Sunday, July 31, 2016

Groove Holmes, Jimmy McGriff, Junior Parker - Troubadours Of Groove

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:49
Size: 86.6 MB
Styles: R&B, Soul- jazz
Year: 1996/2012
Art: Front

[3:30] 1. Richard 'Groove' Holmes - Groove Grease
[3:11] 2. Richard 'Groove' Holmes - The Bird
[3:34] 3. Richard 'Groove' Holmes - Plain Brown Bag
[3:38] 4. Richard 'Groove' Holmes - Ain't It Funky Now
[2:46] 5. Jimmy McGriff - River's Invitation
[3:19] 6. Jimmy McGriff - Love Ain't Nothin' But A Business Goin' On
[5:15] 7. Jimmy McGriff - Night Glider
[3:30] 8. Jimmy McGriff - Fly Jack
[5:19] 9. Junior Parker - You've Got It Bad
[3:42] 10. Junior Parker - Red Onion

"The Troubadours" are not actually a group, but these are three groovemeisters who made important individual contributions to the soul-jazz and R&B-blues movements. The four Jimmy McGriff and four Richard "Groove" Holmes' organ combo numbers are good but far from essential tracks in their careers. Two Junior Parker numbers are the same. It's hard to understand the concept behind the release of Troubadours of Groove, as many other recordings yield better music and more vital sessions than these. It's not a bad party record though, one time through. ~Michael G. Nastos

Troubadours Of Groove

Nilson Matta Brazilian Trio - Forests

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:20
Size: 142.7 MB
Styles: Latin jazz, Piano jazz
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[6:19] 1. Amor
[7:04] 2. Forests
[6:39] 3. Samba Alegre
[6:22] 4. Montreux
[7:06] 5. Pro Zeca
[5:48] 6. Tarde
[6:24] 7. Ubatuba
[5:54] 8. Paraty
[3:37] 9. Flying Over Rio
[7:03] 10. Vera Cruz

Helio Alves: piano; Nilson Matta: bass; Duduka Da Fonseca: drums, percussion.

This exciting recording is a perfect example of the thorough absorption of the Bossa Nova being integrated with the mainstream jazz piano trio. All three members of Brazilian Trio are, in fact, Brazilians but have lived in New York City for decades,settling in the 1970s, '80s and '90s.

Pianist Helio Alves is the youngest of the three, having worked with Oscar Castro-Neves, Rosa Passos and Paquito D'Rivera. His decidedly modal approach to piano jazz is undoubtedly a credit to the influence of Bill Evans. Like Alves, bassist Nilson Matta hailed from Sao Paulo and has been a prolific musician seemingly appearing on scores of dates over the years. Drummer Duduka Da Fonseca relocated from Rio in 1970 and has been a vital part of the New York jazz scene ever since; at one time he was a part of the Don Pullen Afro-Brazilian Connection. His wife is Brazilian vocalist Maucha Adnet, who has established herself as a primary interpreter of Antonio Carlos Jobim. Da Fonseca and Matta form two-thirds of Trio Da Paz along with guitarist Romero Lubambo.

The music on Forests, while reflecting the pulse and passion of Brazil, is not really Bossa Nova or Samba. Rather, it represents a synthesis of those forms with the style of the American jazz trio. The tunes are redolent of the forests of Brazil, presented in a manner that moves the music into a new category. Opening with Ivan Lins' lovely "Amor," featuring Alves' lyrical piano, the session moves into Matta's title tune, dedicated to the forests of the Earth and in particular the Amazon Rain Forest, with Da Fonseca offering some tasty brushwork. Milton Nascimento contributes "Tarde," a beautiful melody that is limned again by Alves' Bill Evans-style work. Hermeto Pascoal's "Montreux" is a hard-to-find and rarely recorded title that made its debut at the 1979 Montreux Jazz Festival. The album concludes with Nascimento's popular "Vera Cruz," a full blown jazz samba. One significant observation about Brazilian Trio is that, despite its members' individual recording experiences, this is a fully interactive trio, bringing the distinctive touch of Brazil to a faraway studio. ~Michael P. Gladstone

Forests

Margareta Bengtson - I'm Old Fashioned

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:20
Size: 122.1 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[4:30] 1. I'm Old Fashioned
[6:03] 2. This Is New
[5:36] 3. Corcovado
[5:45] 4. Once Upon A Summertime
[4:26] 5. Twisted
[5:11] 6. It Never Entered My Mind
[4:05] 7. Like Someone In Love
[5:23] 8. Dindi
[6:16] 9. Someone To Watch Over Me
[6:01] 10. Some Other Time

Jazz standards aren't done any better than this! One of the most beautiful soprano voices is that of Margareta Bengtson, one of the founding members of "The Real Group." Melodious, clear and with such lilting voicings, she breathes new life into these well crafted jazz compositions. Her heritage with the Real Group has honed her interpretations of these classic standards like few female vocalists in our time. You'd think this lovely and extremely talented woman from Stockholm, Sweden was "all American". Margareta has captured the soul of this music! ~Barry Fincher

I'm Old Fashioned

Gary Smith - Soft Jazz For Lovers

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:38
Size: 113.6 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz, Easy Listening
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[6:27] 1. I'm Glad There Is You
[4:18] 2. The Gentle Rain
[4:14] 3. Dancing On The Ceiling
[3:54] 4. You And Me
[4:07] 5. Jazz Baby
[2:43] 6. I'm So Confused
[4:23] 7. Springis Here
[4:11] 8. How Long Has This Been Going On
[5:59] 9. Kathy
[4:09] 10. In A Mellow Tone
[5:08] 11. Hung Up On Spring

Gary Smith has more than 40 years of experience in the music business and has worked with some of America’s leading entertainers which include: Bernadette Peters, Frankie Laine, Billy Daniels, Barbi Benton, The Coasters, The Platters, Vickie Carr, Kaye Starre, Riders in the Sky, Sheckie Greene, Anna Marie Alberghetti, Danny and The Juniors Barry Williams and many more. As a Producer, Gary Smith has produced over 90 Albums in most genres of music. Some Artists Gary has recorded or recorded with include three time GRAMMY winner Ernie Watts, Lloyd Mabrey, Jeannie Walla, Paul Severson, Warren Kime, Jeff Pine, Ed Stabler, Susan Rowland, Krystyn Hartman, Gary McCallister, Carlos and Andrea Elias, Connie Pyle, Jack Gaby, Swing City Express and many more. Gary Smith has won eight national awards (Silver Microphone awards) for music for advertising and is a voting member of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (GRAMMYs) as well as a member of BMI. As a recording artist Gary Smith has released over 12 Jazz Guitar Albums, released on the GRS WEST MUSIC label.

Soft Jazz For Lovers

Bill Frisell and Joe Lovano with Paul Motian - Motian in Tokyo

Styles: Guitar And Saxophone Jazz 
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:54
Size: 127,1 MB
Art: Front

( 7:13)  1. From Time to Time
( 6:32)  2. Shakalaka
( 7:05)  3. Kathelin Gray
( 1:00)  4. The Hoax
(11:02)  5. Mumbo Jumbo
( 1:36)  6. Birdsong I
( 7:40)  7. Mode VI
( 5:11)  8. Women from Padua
( 5:24)  9. It Is
( 2:06) 10. Birdsong II

Some improvisers prefer a comfort-zone approach to jazz; in other words, they find a style of jazz they're comfortable with and stick to it which isn't necessarily a bad thing. Scott Hamilton's comfort zone, for example, is a swing-to-bop style that recalls the mid-'40s. The tenor saxman has never been groundbreaking or innovative, but he's undeniably superb at what he does. While the comfort-zone approach works well for a traditionalist like Hamilton, drummer Paul Motian is impressive in a very different way he's the sort of thrill-seeker who enjoys the challenge of hurling himself into a variety of musical situations. Recorded in Tokyo, Japan in 1991, Paul Motian in Tokio finds Motian leading a trio that boasts Bill Frisell on electric guitar and Joe Lovano on tenor sax; piano or keyboards and bass are absent, but neither are missed. In Tokio isn't among Motian's essential recordings, although it's a decent album that draws on influences ranging from Keith Jarrett and the ECM Records catalog to Ornette Coleman. In fact, one of the tunes is "Kathelin Gray," which Coleman and Pat Metheny wrote for their Song X collaboration in 1985. But most of the material was written by Motian himself and easily lends itself to an inside/outside approach. Although cerebral, abstract and avant-garde, In Tokio is far from an exercise in atonality and it certainly isn't harsh or confrontational in the way that a free jazz firebrand like Charles Gayle is harsh and confrontational. Actually, the songs tend to have a floating quality, and Motian's trio demonstrates that outside playing can be reflective rather than in-your-face. Again, In Tokio isn't a five-star masterpiece, but it's a likable document of Motian's association with Frisell and Lovano. ~ Alex Henderson http://www.allmusic.com/album/in-tokio-mw0000329312

Personnel: Paul Motian (drums), Joe Lovano (tenor saxophone), Bill Frisell (guitar).

Motian in Tokyo

Carol Sloane - When I Look In Your Eyes

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:22
Size: 145,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:17)  1. Give Me The Simple Life
(4:16)  2. Isn't This A Lovely Day
(7:34)  3. Midnight Sun
(3:24)  4. Take Your Shoes Off, Baby
(5:31)  5. I Didn't Know About You
(3:49)  6. Soon
(4:47)  7. Old Devil Moon
(6:54)  8. Let's Face The Music And Dance
(5:23)  9. Something Cool
(2:54) 10. Tulip Or Turnip
(4:39) 11. I Was Telling Him About You
(5:34) 12. When I Look In Your Eyes
(3:15) 13. Will You Still Be Mine?

This is one of Carol Sloane's finest recordings. Having developed into a superb interpreter of lyrics who always swings, Sloane works closely with pianist Bill Charlap (who is sometimes joined by bassist Steve Gilmore, drummer Ron Vincent, and guitarist Howard Alden) on a variety of haunting ballads and an occasional romp. Her rendition of "Something Cool" ranks with June Christy's (Sloane really sounds purposely pitiful); "I Didn't Know About You" and "I Was Telling Him About You" are quite expressive, and Sloane brings a happier mood to "Give Me the Simple Life" and "Tulip or Turnip." Highly recommended to fans of first-class singing. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/when-i-look-in-your-eyes-mw0000119385

Personnel: Carol Sloane (vocals); Bill Charlap (piano); Howard Alden (guitar); Steve Gilmore (bass); Ron Vincent (drums).

When I Look In Your Eyes

Sadao Watanabe - Dedicated to Charlie Parker

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:32
Size: 93,0 MB
Art: Front

( 8:53)  1. Parker's Mood
( 6:56)  2. A Song for Bird
( 4:11)  3. Everything Happens to Me
( 5:38)  4. I Can't Get Started
(10:13)  5. Au Privave
( 4:39)  6. If I Should Lose You

Dedicated To Charlie Parker album for sale by Sadao Watanabe was released Jun 08, 1993 on the Denon label. One of his best, due mainly to material. ~ Ron Wynn http://www.allmusic.com/album/dedicated-to-charlie-parker-mw0000188917

Personnel: Sadao Watanabe (alto saxophone); Terumasa Hino (trumpet); Kazuo Yashiro (piano); Masanaga Harada (bass); Fumio Watanabe (drums).

Dedicated to Charlie Parker

Till Bronner - The Good Life

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:00
Size: 138,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:57)  1. The Good Life
(4:04)  2. Sweet Lorraine
(5:21)  3. For All We Know
(4:41)  4. Come Dance with Me
(4:57)  5. Change Partners
(5:49)  6. Love is Here to Stay
(4:58)  7. I Loves You Porgy
(3:48)  8. I Might Be Wrong
(4:45)  9. O Que Resta
(3:57) 10. I'm Confessin' that I Love You
(5:08) 11. I'll be Seeing You
(4:10) 12. Her Smile
(3:20) 13. In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning

The Good Life is the debut album on Sony Music Masterworks from renowned jazz trumpeter, Till Brönner, Germany's best known and best-selling jazz artist. The album is conceived for relaxed moments and draws inspiration form the great American jazz songbook, including new arrangements of works made famous by Frank Sinatra, Billie Holiday, Nat King Cole and many more. Along with his masterful trumpet playing, The Good Life also features Brönner singing on eight of the tracks and includes two original songs written by the two-time Grammy® nominee. Featuring an all-star band John Clayton/bass, Anthony Wilson/guitar, Larry Goldings/piano and Jeff Hamilton/drums The Good Life is an intimate, pared-down, back-to-basics tour de force and testimony to the unique power of jazz to amplify and enrich the most beautiful and poignant moments of our lives.

Till Brönner holds an unrivalled position as Germany s most successful jazz musician. His exceptional international career sees him perform, sing, produce, compose, arrange, record and collaborate with the world s greatest artists from the jazz world and beyond. Throughout his stellar career, he has worked with great musicians such as Dave Brubeck, Herbie Hancock, Tony Bennett, Annie Lennox, Michael Brecker, Al Di Meola, Chaka Khan, Natalie Cole and many more. Guest appearances on Brönner s past albums include a wide range of internationally renowned artists such as Gregory Porter, Arturo Sandoval, Aimee Mann, Sergio Mendes, Kurt Elling, Madeleine Peyroux and Milton Nascimento. https://www.amazon.com/Good-Life-Till-Br%C3%B6nner/dp/B01BGGTZ84

The Good Life

Saturday, July 30, 2016

Don Byas - Avalon

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:37
Size: 83.8 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[3:04] 1. Avalon
[3:14] 2. Blue And Sentimental
[2:49] 3. Little White Lies
[3:16] 4. Out Of Nowhere
[3:03] 5. Deep Purple
[3:04] 6. Them There Eyes
[3:19] 7. Once In A While
[3:05] 8. My Melancholy Baby
[2:39] 9. Should I
[2:55] 10. You Call It Madness (But I Call It Love)
[2:53] 11. Jamboree Jump
[3:12] 12. Pennies From Heaven

One of the greatest of all tenor players, Don Byas' decision to move permanently to Europe in 1946 resulted in him being vastly underrated in jazz history books. His knowledge of chords rivalled Coleman Hawkins, and, due to their similarity in tones, Byas can be considered an extension of the elder tenor. He played with many top swing bands, including those of Lionel Hampton (1935), Buck Clayton (1936), Don Redman, Lucky Millinder, Andy Kirk (1939-1940), and most importantly Count Basie (1941-1943). An advanced swing stylist, Byas' playing looked toward bop. He jammed at Minton's Playhouse in the early '40s, appeared on 52nd Street with Dizzy Gillespie, and performed a pair of stunning duets with bassist Slam Stewart at a 1944 Town Hall concert. After recording extensively during 1945-1946 (often as a leader), Byas went to Europe with Don Redman's band, and (with the exception of a 1970 appearance at the Newport Jazz Festival) never came back to the U.S. He lived in France, the Netherlands, and Denmark; often appeared at festivals; and worked steadily. Whenever American players were touring, they would ask for Byas, who had opportunities to perform with Duke Ellington, Bud Powell, Kenny Clarke, Dizzy Gillespie, Jazz at the Philharmonic (including a recorded tenor battle with Hawkins and Stan Getz), Art Blakey, and (on a 1968 recording) Ben Webster. Byas also recorded often in the 1950s, but was largely forgotten in the U.S. by the time of his death. ~bio by Scott Yanow

Avalon

Hélio Alves - Musica

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:09
Size: 133.1 MB
Styles: Latin jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[4:21] 1. Gafeira
[7:17] 2. Kathy
[6:29] 3. Sombra
[5:54] 4. Black Nile
[6:47] 5. Flor Das Estradas
[7:39] 6. Musica Das Nuvens E Do Chao
[6:50] 7. Adeus Alf
[5:36] 8. Tribute To Charlie
[7:10] 9. Chan's Song

Given his world-class chops, Helio Alves should be famous, but he doesn’t quite fit into any known category. He is originally from São Paulo, Brazil, and sounds like it. But he also sounds like a pianist with years of classical training, and like a street-smart jazz musician. Alves emigrated to the United States in 1986, graduated from Berklee, and has worked with as many North Americans (Joe Henderson, Phil Woods, Slide Hampton) as Brazilians (Airto Moreira, Duduka Da Fonseca). He performs rhythmically intricate, sensual music with the precision and harmonic sophistication of a classical musician and the edgy energy of a jazz player. It’s a heady blend.

“Kathy,” by Moacir Santos, is representative. It alternately prances and floats in graceful 5/4, with a sweet melodic piquancy that is affirmational yet wistful. Alves’ improvisations retain a given song’s complexity even as they elaborate that initial content into spontaneous logical new structures. Everything he plays, regardless of tempo, sounds elegant and refined. “Música Das Nuvens E Do Chão” by Hermeto Pascoal and “Sombra” by Alves also contain his signature combination of exact fingering and ecstatic momentum. They start slowly and softly and relentlessly intensify, partly because of the sheer athletic prowess of bassist Reuben Rogers and drummer Antonio Sanchez, but mostly because Alves’ internal motor runs hot.

His transcultural encounters with jazz standards are unique and seductive. The hard 4/4 clarion core of Wayne Shorter’s “Black Nile” is set to dancing in Bahia rhythms. “Chan’s Song,” by Stevie Wonder and Herbie Hancock, from the film Round Midnight, has a new fervent pulse and ornate decorations from guest guitarist Romero Lubambo. Helio Alves is his own category. ~Thomas Conrad

Musica

Irene Kral - You Are There

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:35
Size: 147.9 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[2:07] 1. Watch What Happens
[3:16] 2. If Love Were All
[4:04] 3. Emily
[2:57] 4. Wheelers And Dealers
[4:41] 5. What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life
[3:31] 6. Mad About The Boy
[3:30] 7. The Underdog
[2:54] 8. You Were There
[1:46] 9. A Child Is Born
[2:57] 10. The Shadow Of Your Smile
[2:47] 11. A Time For Love
[2:21] 12. The Winds Of Heaven
[4:31] 13. A Noel Coward Medley
[3:43] 14. Small Day Tomorrow
[3:10] 15. Pieces Of Dreams
[1:50] 16. Unlit Room
[2:44] 17. Summer Me, Winter Me
[2:40] 18. Love Came On Stealthy Fingers
[2:12] 19. A Room With A View
[2:06] 20. Nothing Like You
[2:18] 21. You Are There
[2:22] 22. I Like It Here (And Here Is Where I'll Stay)

Irene Kral, vocals; Loonis McGlohon, piano, leader, arrangements; Terry Lassiter, bass; Jim Lackey, drums.

Clint Eastwood's Bridges of Madison County is one film that changed my life. Not that I ended up getting a date with Meryl Streep. Nor that I had a Zen awakening to all the bridges that exist in life and love. No, it was the background crooning of two astonishing vocalists whom I, in my regrettable ignorance, had never before heard. When I saw the movie (and listened to its absorbing soundtrack), I glued my eyes to the credits and picked out the names Johnny Hartman and Irene Kral. Since then, my life has become an obsession to find the recordings of these two extraordinary singers who at their best rose far above the crowd of their contemporaries. By now, Hartman's recordings- partly thanks to the movie- are relatively easy to obtain on numerous CD's. With Irene Kral, it is another story. Unfortunately, she was not a prolific recording artist. My life has become one lonely, repetitious series of visits to the jazz section of Tower Records, and with one of every hundred peeks at the "Irene Kral" space (Kral Space is actually the title of one of her albums), I have espied and captured another one of her CD's. At present, I have put my hooks on three: Irene Kral Live ; Gentle Rain ; and now You Are There. All these albums were originally recorded in the 1970's with small groups, or in the case of Gentle Rain, Alan Broadbent's piano accompaniment. This, long after Ms. Kral had done her stints with the best of the big bands- Kenton, Ferguson, etc.- and made that difficult decision to quietly pursue artistic intimacy rather than commercial success.

Johnny Hartman and Irene Kral were both poets of ballads. (Hartman could also swing quite well on up-tempo tunes, while Kral seemed to focus almost entirely on ballads.) Their skill at timing, pitch, and phrase were usually impeccable (Hartman seems to me to have been a bit less consistent than Kral, but that may be because he did diverse recording gigs over several decades.) Their interpretations- their sentiment, their values- were totally pure, such a delicious contrast to the jaded quality of so many of the "greats" whom we all know. They captured the essence of what legendary trombonist J.J. Johnson somewhat mysteriously referred to as "jazz syntax," that special "feel" (with blues somewhere in the background) which makes jazz soulful, meaningful, and creative. As Robert Bly has pointed out, a characteristic of the best modern poets is the way they use vowel sounds. If you listen carefully to Kral's phrasing, you will hear how she emphasizes vowels and gives them her own special speech quality, infusing them with meaning.

You are There was originally recorded in 1977 in record producer Dick Phipps' home music room in Lexington, South Carolina. Kral was somewhere between episodes of breast cancer, which was to take her life at the age of 40 in 1978 (what an incalculable loss!) Her voice, however is strong, and her articulation confident and full of life, with no sign of illness. Her friends, among whom was Carmen McCrae, say that she bore her fate with extraordinary grace. (James Gavin's very helpful liner notes provide useful information about her life and work, as well as a clear appreciation of Kral, the person and the singer.) Each track is excellent: the album is of consistent quality from beginning to end. (The acoustics and recording equipment are quite good, except for a slight "analog" hiss, which is quickly forgotten.) The backup group is the Loonis McGlohon Trio with McGlohon on piano, Terry Lassiter, bass, and Jim Lackey, drums. They are superb accompanists, never intrusive, always to the point. (Ms.Kral's main accompanist at the time was the incomparable Alan Broadbent, but McGlohon, though more restrained in his improvising than Broadbent, provides a perfect frame for Ms. Kral's vocal images.)

Kral always chose her songs carefully. The tunes on this album are tasteful, tender, and interesting. I like her rendition of Mandel's "The Sunshine of Your Smile." "Small Day Tomorrow" seems to reflect Kral's own decision to "follow a different drummer." "A Noel Coward Medley" is a delightful surprise. Kral naturally draws the listener to the uniqueness of both the melody and the words in each song.

If there is a jazz heaven, Ms. Kral's name is surely up there in lights with the great, beautiful, and true jazz artists who will never be known to the marketplace world of the commercial successes. You are There will serve as an excellent introduction to the extraordinary gifts of a singer whose light shone so very brightly for all too short a time. ~AAJ Staff

You Are There

Horace Parlan - By Horace Parlan

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:55
Size: 102.8 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2001
Art: Front

[5:15] 1. Broken Promises
[6:24] 2. Deep River
[5:05] 3. Party Time
[7:44] 4. Little Esther
[6:45] 5. Norma
[6:38] 6. Arrival
[7:03] 7. Love And Peace

Known for his collaborations with Charles Mingus, Dexter Gordon and Archie Shepp, Horace Parlan's compositions are deeply textured and his piano playing is full of warmth. This is quite remarkable, because Parlan contracted polio at age five, and it constricted the right side of his body. "Horace Parlan by Horace Parlan" reveals his deep passion for music, and his extraordinary persistence in an intimate and touching portrait. Tracks: Broken Promises, Deep River, Party Time, Little Esther, Norma, Arrival, Love and Peace.

By Horace Parlan

Yusef Lateef - The Golden Flute

Styles: Saxophone And Flute Jazz
Year: 1966
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:44
Size: 91,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:47)  1. Road Runner
(3:28)  2. Straighten Up and Fly Right
(4:26)  3. Oasis
(4:06)  4. (I Don't Stand) A Ghost of a Chance with You
(2:57)  5. Exactly Like You
(3:56)  6. The Golden Flute
(3:54)  7. Rosetta
(4:35)  8. Head Hunters
(7:31)  9. The Smart Set

It’s a shame that Yusef Lateef is relegated to the second tier of jazz musicians, left as an artist who is known more for his work as a sideman. His abilities as a multi-instrumentalist place him a category with Roland Kirk, yet with none of the acclaim. It’s true that on his Atlantic releases Lateef was saddled with inferior material, but his earlier recordings are adventurous, melodic, and quite satisfying.

The Golden Flute is a marvelous recording from 1966 that showcases Lateef’s ability to sustain a warm groove through a well-designed program of originals and standards. “Road Runner” is a slow, funky tune with gutsy improvising that segues into a slow, beautiful treatment of “Straighten Up and Fly Right,” a sultry ballad infused with melancholy beauty. Yet what would be a relatively straightforward session is augmented by Lateef’s interest in using other instruments to create new textures. Despite the title, there are only two tracks featuring Lateef on flute, but both show his interest in foreign scales and how they can enhance the palette available for improvisation in a consistent way. On “I Don’t Stand a Ghost of a Chance With You” the thin, reedy sound of Lateef’s oboe introduces a eerie quality into a straightforward standard. However, the cherry on top is “Head Hunters,” where Lateef sits out and the rhythm section works through a tune you’ll have in your head long after the recording is over. In the end, Lateef proves himself on The Golden Flute to be an artist of merit, capable of creating a haunting session worthy of comparison to Wayne Shorter’s Blue Note recordings. This is an excellent opportunity to discover an artist whose work as a leader is well worth a listen. ~ David Rickert https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-golden-flute-yusef-lateef-impulse-review-by-david-rickert.php
 
Personnel: Yusef Lateef (tenor saxophone, flute, oboe); Hugh Lawson (piano); Herman Wright (bass); Roy Brooks, Jr. (drums).

The Golden Flute

Chaka Khan - Destiny

Styles: Vocal, R&B
Year: 1986
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:19
Size: 131,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:30)  1. Love Of A Lifetime
(5:47)  2. Earth To Mickey
(4:50)  3. Watching The World
(3:46)  4. The Other Side Of The World
(4:52)  5. My Destiny
(4:35)  6. I Can't Be Loved
(4:24)  7. It's You
(4:25)  8. So Close
(4:43)  9. Tight Fit
(4:42) 10. Who's It Gonna Be
(1:44) 11. Coltrane Dreams

Most of the solo albums that Chaka Khan provided in the 1980s are excellent. 1986's Destiny falls short of perfect, although the LP is impressive more often than not. Many people were surprised to hear how rock-minded much of Destiny is, but then, Khan's former band Rufus had major rock leanings in the beginning: 1973's Rufus and 1974's Rags to Rufus underscored Khan and Rufus' appreciation of Ike & Tina Turner's soul/rock and were hardly the work of R&B purists. Nor is Destiny; while some of the material is straight R&B (including "Tight Fit" and the exuberant single "Love of a Lifetime"), Khan successfully combines R&B and rock elements on "My Destiny" and "Who's It Gonna Be" (which Janice Marie Johnson of A Taste of Honey fame had recorded on a little-known solo album in 1984). And some of the tunes are really more pop/rock than R&B, including "Watching the World," "The Other Side of the World," and "So Close." As much as Destiny has going for it, the LP isn't without its shortcomings. "Who's It Gonna Be" would have been better off without the fake applause that producers Arif and Joe Mardin pointlessly added, and the post-bop jazz offering "Coltrane Dreams" (which features saxman Sam Rivers) is too brief for its own good. Rivers, a major talent, doesn't get a chance to stretch out, and the piece ends up sounding undeveloped, which is quite frustrating because Khan can be a great jazz singer when she puts her mind to it. But while Destiny isn't perfect, the album has many more pluses than minuses and is easily recommended to both R&B and pop/rock enthusiasts. ~ Alex Henderson http://www.allmusic.com/album/destiny-mw0000458169

Personnel: Chaka Khan (vocals, rap vocals, cowbells, timbales, background vocals); Reggie Griffin (rap vocals, guitar, saxophone, keyboards, synthesizer, programming, background vocals); Randy Fredrix, Nick Moroch, Paul Pesco (guitar, electric guitar); Marcus Miller (guitar, electric bass); Dann Huff, Reb Beach (guitar); Bob Gay, Robert Gay (alto saxophone); Michael Brecker (tenor saxophone, trumpet); Sam Rivers, Scott Gilman (tenor saxophone); Randy Brecker (trumpet, horns); Tom "Bones" Malone (trombone); Jon Faddis, Marvin Stamm, Michael Mossman (horns); Beau Hill (keyboards, synthesizer, bass synthesizer); Joe Mardin (keyboards, synthesizer, percussion); Dave Lebolt, Philippe Saisse (keyboards, synthesizer, programming); Anthony Patler (keyboards, bass synthesizer); Michael Colina, Cengiz Yaltkaya (keyboards); John Mahoney (synthesizer, Synclavier); David Gamson (synthesizer, programming); Jason Miles , Robbie Buchanan (synthesizer); Anthony Jackson (electric bass); Phil Collins (drums, background vocals); Fred Maher, David Rosenberg, Steve Ferrone (drums); Tom Oldakowski, Jimmy Bralower, Bob Riley (drum machine, drum programming); Cindy Mizelle, Mark Cass Stevens, Mark Stevens, Green Gartside, Sandra St. Victor (background vocals).

Destiny

Chu Berry and his Stompy Stevedores - Chu

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1974
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:19
Size: 139,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:00)  1. Now You're Taling My Language
(2:52)  2. Indiana (Back Home Again In Indiana)
(3:00)  3. Too Marvelous For Words
(2:57)  4. Limehouse Blues
(2:23)  5. Chuberry Jam
(2:53)  6. Maelstrom
(2:56)  7. My Secret Love Affair
(2:49)  8. Ebb Tide
(3:22)  9. Warmin Up
(2:33) 10. At The Clambake Carnival
(3:02) 11. Jive (Page 1 Of The Hepster's Dictionary)
(3:20) 12. Topsy Turvey (Hard Times)
(3:00) 13. Come On With The "Come On"
(3:00) 14. (I Don't Stand) A Ghost Of A Chance (With You)
(3:04) 15. Lonesome Nights
(3:04) 16. Take The "A" Train

30s tenor sides from Chu Berry packaged here in a nice LP that mostly features work done with the Stompy Stevedores combo, but also includes sessions Chu cut with the bands of Cab Calloway and Teddy Wilson! The Berry style at this point is warm, but soulful – arcing out with some of the touches that would show up more strongly in tenorists of the 40s, but still also falling into more traditional modes at times. Titles include "Now You're Talking My Language", "At The Clambake Carnival", "Warming Up", "Maelstrom", "Chuberry Jam", "Come On With The Come On", and "Indiana". (Columbia Special Products pressing.) © 1996-2016, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/657683/Chu-Berry:Chu-Chu-Berry-His-Stompy-Stevedores

Chu

Charlie Hunter - Everybody Has a Plan Until They Get Punched in the Mouth

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:21
Size: 120,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:01)  1. Everybody Has a Plan Until They Get Punched in the Mouth
(7:32)  2. (Looks Like) Somebody Got Ahead of Schedule On Their Medication
(4:02)  3. Leave Him Lay
(5:31)  4. We Don't Want Nobody Nobody Sent
(3:43)  5. Big Bill's Blues
(4:46)  6. Latin for Travelers
(3:52)  7. No Money, No Honey
(6:49)  8. Who Put You Behind the Wheel?
(6:00)  9. (Wish I Was) Already Paid and On My Way Home
(4:59) 10. The Guys. Get. Shirts

Charlie Hunter's Everybody Has a Plan Until They Get Punched in the Mouth is not only his first recording for a major label in nine years, but his first with a larger-than-trio-sized band since 2003. His personnel include drummer Bobby Previte, trombonist Curtis Fowlkes (who both played on 2015's Let the Bells Ring On and 2003's Right Now Move), and cornetist Kirk Knuffke. The album's title paraphrases a quote by former heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson. It's a metaphorical reference to the contrast between an envisioned plan for living and the reality that transpires later.

Hunter saturates his approach in blues and vintage R&B here. To get the vibe right, the band recorded live in a Hudson, New York studio; there are no overdubs everybody walked the tightrope. First single "No Money, No Honey" opens with a guitar hammer on, but the band quickly establishes a funky Meters-esque vamp that gets inverted by knotty jazz syncopation. They all flow back to the groove with Previte holding the center. Hunter's solo signals a call-and-response with the brass, who play in Stax-like tandem and add individual fills in the turnarounds. The title track commences as a slow, steamy jazz-blues with gorgeous melodic flourishes, a fine solo from Fowlkes, and a front line that references Bobby Blue Bland, Quincy Jones, and Oliver Nelson. The slow stroll on Bill Broonzy's "Big Bill's Blues" contains a gorgeous early New Orleans jazz feel in the contrasting harmonic dialogue between Fowlkes and Knuffke (though they play the tags in unison), while Hunter's playing is pure mid-'50s Chicago. "Leave Him Lay" is a choogling 12-bar swagger with Hunter's fills stinging through the horn player's vamps. Previte signals various cadence and time shifts as Knuffke takes a languid solo that provides a nostalgic look at early jazz sans artifice. Second single "Latin for Travelers" (titled after Previte's band of the same name) is a sultry, jazzy blues based on a rhumba. There are subtle colors through the horns' harmonies that evoke brass inventions from Willie Colon, Eddie Palmieri, and Wardell Quezergue. Hunter's own break is sharp, in the pocket, and full of soul. The funky NOLA side returns during the intro to closer "The Guys Get Shirts," but doesn't stay there. Previte guides the group through Chicago blues, '20s jazz, and '50s and '60s R&B. The arrangements lock in, offering many twists and turns, but never leave the groove behind. This album is an excellent return to the majors for Hunter. All killer, no filler. ~ Thom Jurek http://www.allmusic.com/album/everybody-has-a-plan-until-they-get-punched-in-the-mouth-mw0002951658

Personnel: Charlie Hunter (8-string guitar); Kirk Knuffke (cornet); Curtis Fowlkes (trombone); Bobby Previte (drums).

Everybody Has a Plan Until They Get Punched in the Mouth

Friday, July 29, 2016

Fred Wesley - With A Little Help From My Friends

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:28
Size: 97.2 MB
Styles: R&B/Soul/Funk/Jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[3:47] 1. Spring Like
[4:00] 2. Swedish Funkballs
[5:08] 3. Beautiful
[4:14] 4. Ashes To Ashes
[6:00] 5. Palms Up
[4:54] 6. Homeboy
[5:00] 7. Obamaloo
[4:40] 8. Everywhere Is Out Of Town
[4:40] 9. Peace Fugue

Of all the graduates of the various James Brown bands, my guess is that Fred Wesley has been the most pro-active in pursuing a career beyond Brown. He's worked all over the place and with all kinds of artists; he's collaborated/guested on dozens of varied recordings and cut a slew of his own solo sets. He gigs regularly and seems to have found a semi-permanent home in Europe where he's become an almost ever-present on the flourishing festival scene. Indeed this new LP was recorded in Europe ... Germany to be precise. The title has nothing to do with the Beatles by the way; its provenance is down to the friends and family who encouraged the recording and worked on it with him.

Guest-in-chief is Swedish trombonist Nils Landgren. His main contribution is on the tune that defines the album's overall sound – 'Swedish Funkballs'. It's a pleasing, brassy roller that might remind you of Wayne Henderson-era Crusaders – not quite funky, not quite smooth jazz... but with its own discrete charm and certainly tastier than IKEA's meatballs, at which, I'm sure the tune is cocking a snook. There's more of the same sound on 'Spring Like' and the slinky 'Beautiful'. Variety comes in the shape of two semi-spoken pieces - 'Ashes To Ashes' (inspired by last year's ash cloud debacle) and the tale of life on the road – 'Everywhere Is Out Of Town'. Funkiest cut is 'Homeboy' - hardly surprising since it's an old Maceo tune, while 'Obamaloo' is a musical tribute to you know who. In the notes Fred chooses 'Palm's Up' as his favourite track and I'm inclined to agree. It's a lovely mid-tempo groove with a hint of Latin about it and some fine piano from Peter Madsen. It really works, which is more than can be said for the ambitious closer - 'Peace Fugue'. Here Fred's mellifluous trombone is quiet at odds with the rocky guitar of Reginald Ward. But it's still a Wesley horn and good to hear the great man's son, Victor, on trombone too... he's a lot to live up to!

With A Little Help From My Friends

Warren Vaché - First Time Out & Encore '93

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:35
Size: 143.3 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[4:09] 1. Black Butterfly
[2:46] 2. Joy Spring
[3:00] 3. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
[4:30] 4. Once In A While
[3:49] 5. Chelsea Bridge
[6:02] 6. Oh Baby
[4:06] 7. I Surrender, Dear
[5:44] 8. Song Of The Wanderer
[4:42] 9. All Of Me
[3:44] 10. Willow Weep For Me
[3:08] 11. Dream Dancing
[4:02] 12. Easy Living
[3:38] 13. Always
[5:23] 14. Autumn Nocturne
[3:46] 15. When It's Sleepy Time Down South

With the exception of a privately issued record, this CD features cornetist Warren Vache's debut as a leader on record. The music is quite impressive for Vache (at 25) is showcased on five numbers backed only by guitarist Bucky Pizzarelli, and he displays both a lovely tone and a creative imagination within the boundaries of small group swing (even on Clifford Brown's "Joy Spring"). The other half of the session is more dixieland-oriented for Vache is teamed with soprano-saxophonist Kenny Davern, both Pizzarelli and Wayne Wright on guitars, bassist Michael Moore and drummer Connie Kay. "Oh Baby" and "All Of Me" in particular are quite heated. Well worth searching for. ~Scott Yanow

First Time Out & Encore'93

Charles Ruggiero - Charles Ruggiero Meets Laura Mace

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:45
Size: 88.7 MB
Styles: Pop, Contemporary jazz
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[3:34] 1. Our Day Will Come
[3:36] 2. Return To Me
[4:02] 3. Heart Of Glass
[7:28] 4. Wicked Game
[3:08] 5. Comin' Home Baby
[5:51] 6. I Only Have Eyes For You
[5:42] 7. I Want You
[5:20] 8. Crying

If something is well made, it lasts. If it lasts long enough, it has the opportunity to remain relevant. When things remain relevant long enough they transform. They become Classic.

The Beverly Hills Hotel is that way. Being there is like being transported to Hollywood when Hollywood was at its finest. The mint green and pink exterior gives way to their iconic 50 foot nameplate, letting you know you're in for a special stay. In 2012 Laura and I began what would be a long standing residency there. It was a wonderful. Palm trees, celebrities, and fancy cocktails were the set, and we were the soundtrack. Classic.

These songs are that way too, so we treated them as such. Laura and I always talked about wanting to capture the spirit of our nights at The Hotel. We finally did. In January, we walked into a recording studio with a few of our friends. We set up our instruments and a few microphones, we picked out a few songs we liked and six hours later we walked out with this record. Classic. We hope you enjoy it. ~Charles Ruggiero 2016

Charles Ruggiero Meets Laura Mace

Charlie Parker Quartet - Now's the Time

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1957
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:17
Size: 94,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:01)  1. The Song is You
(2:49)  2. Laird Baird
(3:03)  3. Kim
(3:02)  4. Kim (Alternate Take)
(3:08)  5. Cosmic Rays
(3:20)  6. Cosmic Rays (Alternate Take)
(3:08)  7. Chi-Chi
(2:45)  8. Chi-Chi (Alternate Take 1)
(2:41)  9. Chi-Chi (Alternate Take 2)
(3:06) 10. Chi-Chi (Alternate Take 3)
(3:07) 11. I Remember You
(3:05) 12. Now's the Time
(2:57) 13. Confirmation

Now's the Time captures Charlie Parker during one of his peak recording periods. The personnel of Hank Jones, Al Haig, Percy Heath, Teddy Kotick, and Max Roach all contribute immeasurably to this classic session. There are numerous outtakes, which offers a fascinating analysis of Parker's improvisations, as well as classics such as "Song Is You," "Laird Baird," "Kim," and "Now's the Time." What makes this session extra special is the excellent recording quality that too many of his early recordings, brilliant as they are, suffered from. Hearing the clarity of each player contributes to one of bebop's best sessions. This is essential music. ~ Robert Taylor http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-genius-of-charlie-parker-vol-3-nows-the-time-mw0000904953

Personnel:  Charlie Parker - Alto Saxophone;  Hank Jones – Piano; Teddy Kotick – Bass; Max Roach – Drums;  Al Haig – Piano;  Percy Heath - Bass

Now's the Time