Wednesday, June 22, 2016

Don Friedman - Standards In Cagliari

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:52
Size: 148.5 MB
Styles: Bop, Piano jazz
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[12:34] 1. In Your Own Sweet Way
[11:51] 2. The Shadow Of Your Smile
[ 8:49] 3. Solar
[12:33] 4. Stella By Starlight
[10:52] 5. My Foolish Heart
[ 8:09] 6. Confirmation

Double Bass – Jeff Fuller; Drums – Tommy Bradascio; Piano – Don Friedman. Recorded Live on 15th of October in Cagliari at Bastione di Saint Remy during the 17th Sardinia international Jazz Festival.

Donald Ernest Friedman (born May 4, 1935 in San Francisco California), better known as Don Friedman, is a jazz pianist. On the West Coast, he performed with Dexter Gordon, Chet Baker, Buddy DeFranco and Ornette Coleman, among others, before moving to New York. There, he led his own trio in addition to playing in Pepper Adams's, Booker Little's and Jimmy Giuffre's bands in the sixties. He was also a part of Clark Terry's big band. He currently works in New York as a pianist and jazz educator. He has many fans in Japan, and has recently toured in the country. ...

Standards In Cagliari

The Dionne Farris Charlie Hunter Duo - Dionne Dionne

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:59
Size: 77.8 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz, R&B
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[3:26] 1. Alfie
[3:07] 2. Walk The Way You Talk
[4:12] 3. Always Something There To Remind Me
[4:50] 4. Don't Make Me Over
[4:21] 5. Wives And Lovers
[2:02] 6. Loneliness Remembers What Happiness Forgets
[4:11] 7. Déjà Vu
[3:43] 8. Walk On By
[4:02] 9. You're Gonna Need Me

The debut album from the duo of Dionne Farris and Charlie Hunter, 2014's Dionne Dionne finds the former Arrested Development vocalist and acclaimed jazz guitarist covering songs strongly associated with legendary R&B singer Dionne Warwick. Here, Farris and Hunter take a stripped-down jazz and soul approach to such classic Warwick numbers as "Always Something There to Remind Me," "Don't Make Me Over," "Walk on By," and others. Working as both a creatively inspired collaboration and deeply heartfelt homage, Dionne Dionne will certainly be a revelation for longtime Farris, Hunter, and Warwick fans alike. ~Matt Collar

Dionne Dionne

Kay Kyser - Best Of Big Bands

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:29
Size: 108.7 MB
Styles: Big band, Easy Listening
Year: 1980/1990
Art: Front

[2:31] 1. Praise The Lord And Pass The Ammunition!
[2:22] 2. There Goes That Song Again
[2:54] 3. Indian Summer
[3:24] 4. That's For Me
[2:42] 5. If I Only Had A Brain
[2:44] 6. Don't Sit Under The Apple Tree (With Anyone Else But Me)
[2:35] 7. (There'll Be Bluebirds Over) The White Cliffs Of Dover
[2:59] 8. Two Sleepy People
[3:06] 9. Bell Bottom Trousers
[3:16] 10. On A Slow Boat To China
[3:05] 11. Ole Buttermilk Sky
[2:59] 12. Deep Purple
[3:19] 13. (I Got Spurs That) Jingle, Jangle, Jingle
[3:01] 14. The Woody Woodpecker Song
[3:09] 15. Huggin' And Chalkin'
[3:16] 16. The Old Lamplighter

Kay Kyser was never much more than an entertaining curio in the field of swing music, a novelty act with an unusually good band to back him up. All of his hits from the late '30s until the end of the '40s are represented, most of which have more nostalgic interest today than major musical value, although Ginny Simms and her successors sing well enough. The sound on this collection isn't ideal, as it dates from a period when Columbia in particular was getting a cold, harsh texture from much of its '40s big band masters; but it is fair, and there's unlikely to be an upgrade anytime soon. ~Bruce Eder

Best Of Big Bands

Smokey Robinson - Timeless Love

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:34
Size: 127.2 MB
Styles: R&B, Vocal
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[4:30] 1. You Go To My Head
[5:05] 2. I'm In The Mood For Love
[5:28] 3. Our Love Is Here To Stay
[3:18] 4. Fly Me To The Moon (In Other Words)
[5:50] 5. Night And Day
[3:39] 6. I'm Glad There Is You
[3:15] 7. More Than You Know
[4:08] 8. Speak Low
[5:08] 9. Time After Time
[2:46] 10. I Can't Get You Anything But Love (Baby)
[2:53] 11. I Love Your Face
[4:25] 12. I've Got You Under My Skin
[5:03] 13. Tea For Two

Smokey Robinson hasn't had much use for making records since his records stopped selling in significant numbers, which happened as of the early '90s; after that, his only regular album has been 1999's Intimate. But Universal Music's New Door imprint exists for the purpose of making new recordings with veteran artists for whom the major label is the repository for the bulk of their catalogs (think Joe Cocker, Nanci Griffith), and Robinson fits that criterion perfectly, since Universal controls the Motown library. But instead of making an album of new, original songs, Robinson has opted for the hoary concept of "aging rock-era pop star sings pre-rock standards," an idea that was never good to begin with and that should have been buried with the final entry in Rod Stewart's series of atrocities. Happily, Robinson's version turns out to be not half bad. One reason for this is that, unlike Stewart et al., his model is not Frank Sinatra and the rest of the Rat Pack, but rather some of the jazz singers who also essayed the work of Cole Porter and other pre-1950 songwriters. Robinson seems to have first heard these songs as sung by Ella Fitzgerald (his primary influence), Sarah Vaughan, and Billie Holiday, among others. When he sings "I'm in the Mood for Love," he throws in some of the King Pleasure vocalese on James Moody's jazz interpretation of the song, "Moody's Mood for Love." Robinson is no stranger to the material; he first recorded Kurt Weill's "Speak Low" and Porter's "I've Got You Under My Skin" with the Miracles in 1962, and now as a 66-year-old he isn't afraid to take these songs where he wants to take them, i.e., in the direction of his '80s "quiet storm" hits. They are all the better for it. As of 2006, Robinson was spending his time playing the concert halls in the many hotel/casinos around the country; his versions of these standards would be as likely to drawn appreciation in such venues as his old hits. ~William Ruhlmann

Timeless Love

Dick Hyman - Stompin' At The Savoy

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:14
Size: 105.8 MB
Styles: Jazz organ
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[2:57] 1. Begin The Beguine
[4:04] 2. Moonlight Serenade
[3:39] 3. I'm Getting Sentimental Over You
[4:18] 4. One O'clock Jump
[3:58] 5. Sing, Sing, Sing
[3:00] 6. Song Of India
[3:20] 7. Stompin' At The Savoy
[3:07] 8. And The Angels Sing
[2:57] 9. Cherokee
[2:59] 10. A String Of Pearls
[2:51] 11. You Do Something To Me
[3:20] 12. Music Makers
[3:17] 13. St. Louis Blues
[2:20] 14. Way Down Yonder In New Orleans

Throughout a busy musical career that got underway in the early '50s, Dick Hyman has functioned as pianist, organist, arranger, music director, and composer. His versatility in all of these areas has resulted in a long career involving film scores, orchestral compositions, concert appearances and well over 100 albums recorded under his own name. While developing a masterful facility for improvisation in his own piano style, Mr. Hyman has also investigated ragtime and the earliest periods of jazz and has researched and recorded the piano music of Scott Joplin, Jelly Roll Morton, James P. Johnson, Zez Confrey, Eubie Blake and Fats Waller, which he often features in his frequent recitals. Other solo recordings include the music of Irving Berlin, Harold Arlen, Cole Porter, George Gershwin, Richard Rodgers and Duke Ellington. Some of his past recordings with combos are From The Age Of Swing, Swing Is Here, Cheek To Cheek, and If Bix Played Gershwin, plus numerous duet albums with cornetist Ruby Braff, and fellow pianists including Ralph Sutton, Shelly Berg, Derek Smith.

In addition to his activities in the jazz and concert worlds, Mr. Hyman has had a prolific career in New York as a studio musician and won seven Most Valuable Player Awards from the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. He acted as music director for such television programs as Benny Goodman's final appearance (on PBS) and for In Performance at the White House. He received an Emmy for his original score for Sunshine's on the Way, a daytime drama, and another for musical direction of a PBS special on Eubie Blake. He is a member of the Jazz Hall of Fame of the Rutgers Institute of Jazz Studies and the New Jersey Jazz Society.

Stompin' At The Savoy

Jeff Lorber - Midnight

Styles: Jazz Funk, Fusion
Year: 1988
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:57
Size: 116,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:28)  1. Midnight
(4:16)  2. The Simple Life
(4:49)  3. Down Low
(4:33)  4. I Ain't Thinkin' About You
(4:27)  5. Watching The Sun Set
(4:55)  6. Dear Prudence
(4:28)  7. The Wild East
(5:12)  8. Never
(3:54)  9. Perugia
(4:29) 10. Feelin' It
(4:21) 11. A Walk In The Park

How's this for a definition of a smooth jazz elder statesman: one whose career spans an entire generation, whose hit album in 1999 uses the same instrumentation and stylistic approach as his first demo 24 years before, only now those old instruments and style are hip again as part of a retro movement? Listened to side by side, Midnight and his 1977 breakthrough Water Sign are like twin sons born to the same family years apart. In addition to the hypnotic clicking wah-wah guitar grooves, both albums focus on Fender Rhodes and Hammond B-3, the attractive one-two keyboard punch Lorber has favored for all of his career but the mid-'80s when he experimented with techno sounds. Lorber sets the tone on the hiss-and-pop LP effect before the music begins on "Down Low." The title of the second track, "The Simple Life," best reflects this old-school mentality. On that tune, Lorber experiments on the Rhodes by holding notes of the melody for different lengths of time, creating those unusual distortions; then he'll use those sounds alternately while improvising off the main melody and enhance certain lines with a brief B-3 wash or an acoustic piano flourish. The introduction to the title track is a wayward Rhodes line wandering in search of a groove, which Lorber helps create by providing the wah-wah-flavored rhythmic click himself. ~Jonathan Widran http://www.allmusic.com/album/midnight-mw0000035154

Personnel: Jeff Lorber (various instruments); Chelsea, Robin Dixon (vocals); Gary Meek (flute); Urs Weisendanger (keyboards); Michael Landau, Paul Pesco, Buzz Feiten, Stuart Wylen (guitar); Nathaniel Phillips (bass); John Robinson (drums); Paulinho da Costa (congas, tamborine, percussion).

Midnight

Carmen Lundy - Night and Day

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 1986
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:05
Size: 105,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:50)  1. Night And Day
(6:15)  2. Everything Must Change
(5:12)  3. Easy To Love
(3:38)  4. My Old Flame
(4:03)  5. Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me
(3:18)  6. Lullaby Of Birdland
(4:55)  7. More Than You Know
(5:32)  8. Willow Weep For Me
(4:16)  9. My Shining Hour
(4:03) 10. Every Time We Say Goodbye

Reissue of the 1987 classic album on its 25th anniversary with these very special musicians - Kenny Kirkland, Rodney Jones, Curtis Lundy, Victor Lewis, Ricky Ford and Alex Blake. Available for the first time after many years, the album contains the original tracks with new artwork created by Carmen Lundy especially for this reissue. Finally, the wait is over! We loved this album then, and it sounds even better this time around. Features extraordinary performances from Ms. Lundy and a stellar ensemble, with the late great Kenny Kirkland on piano, this album of standards (her only album of all standards) is a welcome return to the classic songbook.~Afrasia Productions https://www.amazon.com/Night-Day-Carmen-Lundy/dp/B005X1TJUI

Personnel:  Carmen Lundy : Vocals; Kenny Kirkland: Piano; Alex Blake: Bass & Electric Bass; Curtis Lundy: Bass;  Victor Lewis: Drums;  Rodney Jones: Guitar;  Ricky Ford: Tenor Saxophone

Night and Day

Junior Mance - Happy Time

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1962
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:17
Size: 100,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:17)  1. Happy Time
(5:22)  2. Jitterbug Waltz
(5:28)  3. Out South
(4:42)  4. Tin Tin Deo
(5:50)  5. For Dancers Only
(4:39)  6. Taggie's Tune
(5:36)  7. Azure Te
(5:20)  8. The Simple Waltz

Pianist Junior Mance was in excellent company on this inspired 1962 session with bassist Ron Carter and drummer Mickey Roker. Its unfortunate this trio only recorded together on this one date as their unity propels the blues, gospel, and bebop ideas Mance consistently feeds them. The program is highlighted by three Mance originals "Out South," "Taggie's Tune," and the torrid joy of the opening theme "Happy Time," along with versions of "Jitterbug Waltz," "Tin Tin Deo," and Mance at his soulful bluesy best on Clark Terry's "The Simple Waltz."~Al Campbell http://www.allmusic.com/album/happy-time-mw0000671960

Junior Mance Trio: Junior Mance (piano); Ron Carter (bass); Mickey Roker (drums).

Happy Time

Jim Snidero - Interface

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:25
Size: 128,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:47)  1. Interface
(6:12)  2. Silhouette
(4:56)  3. Fall Out
(8:44)  4. One by One
(5:54)  5. Aperitivo
(7:45)  6. Viper
(6:37)  7. After the Pain
(8:26)  8. Expectations

The digital age has completely changed the way language is used. People talk about "googling" things, discovering new "apps," and "friending people" all the time, so it wouldn't be surprising if the word "interface" eventually replaces "communication" in common, everyday conversations. Interfacing can essentially be viewed as a modern day synonym for communication, and that, after all, is one of the cornerstones of jazz. Saxophonist Jim Snidero knows this all too well. With an impressive résumé as a sideman, decades of performing experience under his belt, fifteen prior leader dates which showcase his talent, and a reputation as one of the biggest names in jazz education, thanks to his Jazz Conception books, Snidero has shown that communication with listeners and other musicians is key to success. Interface is a logical successor to Crossfire (Savant, 2009), which found the saxophonist utilizing guitar in place of piano, but it isn't more of the same thing. Paul Bollenbacks use of acoustic guitar on a number of tracks, the impressive drumming from newcomer McClenty Hunter, and the decision to make this an all-original date, help to make this album stand apart from Snidero's prior record.

Three-quarters of the Crossfire band is on board here, with rock-solid bassist Paul Gill filling out the roster, and this band of musical brothers is in sync every step of the way. Gill anchors the band through a variety of settings and, on the rare occasion that he solos ("Expectations"), he manages to perfectly capture the mood of the music. Bollenback's playing is almost beyond words, and he comes at each song in a different way. He delves into bluesy soul soloing that would make Grant Green proud ("After The Pain"), strikes at the heart of the music with power and aggression ("Fall Out"), and astonishes with his stellar technique ("Viper"). While Bollenback and Snidero each have own unique voices on their respective instruments, both players have a shared trait in their playing, which speaks of sincerity and honesty, regardless of the setting. Snidero might make powerful calls to the wild at one moment ("Viper") and naked, intimate gestures at another ("One By One"), but it all comes across with clarity and sense of purpose. Hunter hasn't been part of Snidero's world for as long as the other players, but he makes his mark on this album. He always finds a way to get to the core of each piece, whether the music calls for easy swing ("Expectations"), virtual nothingness that's felt more than heard ("One By One"), or something a bit more potent ("Fall Out" and "Viper"). These eight Snidero originals make it abundantly clear that these four men can interface with the best of them.~Dan Bilawsky https://www.allaboutjazz.com/interface-jim-snidero-savant-records-review-by-dan-bilawsky.php
 
Personnel: Jim Snidero: alto saxophone; Paul Bollenback: guitar; Paul Gill: bass; McClenty Hunter: drums.

Interface

Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Peggy King & The All-Star Jazz Trio - Songs A La King

Size: 145,3 MB
Time: 61:47
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Let's Fall In Love (2:16)
02. Cry Me A River (4:24)
03. Peggy King Introduces Any Questions (1:16)
04. Any Questions (2:13)
05. Maybe You'll Be There (4:31)
06. How About You (2:51)
07. Born To Be Blue (3:10)
08. Be Careful, It's My Heart (2:44)
09. The Boy Next Door (4:02)
10. Nobody's Heart (4:40)
11. Dearly Beloved (3:17)
12. Wait Till You See Him Her (2:59)
13. While We're Young (2:50)
14. You Better Go Now (4:03)
15. With A Song In My Heart (3:23)
16. My Ship (5:12)
17. Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man (4:40)
18. You Took Advantage Of Me (3:08)

Personnel: Peggy King (vcl), with Andy Kahn (p), Bruce Kaminsky (b), Bruce Klauber (d)

Along with Tony Bennett, Peggy King is among the very last certifiable stars of radio, television, motion pictures, theaters, nightclubs and recordings still working today. Shes packed a lot into a whirlwind career of the 1950s and early 1960s, working with everyone from Frank Sinatra and Sammy Davis, Jr. to André Previn and a three-year association with comedian George Gobel; appearing in films like Zero Hour; singing at the 1955 Oscar Awards telecast; entertaining U.S. troops overseas with Bob Hope during the Korean War; and recording for Columbia Records, among others.

In 1961, she married After Six Formal Wear Chairman/President Samuel Rudofker, started a family in Philadelphia, and left the business. Aside from a brief re-entry onstage and with new recordings made during the mid-1980s, Peggy King did not perform in public professionally again until almost two years ago, when she met pianist Andy Kahn, drummer Bruce Klauber, and bassist Bruce Kaminsky, members in long-standing42 years, to be exactof Philadelphias popular jazz ensemble The All-Star Jazz Trio. ~Bruce Klauber

MC
Ziddu

Michael Blum Quartet - Chasin' Oscar: A Tribute To Oscar Peterson

Size: 107,2 MB
Time: 46:04
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Nightingale (6:46)
02. I Loves You, Porgy (6:08)
03. You Look Good To Me (4:55)
04. The Girl From Ipanema (4:03)
05. East Of The Sun (And West Of The Moon) (5:01)
06. Tristeza (3:11)
07. Pine (5:00)
08. Tenderly (5:29)
09. Whisper (5:29)

Michael Blum is a jazz guitarist based out of Hanover, NH. At the age of 21 years old, Michael has already released his debut album, Initiation, which All About Jazz calls, “a stellar debut,” and author Scott Yanow calls, “a strong debut from Michael Blum, a guitarist who will clearly have an important future in jazz.”

In November 2014, Blum received a rave review in DownBeat Magazine, which compares him favorably to, “Kenny Burrell, Charlie Byrd, Jim Hall, Johnny Smith, Emily Remler…or Columbia-era George Benson.” DownBeat calls Blum “an articulate player who executes with clarity…[and] shows unusual maturity.”

“Michael Blum plays with seemingly flawless technique, whose musical style and driving ambition, may one day carry him to elite status.” ~All About Jazz

Vintage Guitar Magazine says, “Hope for jazz guitar’s future abounds in this release [Initiation] by the 20-year-old Blum and his quartet…[it's] the perfect debut for a player who seems wise beyond his years.”

Initiation features The Michael Blum Quartet, with Michael Blum on guitar, Brad Smith on piano, Jim Stinnett on bass, and Dom Moio on drums.

Michael has performed and studied with world-renowned jazz educator and Berklee School of Music professor Jim Stinnett. Over the past few years, Blum has performed extensively at a diverse selection of venues, including Jazz at Lincoln Center and the Hopkins Center for the Arts. He has also performed with musicians such as John Clayton, Jeffrey Clayton, Joe Hunt, Michael Manring and Fred Haas.

MC
Ziddu

Lisa Lindsley - Long After Midnight

Size: 113,1 MB
Time: 48:01
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. Long After Midnight (4:26)
02. Star Eyes (2:22)
03. The House Is Haunted (6:11)
04. Heat Wave (2:54)
05. Skylark's Song (4:39)
06. I Walk A Little Faster - Manhattan (4:02)
07. My Favorite Things (4:34)
08. Diamonds Are A Girl's Best Friend (5:35)
09. Love, You Didn't Do Right By Me (4:04)
10. Mellow Yellow (4:04)
11. The Surry With The Fringe On Top (2:58)
12. When You're Smiling / Pennies From Heaven (2:07)

Lindsley's newest album, Long After Midnight, was born from the inspiration of nights on the Seine and coffee in Parisian cafes. Recorded over the course of 2 days, Long After Midnight invites the listener to walk through the French countryside with a glass of wine, and relax into the music.

The joyful rhythm of Star Eyes, and the heartbreaking ballad of Love, You Didn't Do Right By Me, compliment two new tracks from French composer James Wilson; Skylark's Song, and Long After Midnight, the title song.

Featuring the Mourad Benhammou Quartet, Lindsley's voice flows seamlessly with the Quartet who have played with greats like Alain Jean-Marie and Fabien Mary and Steve Potts. Lindsley's first CD with Grammy Nominated George Mesterhazy, was a work of love and passion, and this CD is no different. Growing quickly as a jazz singer has given her a distinctive voice and a unique and playful approach to interpreting standards, which rings through each track on Long After Midnight.

MC
Ziddu

Mike DiLorenzo - Soul To Soul

Size: 126,4 MB
Time: 54:01
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Soul To Soul (4:16)
02. Friday Night At The Cadillac Club (4:53)
03. Parisian Lights (4:52)
04. Sun Goddess (4:33)
05. Latch (4:58)
06. Pocket Change (3:39)
07. Pinot Nuevo (5:26)
08. Cherokee (4:22)
09. Three Views Of A Secret (4:48)
10. Transformation (4:11)
11. Santorini (3:50)
12. It's A Virtual World (4:07)

As a NY based musician, Mike has had the opportunity to perform on piano, organ and synthesizers with a wide range of artists with styles ranging from R&B to Latin and Jazz. Soul To Soul captures all 3 elements with 7 original compositions from organ swing jazz to samba as well as modern twists of some contemporary jazz classics such as a latin version of Friday Night at the Cadillac Club, a modern tribute to the Ramsey Lewis/EW&F classic Sun Goddess and a different spin on a Weather Report /Jaco Pastorius classic. The jazz standard Cherokee and the EDM hit Latch recorded by Disclosure and Sam Smith are also represented in a new light.

Mike's previous solo recording endeavors have gained national commercial radio and television airplay.

MC
Ziddu

Parisian Chanteuse - Hymne To Love

Size: 175 MB
Time: 29:39
File: FLAC
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals, Chanson
Art: Front

01. La Vie En Rose (4:23)
02. L'hymne A L'amour (2:47)
03. La Foule (2:57)
04. Mon Dieu (2:17)
05. Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien (3:15)
06. Mon Manege A Moi (2:38)
07. Johnny Tu N'es Pas Un Ange (3:38)
08. Milord (4:19)
09. La Vie En Rose (Acoustic) (3:21)

On a Paris morning, in April of 1967, a singer surged into this world! Even when within the confines of her strict catholic upbringing, Synthia found liberation in her voice.
In her early 20‘s, Synthia joined a parisian theater company, where she acted and performed in modern and classic style plays and through this company she discovered “La Commedia Dell‘Arte“ and fell in love with the outrageous forms of this artistic expression. During this period of time she also wrote her first “song and poetry book“, which became building blocks for future work including “Tatou“.

For Parisian Chanteuse, being on stage singing, is the most profound, exhilarating feeling! Synthia created a rock band, “Stonehenge“ in 1994 and performed live in venues such as L‘Arapaho and festivals in France. The musical influences Synthia absorbed from the sounds of Paris‘s “La Rue Des Lombards” (famous for its Jazz Clubs) developed into a passion. The past 10 years Parisian Chanteuse has grown an appreciation for many styles of jazz, including Latin and Afro–Jazz and has infused Oriental and Mambo Dance with a “Dress Glamour“ into her performance.
Parisian Chanteuse celebrates love with “A Tribute To Edith Piaf“.

MC
Ziddu

Tom Saunders & The Wild Bill Davison Legacy - Call Of The Wild

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:37
Size: 147.9 MB
Styles: Dixieland jazz
Year: 1996/2006
Art: Front

[5:59] 1. At The Jazz Band Ball
[5:03] 2. Squeeze Me
[4:42] 3. Running Wild
[3:57] 4. Constantly
[4:45] 5. Beale Street Blues
[4:44] 6. In A Sentimental Mood
[2:35] 7. Cornet Shop Suey
[3:39] 8. Satan Takes A Holiday
[5:02] 9. Battle Hymn Of The Republic
[5:00] 10. Love Is Here To Stay
[4:53] 11. You're Lucky To Me
[5:23] 12. On The Alamo
[3:22] 13. Cottage For Sale
[5:27] 14. I Never Knew

Although often overlooked because he lives in the Midwest, Tom Saunders has long been one of the finest cornetists in trad jazz. On this particular CD, he leads the Wild Bill Davison Legacy Band, most of whom had performed in the past with the late Davison: trombonist Bill Allred, clarinetist Chuck Hedges, tenor saxophonist Rick Fay, pianist Johnny Varro, bassist Paul Keller, and drummer Warren Sauer. While Saunders does not really sound that much like Davison, his own exciting style is solid, good-humored, and complementary to the music that Davison played. Such top-notch Dixieland standards as "At the Jazz Band Ball," "Beale Street Blues," "You're Lucky to Me," and "I Never Knew" all have their exciting moments. Dixieland fans should have little difficulty enjoying this music. ~Scott Yanow

Call Of The Wild

Duane Eddy - Especially For You

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:34
Size: 106.6 MB
Styles: Rock n Roll
Year: 1959/2000
Art: Front

[2:22] 1. Peter Gunn
[3:28] 2. Only Child
[1:35] 3. Lover
[2:14] 4. Fuzz
[2:08] 5. Yep!
[2:29] 6. Along The Navajo Trail
[2:36] 7. Just Because
[4:54] 8. Quiniela
[1:45] 9. Trouble In Mind
[2:43] 10. Tuxedo Junction
[2:51] 11. Hard Times
[2:28] 12. Along Came Linda
[2:50] 13. Only Child
[3:05] 14. Yep! (Alt Vers.)
[5:02] 15. St. James
[1:48] 16. Some Kinda Earthquake
[2:08] 17. First Love, First Tears

Duane Eddy's second LP contained just one hit, "Yep," although "Peter Gunn" would enter the Top 40 when it was issued later in 1960. Unlike his debut Have "Twangy" Guitar Will Travel, it was not built around singles with a few songs to stretch it to album length, with all of the songs (except "Yep") being recorded in a week. Give Eddy this much credit: at a time when virtually all rock & roll LPs were hasty, knocked-together jobs, he did at least try to vary the program. There were slow blues ("Only Child"), pop standards (Rodgers & Hart's "Lover"), a rather long jazzy workout ("Quiniela"), original material in the mold of his hits, sax-driven R&B (a cover of Noble "Thin Man" Watts' "Hard Times"), and poppy stuff with strings and wordless female backup vocals that sounded like themes for B-movie westerns ("Along the Navajo Trail"). It still added up to a pretty inconsequential instrumental album in which the hits ("Peter Gunn" and "Yep") boasted much more arresting hooks than the surrounding tunes. Eddy sounds like he's tearing a page from Les Paul's book on "Lover," with its very atypical (for Eddy) arrangement of hyper-fast guitar licks. ~Richie Unterberger

By the time this album came out in 1959, Duane was a superstar - the first all-time, best-selling rock & roll instrumentalist. Especially For You followed much the same path as its predecessor, with Duane and producer Lee Hazlewood being responsible for writing many of the album's tracks. This super-charged reissue contains stereo remixes from the original master tapes, 3 chart singles (inc. Peter Gunn), 5 never before released bonus tracks, new liner notes & rare 1959 photos.

Especially For You

Nick Manson - L.A. Farewell

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:31
Size: 108.8 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[5:26] 1. L.A. Farewell
[3:14] 2. Nona's Eyes
[3:54] 3. Organs And Hut Tubs
[4:05] 4. Watching, Waiting
[3:53] 5. Real Love, Tried And True
[4:30] 6. Petty Thoughts
[4:06] 7. Sensibly Smooth
[3:01] 8. Pressed For Time
[3:22] 9. Waking Giant
[3:34] 10. Ruthie And Pineapple
[4:38] 11. Shade Car Blues
[3:42] 12. A Small Child's Prayer

Born and raised in the Seattle area, Nick remembers his early years. "My grandfather was a classical pianist so I heard classical music early on. When I was ten I switched from a home organ which I hated to the piano, having nine years of classical piano lessons. I first heard jazz when I was in the seventh grade and enjoyed seeing the high school stage band. I was really into big bands and that is how I got into jazz, listening to the music of Buddy Rich, Count Basie and Duke Ellington. I was also inspired by the Beatles and Elton John to want to make my own music." While in high school, Nick went to Stan Kenton clinics, developing his skills as a composer and an arranger. He competed at all-state festivals in Washington and remembers his piano teacher giving him a copy of Chick Corea's Light As A Feather which made a strong impression. He also picked up some very valuable playing experience in an unusual way. "My parents had a restaurant. When I was a sophomore in high school, they would hire all of the top local players from the Northwest with the condition that they would let me play piano. So I had a chance to play three nights a week as a teenager. It was an invaluable learning experience."

After high school, Nick Manson attended, on scholarship, the Berklee College Of Music. He was inspired and influenced greatly by Dave Mash and George Garzone in composition, arranging and improvisation. When he was 19 he moved to Los Angeles where he played with Lenny Kravitz's first band and attended the Dick Grove School. He became adept at using MIDI and electronics, and was one of the first to play, in concert, Yamaha's prototype of the DX7.

After moving back to Seattle, Nick became very busy doing production work while also playing jazz and creating music in a variety of settings. During his periods in Seattle and back in Los Angeles for a decade, he was quite productive, producing, arranging and performing music on CDs and for films, television and commercials. He won two Emmy Awards for his work on the Seattle television show How 'Bout That, for best piece of music in a musical segment and for best musical production in a half-hour television show. Even during his busiest periods working in commercial music, Nick Manson played jazz. He has performed everywhere from the Kennedy Center to the Blue Note Japan, Blue Note Italy, Billboard Live Japan, Concord Jazz Festival, Jazz Port Townsend, The Baked Potato, The Jazz Bakery, The Telluride Jazz Festival, The Chandler Jazz Festival and Seattle's Jazz Alley, also touring in Europe, South American and Asia. He co-wrote the gospel standard "Jesus, Mighty Fortress" with Terry Clark and Roby Duke, and has worked with Christopher Cross, John Patitucci, Ernestine Anderson, Jackie Ryan, B.B. King, Joe Magnarelli, Eric Rasmussen, Steve Huffsteter, Kim Richmond, Ohad Talmor, Bud Shank, Bill Perkins, Plas Johnson, Jeff Kashiwa, Don Lanphere, Jay Thomas, Deniece Williams, Roby Duke and Ernie Watts among others.

In January 2007, the pianist and his wife, Nona, moved to Phoenix and bacame a Phoenix favorite nearly over night, packing the house in local jazz venues in Scottsdale and Fountain Hills. Nick still performs often in Los Angeles and continues to perform around the globe with his own unique trios and quartets and backing up famous artists when needed. "Every time I play, I want to sound like myself and add to the legacy of the music. That is my main goal; to sound like who I am as a person and to play music that both challenges me and that people will enjoy." ~Scott Yanow

L.A. Farewell

Sarah McLawler - We Bring You Swing

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 28:38
Size: 65.6 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 1959/2009
Art: Front

[2:16] 1. A Foggy Day
[2:35] 2. My Reverie
[2:15] 3. Lullaby Of Birdland
[2:29] 4. The High And The Mighty
[1:48] 5. When Lilacs Bloom
[2:18] 6. Caravan
[2:25] 7. Slow Boat To China
[2:37] 8. Robbins Nest
[2:17] 9. Love Walked In
[2:05] 10. Canadian Sunset
[2:35] 11. Rainbow On The River
[2:52] 12. Midnight Sun

Sarah McLawler (organ) and her husband, Richard Otto (violin) with Lefty Bates on guitar, El Dee Young on bass and Red Holt on drums.

We Bring You Swing

The Jonah Jones Quartet - Swingin' On Broadway/Broadway Swings Again

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:29
Size: 124.8 MB
Styles: Trumpet jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[2:08] 1. Baubles, Bangles And Beads
[2:32] 2. The Party's Over
[1:55] 3. You're So Right For Me
[2:45] 4. Just My Luck
[1:48] 5. The Surrey With The Fringe On Top
[2:29] 6. You're Just In Love
[1:51] 7. Just In Time
[2:38] 8. Hey There
[2:23] 9. I Could Have Danced All Night
[2:04] 10. Whatever Lola Wants
[1:59] 11. Til There Was You
[2:14] 12. Seventy Six Trombones
[1:55] 13. 'till Tomorrow
[2:18] 14. Almost Like Being In Love
[2:31] 15. Tall Hope
[2:21] 16. If Ever I Would Leave You
[2:24] 17. Good Clean Fun
[1:42] 18. I Wish I Were In Love Again
[2:33] 19. Put On A Happy Face
[2:43] 20. The Sound Of Music
[2:07] 21. Get Me To The Church On Time
[2:33] 22. Make Someone Happy
[2:05] 23. Hey, Look Me Over
[2:22] 24. Together Wherever We Go

Twofer: Swingin on Broadway (ST-963) 1958 [#1-12], Broadway Swings Again (ST-1641) 1961 [#13-24]. Jonah Jones, trumpet & vocal on #4; George Rhodes (#1-12) or Teddy Brannon (#13-24), piano; John Brown, bass; Harold Austin (#1-12) or George 'Pops' Foster (#13-24), drums. Recorded in New York City, December 1957 (#1-12) and September 1961 (#13-24).

Jonah Jones zoomed to popularity in the late 50s. He found a successful formula and used it to brighten the hit charts with a succession of bouncy albums on Capitol Records. His quartet was one of the three newcomers in the Top 10 wide variety of small groups listed in the favorite Instrumental Billboard lists in 1958.

Jonah Jones and his quartet give here the aftertheater treatment to hits from famous Broadway musicals. Jones familiar, swinging trumpet and rhythm section infuse the songs with his own spirited style, and the whole set is swingy, for either listening or dancing. All in Jones own brand of mostly muted jazz trumpetrich, mellow and stimulating.

Swingin' On Boadway/Broadway Swings Again

Scott Hamilton & Friends - Across The Tracks

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:51
Size: 130,9 MB
Art: Front + Back

(6:24)  1. Deuces Wild
(5:35)  2. Parker's Pals
(5:41)  3. Save Your Love For Me
(8:15)  4. Cop Out
(5:34)  5. Intermission Riff
(4:25)  6. Sweet Slumber
(7:48)  7. Something For Red
(8:58)  8. Blue Turning Gray Over You
(4:08)  9. Memories Of You

A tenor saxophonist standing foursquare and unreconstructed in the tradition established by Coleman Hawkins, Ben Webster and Illinois Jacquet, Scott Hamilton is considered so uncool in some quarters that to admit you enjoy him is to risk being shunned by hip society. Now in his mid-fifties and playing a brand of jazz that was at its peak before he was born, Hamilton hasn't deviated from his style since his debut album, Scott Hamilton Is A Good Wind Who Is Blowing Us No Ill (Concord, 1977), recorded when he was just 23. Since then he's made another sixty-plus discs as leader or co-leader an output, interestingly, which in jazz is matched only by saxophonists directly opposite him on the stylometer, like Anthony Braxton or Evan Parker. In the process, Hamilton's honeyed sound and easy swing have given all but the most po-faced pleasure. He plays the style he plays guilelessly and with conviction, as though born to it. His music has degrees of creativity absent from the pasticheurs. Retro he might be, revivalist he certainly isn't. Across 

The Tracks, produced by Bob Porter and recorded by Rudy Van Gelder at his Englewood, New Jersey studio (hence the title), is an infectious set of mainly up-tempo ballads and blues, on which Hamilton fronts a quartet completed by guitarist Duke Robillard, organist Gene Ludwig and drummer Chuck Riggs. Baritone saxophonist Doug James is added on two tracks, "Parker's Pals" and "Intermission Riff." The guitar/organ/drums line-up suggests chicken shack soul-jazz, circa 1960 and on one track, an ebullient reading of "Something For The Road," Hamilton adopts an appropriately vocalized and raw tone. But elsewhere he favors the warm, caressing sound, given a languorous vibrato at slower tempos, for which he's best known. Hamilton is brilliantly served by his band. 

Robillard's elliptical solos are magic, giving fresh nuances to familiar structures, and even when comping he's worth listening to. James shines on his two guest appearances, particularly the boppish "Parker's Pals," written by fellow baritone player Leo Parker and first heard on Parker's Let Me Tell You 'Bout It (Blue Note, 1962), now available in a fine Van Gelder remastered edition. Ludwig and Riggs, who has played with Hamilton on and off for over thirty years, cook from start to finish. Forget the style police and give yourself a treat. Scott Hamilton may not stretch the envelope, but he surely seals it with a kiss.~Chris May https://www.allaboutjazz.com/across-the-tracks-scott-hamilton-review-by-chris-may.php

Personnel: Scott Hamilton: tenor saxophone;  Duke Robillard: electric guitar;  Gene Ludwig: organ;  Chuck Riggs: drums;  Doug James: baritone saxophone (2, 5).

Across The Tracks