virtuosity a mastery required to intuit when to let loose with fireworks and when to keep things spare and simple.

More than merely a reflection of the many physical places this group has traveled in its 16-plus year existence, the album title speaks to inner travels, and a spiritual quality that's been palpable since the group's inception, making its name more than just a word. It's also a reflection of extracurricular activities brought back to the group, whether they're Walden's overtly jazz-centric Momentum (Demi Sound, 2009), more reflective In This World (Demi Sound, 2010) and aptly titled Countrified (Demi Sound, 2010); Blade's exploratory work with Shorter's Quartet (together almost as long as the Fellowship Band) and similarly searching work, albeit in a more rock-centric context, with Lanois on projects like Black Dub (Jive, 2010); or Cowherd' s work with everyone from singer/songwriter Rosanne Cash and Canadian bassist Chris Tarry to saxophonist Marcus Strickland and punk idol Iggy Pop. But rather than any of these disparate elements being obvious, they're subsumed into the unmistakable, singular voice that the Fellowship Band continues to evolve, gig after gig, year after year. Landmarks feature s a number of brief, sometimes through-composed miniatures that act as thematic threads that join the album together as a conceptual whole. Sewell's improvised piece of ambient soundscaping on "State Lines," reflects and sets up the five primary notes of Blade's "Ark.La.Tex." which follows, a lengthy exploration that builds slowly, with Butler and Walden (this time on tenor and alto saxophones) creating the thematic unison lines that occasionally, wonderfully, diverge, only to reunite as one. The piece begins to pick up steam, leading to an open middle section where Walden's prowess is bolstered by the joined-at-the-hip pocket created by Blade and Thomas, only to find its way back to the original theme and, ultimately, the composition's primary five-note motif, ending, as it began, with Sewell's ambient landscape, but this time with Cowherd creating a larger sound on pump organ. It's a marvelous piece of writing that, in its construction, seems to expand and contract as its episodic movements move outwards from its gentler beginnings, only to come full circle by the time it closes, twelve minutes later.

Cowherd's pump organ acts as the connecting thread from "Ark. La. Tex." to "Shenandoah," a lovely traditional tune that The Fellowship Band has explored at length in concert, but here keeps to a script, with Walden and Butler (on bass clarinet and tenor saxophone) delivering the familiar, bittersweet theme rubato, leading to Blade's solo introduction to "He Died Fighting," a song that could easily be transported into the singer/songwriter vein of the drummer's unexpected Mama Rosa (Verve, 2009) unexpected, because who'd have thought a drummer so capable of incendiary power would also be capable of such profound poetry, delivered with a voice so unassuming, tender and meaningful? Landmarks' longest piece, "Farewell Bluebird," follows the largely through-composed "Friends Call Her Dot," though Walden's opening a cappella bass clarinet solo is not unlike Cowherd's "Down River" in the way that it sets up this ambling, folkloric tune driven by Blade's gentle but persistently propulsive playing and Parker's subdued but essential tripling of the melody alongside Butler and Walden. It also seems to set up "Friends Call Her Dot," which initially revolves around a four-chord motif and some lovely contrapuntal playing from Cowherd and Walden, a thematic duo that soon becomes a trio when Butler enters on soprano. The solo section features Cowherd's most impressive solo of the set a lesson in motivic evolution whose end signals a shift in time and a bluesy riff that drives a gritty solo from Sewell that combines outré ideas with frenetic slide guitar, marrying Cowherd's modal support with the sound and feeling of the Mississippi Delta. As the Fellowship Band has grown, it has moved away from overt traditional references, even though they're an undercurrent throughout. Instead, as it explores milestones both inner and outer, Landmarks further speaks with the singular voice that the Fellowship Band has built upon since inception. Blending folkloric references, hints of church and spiritual concerns, jazz modality and countrified touchstones, Landmarks is the perfect name for Brian Blade & The Fellowship Band's fourth album; beyond its meaning to the group, it truly is yet another landmark recording in the core quintet's evolutionary travels. It may have come after a long gap in time, but that only makes it a wait all the more worthwhile.~John Kelman http://www.allaboutjazz.com/brian-blade-and-the-fellowship-band-landmarks-by-john-kelman.php
Personnel: Brian Blade: drums; Melvin Butler: soprano and tenor saxophones; Jon Cowherd: piano, mellotron, pump organ; Chris Thomas: bass; Myron Walden: alto saxophone; bass clarinet; Jeff Parker: guitar (7, 9); Marvin Sewell: guitar (3, 4, 6, 8, 10).

Landmarks

Sunday, May 22, 2016

Illinois Jacquet With Kenny Burrell - Desert Winds

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1964
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:02
Size: 81,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:22)  1. When My Dreamboat Comes Home
(4:20)  2. Desert Winds
(4:16)  3. Star Eyes
(3:17)  4. Blues For The Early Bird
(7:38)  5. Lester Leaps In
(3:53)  6. You're My Thrill
(6:13)  7. Canadian Sunset

Illinois Jacquet's searing sax solo in 1942's "Flying Home" (recorded while Jacquet was a member of Lionel Hampton's band) is often credited as the first R&B-styled saxophone solo, and there is no denying the power in that performance, shards of which are still being copied and assimilated. But many critics of the day hated the "dirty tenor" sound, and over the years Jacquet softened his approach considerably, knocking off the wilder corners and playing a smoother, more standard line. Not that this was necessarily a bad thing, since Jacquet was an accomplished melodic player in any style, but listeners should be aware that his rougher sound was all but gone by the time Desert Winds was recorded in 1964. Working with guitarist Kenny Burrell, pianist Tommy Flanagan, and a rhythm section of Wendell Marshall on bass and Ray Lucas on drums, with Willie Rodriguez adding bongos and congas on most tracks, Jacquet's playing here is hushed, easy, and pleasant, with no discernible hard edges, and with no other horn player on the session, he has plenty of room to let his solos build and unwind. He does break out a little bit on the group's version of the Lester Young classic "Lester Leaps In," but most cuts, like the title track, have an unhurried, relaxing midtempo shuffle pace, making Desert Winds feel like the aural equivalent of a gentle twilight breeze. The added percussion gets a little distracting on occasion, but overall Jacquet is in fine lyrical form, particularly on the standout track here, a beautiful version of "You're My Thrill" that carries all the breathy romanticism of a classic Ben Webster solo, and is one of Jacquet's finest pieces. An underappreciated and unassuming album, Desert Winds has plenty of easy charm, and while there are no barn-burning solos here, there are plenty of moments of quiet and lyrical joy.~Steve Leggett http://www.allmusic.com/album/desert-winds-mw0000453461

Personnel: Illinois Jacquet (alto saxophone); Kenny Burrell (guitar); Tommy Flanagan (piano); Wendell Marshall (bass guitar); Ray Lucas (drums); Willie Rodriguez (congas, bongos).

Desert Winds

Angela Bingham & David Halliday - The Night We Called It a Day

Styles: Vocal And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:39
Size: 106,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:31)  1. PS I Love You
(5:15)  2. Born to Be Blue
(7:03)  3. Long John Blues
(5:28)  4. Stars Fell on Alabama
(6:44)  5. Honeysuckle Rose
(6:20)  6. Twisted
(4:57)  7. Scotch 'n' Soda
(4:13)  8. Inutil Paisagem
(6:29)  9. The Night We Called It a Day
(6:34) 10. Someone Else Is Steppin' In

An instant classic, featuring the dynamic jazz duo of Angela Bingham and tenor saxophonist David Halliday with a guitar trio. A fresh take on the straight-ahead jazz tradition of honest expression, solid swinging and an emphasis on the blues.http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/angelabinghamanddavidhal

Personnel: Angela Bingham – voice;  David Halliday - tenor saxophone;  Kenji Aihara – guitar;  Denson Angulo - bass

The Night We Called It a Day

Tim Hagans with Norrbotten Big Band - Future Miles

Styles:  Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:30
Size: 143,4 MB
Art: Front + Back

(4:07)  1. Fanfare For Miles
(9:44)  2. Kickass
(9:14)  3. Kinsey Report
(2:56)  4. Big Gig In Pajala
(9:00)  5. Miles Of The Blues
(9:39)  6. Concrete Hat
(7:55)  7. Future Cool
(9:52)  8. Boogaloo

Tim Hagans, an excellent post-bop-oriented trumpeter, was with the orchestras of Stan Kenton (1974-1977) and Woody Herman (1977), before moving to Sweden (1977-1981) where he played with Sahib Shihab, Ernie Wilkins' Almost Big Band, the Danish Radio Orchestra (which was then directed by Thad Jones), and Dexter Gordon. After returning to the U.S., he taught at the University of Cincinnati and recorded for the local MoPro label. Hagans taught at Berklee (1984-1986), and then in 1986 he started working with Joe Lovano and Fred Hersch. Later, he has made records with Bob Belden, Lovano, Rick Margitza, John Hart, and the Yellowjackets, and has worked with the big bands of Bob Mintzer, Maria Schneider, and the Gil Evans orchestra. Tim Hagans has recorded several Blue Note albums as a leader. ~ Scott Yanow https://itunes.apple.com/nz/artist/tim-hagans/id30511731#fullText

Personnel: Trumpet – Tim Hagans;  Alto Saxophone [Lead], Soprano Saxophone, Flute – Håkan Broström;  Alto Saxophone, Bass Clarinet – Johan Hörlén;  Baritone Saxophone, Flute – Per Moberg;  Bass – Fredrik Jonsson;  Bass Trombone, Tuba – Björn Hängsel;  Drums – Jonas Holgersson;  Keyboards, Programmed By – Scott Kinsey;  Piano – Ion Baciu;  Tenor Saxophone, Clarinet – Bengt Ek;  Tenor Saxophone, Flute – Mats Garberg;  Trombone – Magnus Puls, Peter Dahlgren;  Trombone [Lead] – P-O Svanström;  Trumpet [Lead], Flugelhorn – Bo Strandberg;  Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Dan Johansson (3), Magnus Ekholm, Tapio Maunuvaara

Future Miles

Stefano Di Battista - Italian Standards

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:23
Size: 125,5 MB
Art: Front

(7:08)  1. Attenti al lupo
(5:00)  2. Mille giorni
(6:41)  3. Metti una sera a cena
(8:49)  4. Almeno tu nell'universo
(8:33)  5. Quattro Marzo 1943
(6:19)  6. Quando
(6:24)  7. My suite rose
(5:24)  8. Il mare d'inverno

Italian saxophonist Stefano di Battista has released a trio of albums as a leader, two of which were never issued in the U.S. The third, a U.S. release in 2000 from Blue Note, is self-titled and mainly features di Battista's own compositions. In addition, it includes "Song for Flavia" by Rosario Bonaccorso and a pair of songs by Jacky Terrasson, "Chicago 1987" and "Little Red Ribbon." Both bassist Bonaccorso and pianist Terrasson appear on the album, accompanied by former Coltrane drummer Elvin Jones and trumpeter Flavio Boltro.  Di Battista, a native of Rome who plays both soprano and alto saxophone, took up the instrument when he was 13 to play with some friends from his neighborhood. When he heard recordings by alto saxophonist Art Pepper, he knew the sound of jazz was for him. Later he received guidance from Massimo Urbani, another influential alto saxophonist. By his early twenties, di Battista had begun performing in Paris, thanks to an invitation from Jean-Pierre Como. The two had met during the Calvi Jazz Festival.

Within two years the Italian saxophonist had established himself at the Sunset, a prominent jazz hot spot in the City of Lights. He appeared frequently on the bill with Michel Benita, drummer Stéphane Huchard, and drummer Aldo Romano. From there he proceeded to work as a soloist, which led to associations with such artists as cornetist Nat Adderley, drummers Daniel Humair and Jimmy Cobb, and the late French pianist Michel Petrucciani, among others. Petrucciani invited di Battista into a sextet he was then forming and extended the invitation to include trumpeter Boltro, who frequently accompanied di Battista. Di Battista put out his debut recording as a leader for Label Bleu in 1997. Volare kicked up a lot of attention for the saxophonist and received an award nomination in France. The following year he put out A Prima Vista. The recording of his third album in 2000 so impressed veteran jazz drummer Jones that when the album was finally wrapped up and in the vault, he scooped up di Battista for his Elvin Jones Jazz Machine tour. Di Battista released his second album on Blue Note, the Charlie Parker tribute album Parker's Mood, in 2005.~Linda Seida http://www.allmusic.com/artist/stefano-di-battista-mn0000015276/biography

Italian Standards

Saturday, May 21, 2016

Sarah Vaughan - Sassy Swings The Tivoli Disc 1 And Disc 2

Disc 1

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 1963
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:35 (Disc 1)
Size: 137,7 MB (Disc 1)
Art: Front

(2:34)  1. I Feel Pretty
(5:56)  2. Misty
(2:04)  3. What Is This Thing Called Love
(5:56)  4. Lover Man
(4:30)  5. Sometimes I'm Happy
(3:14)  6. Won't You Come Home, Bill Bailey
(2:33)  7. Tenderly
(5:40)  8. Sassy's Blues
(4:27)  9. Polka Dots And Moonbeams
(2:20) 10. I Cried For You
(3:12) 11. Poor Butterfly
(2:21) 12. I Could Write A Book
(4:56) 13. Time After Time
(1:43) 14. All Of Me
(3:17) 15. I Hadn't Anyone Till You
(2:46) 16. I Can't Give You Anything But Love

After four years on Roulette, Sarah Vaughan returned to Mercury (her main label of the 1950s) with this wonderful live session, one of her very best of the 1960s. Joined by her rhythm section of the period (pianist Kirk Stuart, bassist Charles Williams and drummer Georges Hughes), Vaughan is quite expressive on such signature tunes as "Misty," "Sometimes I'm Happy," "Tenderly" and "I Cried For You." A gem.~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/sassy-swings-the-tivoli-mw0000652544

Personnel: Sarah Vaughn (vocals); Kirk Stuart (piano); Charles Williams (bass); George Hughes (drums).

Sassy Swings The Tivoli (disc 1)

Disc 2

Time: 61:32
Size: 146,8 MB

(5:32)  1. I'll Be Seeing You
(5:51)  2. Maria
(2:15)  3. Day In Day Out
(4:39)  4. Fly Me To The Moon
(3:07)  5. Baubles, Bangles And Beads
(2:15)  6. The Lady's In Love With You
(3:14)  7. Honeysuckle Rose
(2:01)  8. What Is This Thing Called Love
(4:06)  9. Lover Man
(2:19) 10. I Cried For You
(5:26) 11. The More I See You
(5:11) 12. Say It Isn't So
(4:40) 13. Black Coffee
(2:33) 14. Just One Of Those Things
(3:04) 15. On Green Dolphine Street
(5:11) 16. Over The Rainbow

Sassy Swings The Tivoli (disc 2)

John Handy - Handy Dandy Man

Styles:  Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:07
Size: 89,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:07)  1. Play the Music (I Feel Like Dancing)
(4:28)  2. Lady Lady
(4:40)  3. Disco Samba
(4:22)  4. Everything You Touch (Turns Into Love)
(5:15)  5. I Gotta Let Her Know (How I Feel)
(4:21)  6. I Can Tell
(3:30)  7. Handy Dandy Man
(4:05)  8. You Live, You Learn
(3:18)  9. Sing to Me

A talented and adventurous altoist whose career has gone through several phases, John Handy started playing alto in 1949. After moving to New York in 1958, he had a fiery period with Charles Mingus (1958-1959) that resulted in several passionate recordings that show off his originality; he also recorded several dates as a leader for Roulette. Handy led his own bands during 1959-1964, and played with Mingus at the 1964 Monterey Jazz Festival, but it was at the following year's festival that he was a major hit, stretching out with his quintet (which included violinist Michael White and guitarist Jerry Hahn) on two long originals. Soon, Handy was signed to Columbia, where he recorded his finest work (three excellent albums) during 1966-1968. Since that time, he has performed world music with Ali Akbar Khan, recorded the R&B hit "Hard Work" for Impulse in 1976, gigged and recorded with Mingus Dynasty, and in the late '80s led a group (called Class) featuring three female violinists who sing. John Handy (no relation to the Dixieland altoist Capt. John Handy) remains a strong soloist who can hit high notes way above his horn's normal register with ease, but he has mostly maintained a low profile, teaching in the San Francisco Bay Area.
~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/artist/john-handy-mn0000221660/biography

Handy Dandy Man

Danilo Rea - Notturno

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:45
Size: 117,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:12)  1. In The Hall Of The Mountain King
(5:08)  2. Studio Op. 10 n. 3
(3:43)  3. The Man I Love
(5:06)  4. Preludio Op. 28 n. 24
(4:43)  5. Sogno d'amore
(3:55)  6. Sinfonia n. 40 K550
(3:15)  7. A Summer Song For You
(3:55)  8. Corsa della vita
(2:58)  9. Anna e i suoi fratelli
(4:28) 10. Notturno in Mib Op. 9 n. 2
(5:29) 11. Sinfonia n. 3
(4:47) 12. Vento del Nilo

He moved to Rome as a child, he obtained a diploma in piano at the Conservatory of Santa Cecilia , making his debut in 1975 in the jazz music with Enzo Pietropaoli and Roberto Gatto , forming the Trio di Roma .Simultaneously to jazz develops particular interest in music progressive and participates in the formation of the group New Perigee , of which he is the leader and founder bassist Giovanni Tommaso . The New Perigee faced a long tour (seventy concerts in seventy days) along with Rino Gaetano and Riccardo Cocciante , whose testimony is recorded the album called Q Concert .It makes its way into the jazz up to play with some of the greatest American soloists such as Chet Baker , Lee Konitz , John Scofield , Joe Lovano , Art Farmer . In 1989 participates in the work of Roberto De Simone , Requiem for Pier Paolo Pasolini , performed atthe Teatro San Carlo in Naples for the direction of Zoltan Pesko ; in the same year he published together with Roberto Gatto disc Impromptus . In 1997 he creates, with bassist Enzo Pietropaoli and drummer Fabrizio Sferra to Doctor 3, a trio that for a decade the crush of the most important Italian jazz stages. His album The Tales of Doctor 3 was awarded best Italian jazz record in 1998 , while the next jobThe songs remain the same win the title of best jazz record of Music & Records in 1999 .

In Italy there are many his collaborations within the pop , as a pianist of confidence of artists such as Mina , Claudio Baglioni , Pino Daniele and as an occasional collaborator, among others, of Domenico Modugno , Fiorella Mannoia , Riccardo Cocciante , Renato Zero , Gianni Morandi and Adriano Celentano . In 2006 he took part in the Concert for Europe , on ' island of Ventotene , that he is the protagonist along with Baglioni , Nicola Piovani and Luis Bacalov . In the season in 2007 - 2 008 participated in the show Men in tails along with other musicians like Peppe Servillo , Fausto Mesolella , Mimi Ciaramella of Avion Travel , Fabrizio Bosso , Furio Di Castri , Javier Girotto , Gianluca Petrella and Cristiano Calcagno . The show was set up to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of In the blue painted blue for the occasion, the group performs some songs of Domenico Modugno .His improvisations, ranging on any repertoire, are appreciated during concerts tour which takes in the world and during major jazz festivals.

In 2009 he is one of the 70 guest artists of the double CD of Baglioni, QPGA , where Rea plays the piano in "Centocelle" song. In 2010 he creates the music for the show "Comedy" by and with Giorgio Barberio Corsetti . The videos are Cristian Taraborrelli .On 15 June 2011, together with Paolo Damiani and Rashmi V. Bahtt, at dusk, he improvised a memorable concert on the rooftops of Rome . the entire collection was donated to Emergency , the NPO of Gino Strada .In 2012 he accompanied in some summer evenings Gino Paoli , either alone or with the group consisting of Flavio Boltro ( trumpet ), Rosario Bonaccorso ( bass ) and Roberto Gatto ( drums ), as part of the project meeting in jazz , born in the wake collaboration album Milestones of 2007 .February 21, 2014 participated in the Sanremo Music Festival 2014 always with Paoli , followed by a spring tour.~Translate by google https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danilo_Rea

Personnel:  Piano – Danilo Rea;  Vocals – Oona Rea (tracks: 3, 7, 9, 12)

Notturno

Brian Blade - Mama Rosa

Styles: Vocal, Guitar And Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Year: 2009
Time: 52:18
Size: 120,1 MB
Art: Front

 1. After the Revival - 3:17
 2. Mercy Angel - 4:19
 3. At the Centerline - 4:27
 4. Faithful Brother - 3:27
 5. Get There - 3:22
 6. Second Home - 3:18
 7. You'll Always be My Baby - 5:37
 8. Nature's Law - 2:45
 9. Struggling with That - 3:00
10. All That was Yesterday - 5:58
11. Her Song - 5:26
12. All Gospel Radio - 4:31
13. Paslms 100 - 2:46

After a lengthy gap between records with his Fellowship Band, drummer Brian Blade has stepped up the pace, following up the unmistakable sound of Season of Changes (Verve, 2008) with Mama Rosa. Blade temporarily deserts the folkloric jazz context of his longstanding group, instead delivering a singer/songwriter album that's just as compelling. Different in nature it may be, but in its own way it makes perfect sense for the introspective and deeply spiritual Blade. Blade's always had a penchant for song, even when working in longer form for Fellowship. He closed Perceptual (Blue Note, 2000) with the gentle "Trembling," his debut as a singer and invited Joni Mitchell to sing on the more dramatic "Steadfast." Both tracks drew a clear line from Blade's more expansive, jazz-centric writing and a penchant for simple melody and articulating his feelings with words as well as music.

Blade has grown considerably as a singer/songwriter since then, though the spirit of Mitchell with whom Blade toured and recorded looms large, especially on the opening title track, where his open-tuned guitar alludes to Mitchell's own open harmonies. Blade's subject material is far more religious in nature, however, though his faith is personal and far from proselytizing. Daniel Lanois the well-known producer and singer/songwriter plays a supporting instrumental role throughout half of Mama Rosa; his tremolo'd electric guitar a soothing, defining texture on the slightly more up-tempo "Mercy Angel," where he also delivers a moving, lyrical solo. "At the Centerline" incorporates the enduring "Serenity Prayer" ("God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change; courage to change the things I can; and wisdom to know the difference.") before Blade expands on its elegantly simple philosophy with a more complex song that, structurally, provides a strong link between the music of Mama Rosa and that of the Fellowship Band, as does the equally detailed yet smoothly flowing "Faithful Brother." Blade's unassuming and unaffected voice, with its subtle vibrato, brings passionate understatement to lyrics that deal with matters both corporeal and less grounded, always remaining truthful and honest to the core.

With guests including Fellowship's Jon Cowherd (keyboards), Chris Thomas (bass), and Kurt Rosenwinkel (guitar), there's enough harmonic sophistication, even on the relatively straightforward "Get There," to contextualize Blade's the singer/songwriter with Blade the jazz composer and improvising player. It's all part of one continuum, with Mama Rosa simply occupying a different place than Season of Changes or Perceptual. After 11 calming, tender songs, Blade ends the album with two brief soundscapes, in collaboration with Adam Samuels and Tucker Martine. Celestial and ethereal, both "All Gospel Radio" and "Psalms 100" reflect, in pure sound, the same spirituality reflected in Blade's words throughout Mama Rosa an album that may come as unexpected for some, but for those who have followed Blade's career closely, will come as no surprise at all.~John Kelman http://www.allaboutjazz.com/mama-rosa-brian-blade-verve-music-group-review-by-john-kelman.php
Personnel: Brian Blade: lead vocals, guitar, piano (2, 5, 7, 11, 13), drums (2, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11); Daniel Lanois: guitar soloist (2, 3, 7, 10, 11), pedal steel guitar (7); bass (2, 5), harmony vocal (11); Geoffrey Moore: guitar (1, 3), nylong string guitar (4); Kurt Rosenwinkel: guitar (4); Greg Liesz: pedal steel guitar (6); lap steel guitar and weissenborn (9); Patrick Smith: pedal steel guitar (11); Jon Cowherd: piano (3, 4), pump organ (3); Aaron Embry: piano (1); Chris Thomas: bass (1, 3, 4, 6); Jenny Lee Lindberg: bass (9); Dave Coleman: MXR operator (9); Adam Samuels: processing (12, 13); Tucker Martine: processing (13); Kelly Jones: harmony vocals (2, 5, 10); Daryl Johnson: harmony vocal (7, 11); Silverlake Male Chorus (3): John Bigham, Daryl Johnson, Aaron Embry, Rocco Deluca.

Mama Rosa