Sunday, December 25, 2016

Cheryl Barnes - Listen to This

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:12
Size: 160,0 MB
Art: Front

( 4:09)  1. Like Jazz
( 4:42)  2. That Afternoon in Harlem
( 5:55)  3. Come With Me
( 6:03)  4. Why Did I Choose You?
( 3:54)  5. Listen to This
( 4:53)  6. I Wish You Love
(10:41)  7. Come in from the Cold
( 7:00)  8. What's on Your Mind
( 5:29)  9. Baby's Got Some Awful Kind of Blues
( 4:43) 10. What's Fair in Love
( 6:27) 11. When I'm Laid to Rest in Earth
( 5:10) 12. Merry, Merry Christmas to You

Barnes is like a rare archaeological find a legendary artist whose reputation precedes her and now, is suddenly discovered. Actually, the artist herself has been active in the jazz performance space for years, giving hundreds of shows around the world with the likes of Wynton Marsalis, J.J. Johnson, and Quincy Jones. However, unless you were lucky to have caught one of her live performances, her album arrives with a startlingly but altogether pleasurable surprise. While principally a jazz vocalist, she was classically trained in music (since the age of 9) and is adept at pop, classical, Gospel and Latin sounds. She also is a much sought-after vocal clinician, who conducts workshops and classes across the country. Did I mention she s fluent in four languages? The point here is that this is a very smart woman who uses her intellect to enhance her vocal prowess. Even when she is deeply emotive, she is a singer at all times in control of her voice. She punctuated her set at the Rockwell with a mix of songs from the album that showcased her versatility from the upbeat party vibe of the title track Listen To This to the poignant ballad about a veteran jazz singer with an extraordinary life in Afternoon In Harlem and to the heartfelt Baby s Got Some Awful Kind of Blues. Missing from the set, but on the new album, was her amazing reinterpretation of Joni Mitchell s Come In From The Cold. The album was produced by music industry veteran Rahn Coleman, recorded at Mystic Knight Recording Studios in Los Angeles and features a stellar list of sidemen including Brandon Fields on sax, John Hammond on piano, and Rickey Minor on bass with orchestration by John Beasley. Her set at Rockwell was orchestrated expertly by her husband, arranger and keyboardist Phillip Cabasso. In an interview prior to her Rockwell gig, she cited as her musical influences Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughn, Peggy Lee and Nancy Wilson. 

By the time that I was a teenager, I pretty much could imitate any voice. To find my own voice, I had to stop listening to vocalists and focus instead on instrumentalists, she said. Two other musical influences in her career must be mentioned. My grandmother was a singer and had a naturally, beautiful, magnificent voice, and she encouraged me to study music, she says. The other is Linda Hopkins, the legendary jazz, blues and r&b singer. She confesses to thinking of Hopkins when she recorded for the album An Afternoon in Harlem, written by her friends Mark Winkler and Marilyn Harris. I know Linda Hopkins fairly well, and she reminds me of the elegant, confident, older women with beautiful homes and clothes that were party of my upbringing in Cleveland (Ohio). Linda still has an incredible energy and love for music, which she shows by encouraging and supporting younger artists, she says. So, what took Barnes so along to come in from the cold and enter the studio to record Listen To This ? In a word, life. After years of touring and working with a multitude of artists, I ve decided now was the time to focus my energies on my own CD. It s been a long time in the making and I m very proud of both the music and the breadth of the songs and musicians on this album, she says. But she also confesses her own obsession with being technically perfect might have stymied her from recording more. Six years ago I decided that I must make an album so that I could leave a legacy to share with fans and other artists. But I had to learn not to over analyze my music, and throw my inhibitions under the table, she says. In fact, in the coming years, she says she looks forward to doing new things with jazz, possibly on another album. We re poised and ready when she does. --Greg Ptacek - Monsters and Critics Cheryl Barnes tells us what she wants us to do with her single word album title. ~ Straight No Chaser

Cheryl Barnes tells us what she wants us to do with her single word album title, but her staid album cover (hands clasped, semi serious facial expression) hardly prepares us for the wild ride. Those listening to the singer s glorious voice and surfing the wave of eclectic emotion as she dips and weaves from bluesy, swinging jazz ( Like Jazz ) to sparse eloquent ballads ( Why Did I Choose You, Baby s Got Some Awful Kind of Blues ) and dazzling, colorful big band vibes ( Listen To This, penned by her husband Phillip Cabasso) may wonder where she s been all their lives. And the answer is: out there, performing in various settings throughout the world, which apparently didn t give her time to hit the studio and set her unique brand of heartfelt expression and joyful whimsy to disc. She s done shows with Quincy Jones, Wynton Marsalis, J.J. Johnson, Billy Mitchell and Cathy Segal-Garcia. Brought her 16 years of operatic training to featured solo spotlights with the Denver Symphony Orchestra, the Florida Orchestra and the Lawrence University Orchestra in Wisconsin. Branching out from her home base in Los Angeles, Barnes has also toured South America, worked extensively as a vocal clinician and is a founding member of the Jazz Vocal Coalition. Her resume and creativity demand deeper thought for a debut than simply mining the Great American Songbook so she starts the CD mining gold from the catalog of fellow L.A. vocalist Mark Winkler ( Like Jazz and the playful story song Afternoon in Harlem ) and continues with unique choices like the wistful Come With Me, the eloquent I Wish You Love (partially sung in French) and an expansive, jazzy meditation on Joni Mitchell s Come In From The Cold. Among the L.A. elite helping Barnes bring the magic at last to the studio are Brandon Fields (sax), John Hammond (piano), Rickey Minor (bass) and John Beasley (orchestrations). ~ Jazz Monthly

A lot of CDs cross my desk, and an unusually large number of female vocalists. While some stand out, most are fairly generic treatments of the Great American Songbook. Enjoyable, but not really worth repeated listening. And then I heard Cheryl Barnes. For several decades, Cheryl s versatility has encompassed many musical genres. Singing in four different languages, Cheryl has performed around the world (including shows with Wynton Marsalis, J.J. Johnson, Quincy Jones and a guest member spot with the Clara Ward Gospel Singers), and has recorded with the likes of Azar Lawrence, Billy Mitchell and Cathy Segal-Garcia. Her sixteen years of Operatic training have brought her to the stage as a featured soloist with the Denver Symphony Orchestra, the Florida Orchestra and The Lawrence University Orchestra in Wisconsin, and she has toured extensively throughout South America, nurturing her love for Samba, Bossa Nova, Salsa and the riches of Latin and Afro-Cuban Music. After all that singing, it might come as a surprise that Listen to This is her recording debut. Backed by a strong band featuring Brandon Fields on sax, John Hammond on piano, and Rickey Minor on bass, she has chosen songs that could serve as a series of musical souvenirs from the many places her career has taken her. . From original jazz tunes like Afternoon in Harlem ; to reinterpretations of pop tunes by Joni Mitchell ( Come in From the Cold ); to gospel-influenced and classical material ( When I Am Laid in Earth ) there is no shortage of great material. Add in orchestration by John Beasley and this is a wonderful listen Podcast 411 is my conversation with Cheryl about the making of the CD, her choice of songs, and how she sings such a wide variety of styles. Musical selections include her cpver of Joni Mitchell's "Come in from the Cold"; "Afternoon in Harlem" and "Listen to This".~ Straight No Chaser   https://www.amazon.com/Listen-This-Cheryl-Barnes/dp/B00IQD35JQ

Listen to This

Rich Perry Quartet - So in Love

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1997
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 65:24
Size: 121,0 MB
Art: Front

(10:44)  1. Eiderdown
( 6:12)  2. Little Waltz
( 9:47)  3. So in Love
(10:29)  4. Spring Is Here
( 9:46)  5. Moon and Sand
( 7:48)  6. My Foolish Heart
(10:34)  7. In Your Own Sweet Way

Too long taken for granted, tenor saxophonist Rich Perry often serves as the faceless sideman, a past contributor to the music of Tom Harrell, Chet Baker, Jack McDuff, Billy Hart, and the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra. For very close to a decade now, he's also been the lead voice of pianist Harold Danko's quartet, a group that likewise deserves more critical and popular acclaim than it has garnered. If it wasn't for Perry's select bunch of SteepleChase sides we'd barely hear anything from him, and yet we've really never heard much of those due to those small label distribution woes. That is until now. Actually recorded in the fall of 1997, Perry's So In Love is part of a recent set of SteepleChase releases making their way to the United States for the first time. Before getting too much into details, let it be said that the saxophonist has got himself a surefire winner with this one and the story behind its gestation is worth telling. Basically, Perry was taking a break from the Danko quartet and decided to put together a new grouping for his upcoming session. He's done this for past records, but this ensemble was unique in being a bit more contemporary in stature. Pianist Renee Rosnes and drummer Billy Drummond (who also happens to be Rosnes' husband), along with bassist Peter Washington, combine to create a formidable rhythm section that locks in tight with Perry and holds on. The opening "Eiderdown" contains many of the prime elements that reoccur throughout the record, including Rosnes' liquid touch and abounding imagination, not to mention Drummond's interactive discourse with each soloist. 

Perry is a melodic and methodical soloist who seems to be more influenced by players like Warne Marsh or Hank Mobley than John Coltrane or Sonny Rollins. It's not characteristic of his style to engage in overblowing or other histrionics, yet Drummond and Rosnes seem to bring out his more boisterous side here, particularly on the title track. There's a serene quality to some of the slower pieces that finds Rich and Rosnes in their element. A nice twist on "Moon and Sand" is provided through the use of a bossa beat and Ron Carter's "Little Waltz" gets a heartfelt treatment apropos to its original intent. It just goes to show what can happen when you break out of the routine to hang out with some new friends. If you're having a hard time finding a local dealer for SteepleChase product in the US, contact thier distributor at stateside@prodigy.net. 
~ C.Andrew Hovan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/so-in-love-rich-perry-steeplechase-records-review-by-c-andrew-hovan.php
 
Personnel: Rich Perry- tenor saxophone, Renee Rosnes- piano, Peter Washington- bass, Billy Drummond- drums

So in Love

Irakere - Cuba Libre

Styles: Latin Jazz, Fusion
Year: 1980
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:10
Size: 93,5 MB
Art: Front

(12:57)  1. Cuba Libre
( 6:58)  2. Sea Mail
( 7:38)  3. Encuentro
( 5:28)  4. Qué Pasa?
( 5:58)  5. Gospelanza
( 1:08)  6. Cuba Libre (reprise)

It's with great pleasure that Far Out Recordings can re-issue this extremely rare, cult record from one of the finest bands to emerge from Cuba. Stepping out of Brazil Joe Davis has been digging through the dustiest crates to re-discover one of the very best Latin American records. Recorded in Japan in 1980 and released as a Japanese exclusive vinyl LP 'Cuba Libre' was composed, arranged and produced by the remarkable Japanese musician Chikara Ueda. With almost the entire original line up in place including Chucho Valdes, Arturo Sandoval, and Jorge Alfonso this is a record of sublime quality that retains all of the authentic essence and beauty of Cuban music. Among the most influential Latin bands Irakere's mix of fiery funk anthems and sophisticated jazz has rarely sounded better than on these six classic and uniquely Cuban tracks. 'Cuba Libre' is one of Irakere's finest moments. Never before released on CD, this is the first ever release outside of Japan for 'Cuba Libre' and with stunning re-mastering and music of glorious quality this is an essential and significant re-issue of one of Latin music's holy grail collector's items. A vital 45 minutes in the history of Cuban music. https://www.amazon.co.uk/d/CDs-Vinyl/Cuba-Libre-Irakere/B003BL0BCC

First time on CD for this 1980 Japanese release by one of Cuba's best loved bands. Overshadowed internationally by the sucess of Buena Vista Social Club, Irakere inhabit an exalted place with those in the know. A real treaasure for all music lovers. ~ Clash
 
Personnel:  Chucho Valdés – keyboards;  Arturo Sandoval – trumpet;  Jorge Varona – trumpet;  Germán Velazco - alto saxophone;  Carlos Averhoff - tenor saxophone;  Carlos Emilio Morales – guitar;  Carlos del Puerto – bass;  Jorge "El Niño" Alfonso – percussion;  Óscar Valdés – percussion;  Enrique Plá – drums.

Cuba Libre

Ed Hamilton - Groovology

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:20
Size: 101,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:21)  1. Fly like an eagle
(3:50)  2. If only
(4:36)  3. On my way
(4:22)  4. Ooh child
(5:51)  5. Jj's groove
(4:38)  6. April goodbyes
(4:50)  7. Souls felt
(5:02)  8. Jinda boogie
(4:38)  9. Didn't i (blow your mind this time)
(2:08) 10. Song for a princess


Dead set on achieving success as a smooth jazz guitarist, Ed Hamilton seems to have abandoned some of the playful sense of humor and adventurous edge which characterized his first two albums. Groovology features beautiful compositions and a solid mix of subtle warmth (as on the tribute "Song for a Princess") and more jumpy expressions which remind us of his sharp improvisational skills. Hamilton also plays the ace card of seamlessly interacting with the soprano sax of Tim Ries over the floating synth textures of pieces like "If Only" and "Ooh Child." Likewise, he creates interesting mood swings by varying his tones from high to low over a bubbling, synth-created, blues organ flavor throughout the light funk cover of "Fly Like an Eagle." It's all perfectly amiable, yet considering the artistic splash his previous works made, Hamilton plays it too close to the vest; there are few traces of the brew of hard rock, avant-garde, spacy fusion, and bebop that made his Path to the Heartland such an eye opener. ~ Jonathan Widran http://www.allmusic.com/album/groovology-mw0000040898

Personnel: Ed Hamilton (guitar, keyboards, bass, programming); Tim Ries (saxophone); Dave Falciani (piano).

Groovology

Saturday, December 24, 2016

Sammy Price - Fire

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:46
Size: 139.1 MB
Styles: Blues/Jazz piano
Year: 1975/2008
Art: Front

[2:55] 1. Back Home Again To France
[3:29] 2. Black And Blue Blues
[3:01] 3. Walkin' Down Pigalle
[4:10] 4. Memories Boogie
[4:26] 5. Funky
[2:54] 6. Boogie Woogie For Hugues
[4:33] 7. West End Boogie
[3:48] 8. Whodat Blues
[3:55] 9. Riffin' Boogie
[4:57] 10. Tain't Nobody's Business If I Do
[2:24] 11. Salute To Basie
[3:22] 12. Begin The Beguine
[4:31] 13. West End Boogie (Take 1)
[4:41] 14. Indiana
[3:53] 15. Ain't She Sweet
[3:39] 16. Trombone With Fire

Ted Buckner - Sax (Alto); Doc Cheatham - Trumpet; Gene "Mighty Flea" Conners - Trombone; J.C. Heard - Drums; Sammy Price - Piano; Carl Pruitt - Bass.

This LP by pianist Sammy Price (put out domestically by Classic Jazz) can easily be split into two parts. Seven songs pay tribute in their titles to France and showcase Price mostly playing blues in a trio with bassist Carl Pruitt and drummer J.C. Heard. The remaining four songs add a trio of veteran swing-era horn players (trumpeter Doc Cheatham, trombonist Gene "Mighty Flea" Conners and altoist Ted Buckner) on three blues and the one non-Price standard "Tain't Nobody's Business If I Do." Although the inclusion of the horns gives added interest to the date, there is a certain sameness to much of the material and a predictability to the enjoyable but unsurprising outcome. ~Scott Yanow

Fire

Lee Wiley - Sings The Songs Of George & Ira Gershwin And Cole Porter

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:48
Size: 118.6 MB
Styles: Standards, Vocal jazz
Year: 1989
Art: Front

[3:27] 1. How Long Has This Been Going On
[3:27] 2. My One And Only (What Am I Gonna Do )
[2:53] 3. Sweet And Low Down
[3:17] 4. 's Wonderful
[3:20] 5. I've Got A Crush On You
[3:01] 6. Someone To Watch Over Me
[3:29] 7. Sam And Delilah
[3:12] 8. But Not For Me
[3:25] 9. Looking At You
[3:04] 10. Let's Fly Away
[3:11] 11. Why Shouldn't I
[2:52] 12. Hot-House Rose
[3:05] 13. You Do Something To Me
[3:25] 14. Find Me A Primitive Man
[3:12] 15. Easy To Love
[3:20] 16. Let's Do It

Lee Wiley was the first jazz singer to record a full album (eight songs in the '78' days) dedicated to the music of one composer; her "songbooks" preceded Ella Fitzgerald's by more than 15 years. The greatest recordings of her career were these four projects, the first two of which are on this Audiophile reissue. Wiley, who had an introverted and quietly straightforward yet sensuous (and somewhat smoldering) style, is heard singing eight songs apiece by the Gershwins and Cole Porter. Her accompaniment includes all-star groups headed by pianist Joe Bushkin and trumpeter Max Kaminsky (which include tenor-saxophonist Bud Freeman, clarinetist Pee Wee Russell and on four songs Fats Waller), a quartet with Bushkin and trumpeter Bunny Berigan, and Paul Weston's Orchestra. Wiley's renditions of such songs as "How Long Has This Been Going On," "I've Got A Crush On You," "Someone To Watch Over Me," "Let's Do It" and "Easy To Love" are both memorable and haunting. This reissue is a gem as is the followup Audiophile release of Rodgers & Hart and Harold Arlen songs. ~Scott Yanow

Sings The Songs Of George & Ira Gershwin And Cole Porter

Neil Diamond - The Movie Album (2-Disc Set)

On this lazy, nearly shameless album (two CDs that don't even make it to 70 minutes combined), Neil Diamond visits movie songs past ("As Time Goes By") and present ("My Heart Will Go On") with stops along the way for takes on almost anything you would anticipate an album and artist like this would cover ("Unchained Melody"? There. "Can You Feel the Love Tonight"? Ditto. "Moon River"? Yep, it's there.) Assisted by conductor Elmer Bernstein and an 80-piece orchestra, Diamond takes a 20-song stroll down film memory lane on The Movie Album: As Time Goes By with a bombast that often borders on parody. Oversinging like he's never oversung before, Diamond makes even the most inspired tunes of the bunch ("And I Love Her," "Can't Help Falling in Love") into Branson-worthy set pieces that are all melodramatic glitz and no style. A black stain on both Diamond and movies. ~Michael Gallucci

Album: The Movie Album (Disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:16
Size: 76.2 MB
Styles: Adult Contemporary
Year: 1998

[2:53] 1. As Time Goes By
[3:38] 2. Secret Love
[3:49] 3. Unchained Melody
[4:06] 4. Can You Feel The Love Tonight
[2:37] 5. The Way You Look Tonight
[3:27] 6. Love With The Proper Stranger
[2:56] 7. Puttin' On The Ritz
[2:45] 8. When You Wish Upon A Star
[4:21] 9. The Windmills Of Your Mind
[2:38] 10. Ebb Tide

The Movie Album (Disc 1)

Album: The Movie Album (Disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:21
Size: 76.4 MB
Styles: Adult Contemporary
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[3:09] 1. True Love
[4:13] 2. My Heart Will Go On
[3:58] 3. The Look Of Love
[4:37] 4. In The Still Of The Night
[3:30] 5. Moon River
[3:14] 6. Ruby
[4:21] 7. Suite Sinatra I've Got You Under My Skin One For My Baby
[2:23] 8. And I Love Her
[3:07] 9. Can't Help Falling In Love
[0:45] 10. As Time Goes By (Reprise)

The Movie Album (Disc 2)

Lambert, Hendricks & Ross - The Swingers

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1958
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:50
Size: 96,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:32)  1. Airegin
(3:16)  2. Babe's Blues
(3:32)  3. Dark Cloud
(2:04)  4. Jackie
(5:07)  5. Swingin' 'Til the Girls Come Home
(4:13)  6. Four
(3:30)  7. Little Niles
(2:57)  8. Where
(2:58)  9. Now's the Time
(3:46) 10. Love Makes the World Go Around
(6:49) 11. Clap Hands! Here Somes Charley

One of the lesser-known sets by the classic jazz vocal group Lambert, Hendricks & Ross, this LP holds its own with their more famous recordings. Assisted by tenor saxophonist Zoot Sims, pianist Russ Freeman, and guitarist Jim Hall, among others, Dave Lambert, Jon Hendricks, and Annie Ross sound at their best on such numbers as "Airegin," "Jackie" (a feature for Ross), "Swingin' 'Til the Girls Come Home," "Four," and "Now's the Time." 

This album is recommended to fans of this unique and influential vocal trio. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-swingers!-mw0000194210

Personnel:  Vocals – Annie Ross, Dave Lambert, Jon Hendricks;  Bass – Ed Jones;  Drums – Sonny Payne;  Guitar – Freddie Green;  Piano – Russ Freeman;  Tenor Saxophone – Zoot Sims

The Swingers

Shirley Horn - I Love You, Paris

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:28
Size: 170,9 MB
Art: Front

( 6:23)  1. Wouldn't It Be Lovely?
( 3:12)  2. Just In Time
( 4:50)  3. He Was Too Good To Me
( 8:16)  4. Do It Again
( 5:36)  5. Old Country
( 6:38)  6. It's Easy To Remember
( 2:31)  7. All Through The Night
( 6:47)  8. L.A. Break Down
( 9:44)  9. I Loves You Porgy/Here Comes De Honey Man
(12:53) 10. A Song For You/Goodbye
( 7:33) 11. That Old Devil Called Love

The highlights of a 2½-hour concert recorded in Paris, this CD has even more ballads than a typical Shirley Horn set because, due to the monitor malfunctioning during the second half of the performance, Horn chose to stick exclusively to ballads during that portion of the show. Accompanied by bassist Charles Ables and drummer Steve Williams, Horn is in peak form throughout this program, often sounding exquisite and using silence and pauses quite expertly. 

Among the highlights are "Wouldn't It Be Loverly," "Do It Again," a medley of "I Loves You Porgy" and "Here Comes De Honey Man," and a lengthy version of "A Song for You" that eventually becomes "Goodbye." Highly recommended. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/i-love-you-paris-mw0000119061

Personnel: Shirley Horn (vocals, piano); Charles Ables (electric bass); Steve Williams (drums).

I Love You, Paris

Miles Davis - On the Corner

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1972
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:44
Size: 125,8 MB
Art: Front

(19:56)  1. On the Corner/New York Girl/Thinking of One Thing and Doing Another
( 5:16)  2. Black Satin
( 6:08)  3. One and One
(23:22)  4. Helen Butte/Mr. Freedom X

Could there be any more confrontational sound in Miles Davis' vast catalog than the distorted guitars and tinny double-timing drums reacting to a two-note bass riff funking it up on the first track from On the Corner? Before the trumpet even enters the story has been broken off in the middle deep street music melding with a secret language exchanged by the band and those who can actually hear it as music. Here are killer groove riffs that barely hold on as bleating trumpet and soprano sax lines (courtesy of Dave Liebman on track one) interact with John McLaughlin's distortion-box frenzy. Michael Henderson's bass keeps the basic so basic it hypnotizes; keyboards slowly enter the picture, a pair of them handled by Herbie Hancock and Chick Corea, as well as Ivory Williams' synthesizer. Finally, Colin Walcott jumps in with an electric sitar and there are no less than five drummers  three kits (Al Foster, Billy Hart, and Jack DeJohnette), a tabla player, and Mtume. It's a four-tune suite, On the Corner is, but the separations hardly matter, just the shifts in groove that alter the time/space continuum. After 20 minutes, the set feels over and a form of Miles' strange lyricism returns in "Black Satin." Though a tabla kicks the tune off, there's a recognizable eight-note melody that runs throughout. Carlos Garnett and Bennie Maupin replace Liebman, Dave Creamer replaces McLaughlin, and the groove rides a bit easier except for those hand bells shimmering in the background off the beat just enough to make the squares crazy. 

The respite is short-lived, however. Davis and band move the music way over to the funk side of the street  though the street funkers thought these cats were too weird with their stranded time signatures and modal fugues that begin and end nowhere and live for the way the riff breaks down into emptiness. "One and One" begins the new tale, so jazz breaks down and gets polished off and resurrected as a far blacker, deeper-than-blue character in the form of "Helen Butte/Mr. Freedom X," where guitars and horns careen off Henderson's cracking bass and Foster's skittering hi-hats. It may sound weird even today, but On the Corner is the most street record ever recorded by a jazz musician. And it still kicks. ~ Thom Jurek http://www.allmusic.com/album/on-the-corner-mw0000197892

Personnel:  Miles Davis – electric trumpet;  Dave Liebman – soprano saxophone;  Carlos Garnett – soprano and tenor saxophone;  Herbie Hancock – electric piano, synthesizer;  Chick Corea – electric piano;   Harold I. Williams – organ, synthesizer; David Creamer, John McLaughlin – electric guitar;  Michael Henderson – electric bass;  Collin Walcott, Khalil Balakrishna - electric sitar;  Bennie Maupin – bass clarinet (B1);  Badal Roy – tabla;  Jack DeJohnette– drums;  Jabali Billy Hart – drums, bongos;  James "Mtume" Foreman, Don Alias – percussion;  Paul Buckmaster – cello, arrangements

On the Corner

Andrew Rathbun - Affairs of State

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:49
Size: 148,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:10)  1. Fragmented
(8:16)  2. We Have Nothing But Tears
(7:14)  3. Around the Same Circles, Again and Again
(6:04)  4. Break the Chains
(6:38)  5. 5th Anniversary
(6:34)  6. Fiasco
(8:30)  7. Ongoing
(6:21)  8. Folly (Of the Future Fallen)
(8:58)  9. Paint Peelings

Andrew Rathbun is a Canadian-born tenor saxophonist resident in New York, a Brooklyn regular who has garnered support from fellow tenorists Joe Lovano and Dave Liebman as well as trumpeter Kenny Wheeler. That should give some sense of Rathbun's lineage. He's a thoughtful player and true to the influence of Wheeler (and Booker Little) and the mid-'60s Miles Davis quintet a skillful composer, honing a refined lyricism that explores challenging harmonic patterns. He’s also interested in consistent partnerships. The quintet heard here includes two musicians, trumpeter Taylor Haskins and bassist John Hebert, who played on Rathbun's first quintet session, Scatter Some Stones (Challenge, 1998). Returning the favor, Rathbun has also appeared on Haskins' two Fresh Sound CDs. As one might expect, there's a close-knit feeling that extends from hand-in-glove ensemble playing to some understated contrapuntal improvising.  

Rathbun likes extra-musical themes (two of his previous CDs have been poetry settings), and the pieces here reference the decline of America in the Bush years, from the Iraq war to collapsing infrastructure and luxury condos; however, the album's dominant moods are melancholy and resilience rather than rage, an introspective lyricism that wouldn't otherwise suggest the political theme. Rathbun's compositions use contrasting elements to create tension and develop texture, as in the antiphonal voicings of "Fragmented," the dissonant elegy of "We Have Nothing But Tears" and the effective use of sparkling electric piano on "Folly." His tenor sound possesses significant flexibility, from warm calm to gritty resistance; it's a fine match with Haskins, whose pitch inflections can add a sudden illumination. The rhythm section Herbert joined by pianist Gary Versace and drummer Mike Sarin is a model of support, a loose and engaged presence balancing empathy and aggression with an almost orchestral breadth. The result is consistently thoughtful, well-crafted music in a mature idiom. ~ Stuart Broomer https://www.allaboutjazz.com/affairs-of-state-andrew-rathbun-steeplechase-records-review-by-stuart-broomer.php
 
Personnel: Andrew Rathbun: tenor saxophone; Taylor Haskins: trumpet; Gary Versace: piano; John Hebert: bass; Mike Sarin: drums.

Affairs of State

Ari Ambrose - Jazmin

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:00
Size: 145,5 MB
Art: Front

( 8:41)  1. Jazmin
( 7:10)  2. When Your Lover Has Gone
(10:27)  3. Ila
(12:06)  4. Along Came Betty
( 4:25)  5. Dollar Shot
( 9:19)  6. Bubbles, Bangles and Beads
( 8:49)  7. Who Know

So-called Young Lions seem pretty toothless these days. Wynton’s playing sideman gigs at the Village Vanguard, a venue he once lorded over (see the exemplary box set on Columbia), and cats like Nicholas Payton and Joshua Redman have largely fallen off the radar of public consciousness. The Zeitgeist seems ripe for new contenders and tenor player Ari Ambrose just might lead the pack. Rather than traffic in hard bop retreads, the saxophonist sets his sights higher. A reverence for the glories of the past tempers an insightful ear cocked toward future challenges to conquer. One element essential to this sort of strategy is a like-minded band. Ambrose has his bets covered in this regard with Michael Leonhart, Joe Martin and Rick Montalbano. Even with several records under their collective belt this is still a relatively young ensemble, and that freshness feeds directly into the music. Vestiges of Byas and Webster crop up in his tone and phrasing, but there’s also an edge of unpredictability to his sound. Sliding into near micro tonality on the velvet ballad changes of “When Your Lover Has Gone” Ambrose’s tenor adopts a ghostly translucent cast. Leonhart’s lovingly muted brass smears out a gentle counterpoint and Martin’s ensuing bass solo builds at a beautifully sculpted pace. Everything about the track registers as a model of grace and measured poise.


“Ila” radiates avant-garde overtones while still adhering to a solid structural base. Martin’s dour bass bowing weaves with Montalbano’s atmospheric cymbals and malleted toms, prefacing Ambrose’s own somber entrance. The tenor’s solo loses steam after a strong opening section, segueing into a spate of pitch-pointed cries and flutters. But succor comes in the form of Martin’s busy fingers, which pluck out a vacillating harmonic backdrop alongside Montalbano’s traps and Ambrose regains focus through the coalescing momentum. Rollinsesque ingenuity saturates the playing of both horns, with each man reeling off his share of melodic quotes and Leonhart also trading in legato trills. Benny Golson’s “Along Came Betty,” rendered at a languorous tempo and elongated duration, allows the band even more room for spacious interplay. Ambrose steps forward first, flanked by Leonhart’s lubricious counterpoint and the roles smoothly transpose during the trumpeter’s own solo. Further interjections from the horns punctuate pauses in Martin’s solo, but his fingers plough right on through with an ergonomically sound excursion across his strings. Montalbano gets room to move through a series of highly attentive drum breaks. Leonhart’s “Dollar Shot” bounces along on an infectious highlife-flavored groove, while the venerable standard “Baubles, Bangles and Beads” furthers the mood of accessible exploratory élan. A rousing reading of Monk’s questionary “Who Knows” closes things out and the quartet demonstrates a convincing affinity for the composer’s angular harmonic antics. Ambrose and his colleagues probably won’t register in the minds of many jazz listeners, but engaging discs like this one suggest that their relative anonymity is almost certainly a temporary ailment.~ Derek Taylor https://www.allaboutjazz.com/jazmin-ari-ambrose-steeplechase-records-review-by-derek-taylor.php

Personnel:  Ari Ambrose- tenor saxophone;  Michael Leonhart- trumpet;  Joe Martin- bass;  Rick Montalbano- drums.

Jazmin

Friday, December 23, 2016

Count Basie, Sarah Vaughan - Count Basie & Sarah Vaughan

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:06
Size: 105.5 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1962/1995
Art: Front

[2:10] 1. Perdido
[3:56] 2. Lover Man
[2:53] 3. I Cried For You
[3:53] 4. Alone
[3:09] 5. There Are Such Things
[2:48] 6. Mean To Me
[2:43] 7. The Gentleman Is A Dope
[4:50] 8. You Go To My Head
[3:07] 9. Until I Met You
[3:21] 10. You Turned The Tables On Me
[4:50] 11. Little Man (You've Had A Busy Day)
[2:50] 12. Teach Me Tonight
[2:42] 13. If I Were A Bell
[2:48] 14. Until I Met You

Although Count Basie gets top billing, he actually doesn't even appear on this set. Basie's Orchestra and pianist Kirk Stuart are purely in a supporting role behind the magnificent voice of Sarah Vaughan, other than a couple of short spots for trumpeter Joe Newman and Frank Foster's tenor. Sometimes Vaughan sounds overly mannered and seems to give little weight to the words she is singing, but her wide range and impeccable musicianship carry the day. Highlights include "Perdido," "Mean to Me," and "You Go to My Head," and the set is understandably recommended more for Sarah Vaughan fans than Count Basie collectors. [Some reissues add a pair of charming Vaughan duets with Joe Williams, "Teach Me Tonight" and "If I Were a Bell," that were originally released as a single, plus an alternate take of "Until I Met You."] ~Scott Yanow

Count Basie & Sarah Vaughan

Ben Sidran - On The Cool Side

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:21
Size: 110.7 MB
Styles: Cool jazz
Year: 1985/1999
Art: Front

[5:15] 1. Mitsubishi Boy
[3:03] 2. Lover Man, Pt. 1
[4:54] 3. Lover Man, Pt. 2
[3:52] 4. Brown Eyes
[5:50] 5. On The Cool Side
[3:34] 6. Old Hoagy
[3:56] 7. Heat Wave
[4:16] 8. Take It Easy Greasy
[3:33] 9. Lazy River
[4:25] 10. That's What The Note Said
[5:37] 11. Lost In The Stars

Ben Sidran - Piano, Vocals; Billy Peterson - Bass; Ricky Peterson - Synthesizer; Steve Miller - Guitar, Vocals; Paul Peterson - Synthesizer; Howard Arthur - Guitar; Dr. John - Vocals.

My first step into the world of digital instruments, I used the latest gear at the time (Lynn drum machine, Yamaha DX7, etc.) to capture the spirit of the times, and it did: the sound of this recording is forever locked in the 1980s. Some of the songs, on the other hand, like "Mitsubishi Boy", have had many reincarnations. ~Ben

Ben Sidran's musical persona has always been one of cool-cat hipster, talk-singing his songs in a style reminiscent of his mentor, Mose Allison. On the Cool Side was one of his more commercially viable solo releases, finding an audience in the small coterie of contemporary jazz stations in the mid-'80s. The title track is a classic of the genre, an upbeat, joyous affirmation of life, featuring a backing vocal from old pal Steve Miller. Sidran's take on "Lover Man" adds a whole new funky dimension to that oft-recorded warhorse, as do his versions of "Heat Wave" and "Up a Lazy River," the latter featuring Dr. John on second vocal. The music on this recording is heavily electronicized, with programmed drums, synthesized riffs, and Fender Rhodes piano, but it sure sounds like a lot of fun. And, you'll find yourself walking down the street singing "keep on searching, keep it on the cool side" with a big smile on your face. ~Jim Newsom

On The Cool Side

The World's Greatest Jazz Band - At Manchester's Free Trade Hall, England 1971 (2-Disc Set)

Bob Wilber (clarinet, soprano saxophone); Bud Freeman (tenor saxophone); Billy Butterfield (trumpet, flugelhorn); Yank Lawson (trumpet); Vic Dickenson, Eddie Hubble (trombone); Ralph Sutton (piano); Bob Haggart (electric bass); Gus Johnson (drums).

With an over-the-top (and perhaps tongue in cheek) name like the World's Greatest Jazz Band, all modesty has been happily tossed out the window. Whether any band can actually live up to such a title is questionable, but At Manchester's Free Trade Hall, England 1971 does qualify as a fine recording of a vivacious live show. This rather large band (nine players), including trumpeters Yank Lawson and Billy Butterfield, and pianist Ralph Sutton, turns back the clock to a jazz form -- Dixieland -- that hadn't been "in" since the 1910s. The set list, "Ain't Misbehavin'," "Carolina in the Morning," and "Bourbon Street Parade," reflects this backward glance. The odd thing about this date for anyone immersed in contemporary jazz (anything from Coltrane on) is how melodic and fun jazz was before it became sophisticated. Sutton and clarinetist Bob Wilbur's freewheeling solos on "Ain't Misbehavin'" concoct an intoxicating mood, while the instrumental interchanges and intertwinings by the band throw the proceedings into high gear. The band offers quite a few variations on the Dixieland style, varying the arrangements and featuring different players on different cuts. This, plus the fact that most of the tracks hover around three- to five minutes, means that these two discs keep the listener tuned in. The only factor that seems a bit old-fashioned here are the song introductions, though they do provide a space to identify the featured musician(s) on each cut. At Manchester's Free Trade Hall, England 1971 delivers over an hour-and-a-half of spontaneous, effervescent jazz, and stands as a worthy testament to the World's Greatest Jazz Band. ~ Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr.

Album: At Manchester's Free Trade Hall, England 1971 (Disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:27
Size: 108.7 MB
Styles: Dixieland
Year: 2006

[1:34] 1. Yank Introduces The WGB
[5:42] 2. Panama
[4:56] 3. Dogtown Blues
[5:50] 4. Ain't Misbehavin'
[4:19] 5. Black And Blue
[4:02] 6. Alligator Crawl
[4:42] 7. I Got Rhythm
[5:05] 8. Limehouse Blues
[3:46] 9. Big Noise From Winnetka
[4:02] 10. What's New
[3:25] 11. South Rampart Street Parade

At Manchester's Free Trade Hall, England 1971 (Disc 1)

Album: At Manchester's Free Trade Hall, England 1971 (Disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:54
Size: 125.7 MB
Styles: Dixieland
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[4:57] 1. Bourbon Street Parade
[4:02] 2. The Girl On The Beach
[4:38] 3. Just One Of Those Things
[5:27] 4. Summertime
[5:31] 5. Viper's Drag
[5:34] 6. At Sundown
[3:44] 7. Carolina In The Morning
[5:22] 8. In A Sentimental Mood
[6:24] 9. Wolverine Blues
[5:35] 10. Muskrat Ramble
[3:35] 11. Up-Up And Away My Inspiration

At Manchester's Free Trade Hall, England 1971 (Disc 2)

Kelley Suttenfield, Nick Romano - Among The Stars

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:01
Size: 89.3 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[4:15] 1. Fly Me To The Moon
[4:40] 2. Harvest Moon
[2:49] 3. Beautiful Love
[4:41] 4. Wash Me Clean
[3:31] 5. Just Say I Love Him
[3:50] 6. One Fine Day
[4:34] 7. Try Your Wings
[4:11] 8. People Will Say We're In Love
[3:55] 9. Until It's Time For You To Go
[2:30] 10. I'll Be Your Baby Tonight

Voice and nylon-string guitar. That's it. Nothing else to hear on this one, but nothing else is really needed. Vocalist Kelley Suttenfield's first album—Where Is Love (Rhombus Records, 2009)—was a well-crafted, full band affair that reimagined the works of everybody from Wes Montgomery ("West Coast Blues") to Caetano Veloso ("Coraçao Vagabundo") to The Platters ("Twilight Time"). On her sophomore date, she strips away the band, leaving only guitarist Tony Romano in the picture to help her explore music of the night and songs of love.

Among The Stars offers quiet and absorbing takes on jazz standards along with classics from singer-songwriters like Neil Young and Bob Dylan. In theory, pieces like "Fly Me To The Moon" and "Harvest Moon" may not seem like they belong back-to-back on the same program, but Suttenfield and Romano shape each and every number to fit their aesthetic. "Fly Me To The Moon," for example, has no Sinatra-esque swinging swagger to it, moving instead atop moody lines, and there's no steady strum to calmly propel "Harvest Moon." Actually, there's rarely any steady strum to speak of. Romano isn't a four-chords-to-a-bar accompanist. He's far more interactive with song and singer, dropping his own bass notes into place, connecting the harmonic dots with single note lines, and giving the occasional chordal punctuation or aside. When Romano does wear the rhythm guitarist hat, as on parts of the striking "Just Say I Love Him," he remains understated in his approach.

Suttenfield's voice has been rightly compared to that of Susannah McCorkle in the past, but that connection is really just a surface similarity. McCorkle had great highs and lows in her delivery; Suttenfield works in narrower confines, but she knows her working space extremely well. She doesn't usually look upward toward the heavens or explore the depths, preferring instead to get the most out of the middle ground. These ten numbers come and go in less than forty minutes, but that's more than enough time for Suttenfield and Romano to make a lovely statement. Among The Stars is a real low-key charmer. ~Dan Bilawsky

Among The Stars

Archie Shepp Quartet - Blue Ballads

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:23
Size: 119.9 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1996/2007
Art: Front

[ 5:54] 1. Little Girl Blue
[ 7:15] 2. More Than You Know
[ 7:53] 3. Blue In Green
[ 5:09] 4. Blue And Sentimental
[ 7:50] 5. Cry Me A River
[ 7:29] 6. If I Should Lose You
[10:51] 7. Alone Together

Bass – George Mraz; Drums – Idris Muhammad; Piano – John Hicks; Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Vocals – Archie Shepp. Recorded at Clinton Studio "A" on November 24 & 25, 1995 in N.Y.

Recorded in November 1995, saxophonist Archie Shepp's Blue Ballads is a counterpart to True Ballads and Something to Live For, which date from the same period. All three albums feature pianist John Hicks, bassist George Mraz, and drummer Idris Muhammad. These intimate studies in shared introspection, along with Black Ballads and True Blue, document Shepp's astute exploration of the ballad form during the 1990s. On Blue Ballads Shepp mingled time-honored standards such as Rodgers & Hart's "Little Girl Blue," Arthur Schwartz's "Alone Together," and Vincent Youmans' "More Than You Know" with the Miles Davis-Bill Evans masterpiece "Blue in Green" and "Blue and Sentimental," which had served as the feature number for Count Basie's star tenor saxophonist Herschel Evans some 60 years earlier. Once again and in all the best ways, Shepp shines in parallel with his contemporary Pharoah Sanders. Both are skilled balladeers as well as free spirits who simply cannot be bottled or pigeonholed. ~arwulf arwulf

Blue Ballads

Buck Clayton - Tenderly

Styles: Trumpet Jazz, Swing
Year: 1959
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:09
Size: 86,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:25)  1. I've Got My Love To Keep Me Warm
(2:48)  2. Rosetta
(3:09)  3. Lonesome
(3:23)  4. Tenderly
(2:57)  5. Sugar Blues
(2:45)  6. Black And Blue
(2:31)  7. Premier Bal
(2:56)  8. These Foolish Things
(3:07)  9. Louise
(2:45) 10. Pennies From Heaven
(3:24) 11. Stompin' At The Savoy
(2:52) 12. I'm In The Mood For Love

This out-of-print Inner City LP has tasteful playing by Buck Clayton with a French quintet comprised of Jean-Claude Pelletier on piano and organ, guitarist Jean Bonal, bassist Roland Lobligeois and expatraite drummer Kansas Fields. 

The emphasis is on ballads and standards (although there are a pair of obscure Sidney Bechet tunes) but Clayton's appealing sound, naturally melodic style and swinging solos make all of the concise performances of interest to mainstream jazz fans.~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/tenderly-mw0000911536

Personnel:  Buck Clayton – trumpet;  Jean-Claude Pelletier - piano, organ;  Jean Bonal – guitar;  Roland Lobligeois – bass;  Kansas Fields - drums

Tenderly

Greta Matassa - Favorites From A Long Walk

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:22
Size: 143,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:42)  1. Double Rainbow
(4:46)  2. Inside A Silent Tear
(3:04)  3. Sweet And Lovely
(4:08)  4. He's Gone Again
(3:27)  5. If I Love Again
(6:23)  6. Listen Little Girl
(5:55)  7. I Will Wait For You
(4:55)  8. Look At That Face
(3:55)  9. Late, Late Show
(6:31) 10. Speak Low
(6:20) 11. Never Never Land
(4:44) 12. The Man With A Horn
(3:25) 13. There'll Be Another Spring

A nice album of relatively unknown songs originally done by the great female vocalists of yesteryear. Greta Matassa has a nice way with the music, alternately whispering softly and belting out cadences as the compositions require. Matassa doesn't quite mimic the classic singers, but she does have hints of their styles slyly embedded in her delivery. Ella comes out just a bit when she starts to scat. Carmen McRae comes through a bit on a Jobim number. Sarah Vaughan comes out when she needs to purr a little. Ultimately, there isn't much new to be found here, if one has already heard Matassa's formidable prowess. However, it's a nice round of songs whether it's new or not. Perfect for a slow weekend afternoon. ~ Adam Greenberg  http://www.allmusic.com/album/favorites-from-a-long-walk-mw0000263030

Personnel: Greta Matassa (vocals); Darin Clendenin & Friends, Darin Clendenin (piano); Clipper Anderson (electric bass); Richard Cole (saxophone); Thomas Marriott (trumpet); Mark Ivester (drums).

Favorites From A Long Walk

Sadao Watanabe - Fly me to the Moon

Styles: Saxophone And Flute Jazz
Year: 1967
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:44
Size: 81,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:35)  1. The Girl from Ipanema
(2:45)  2. Meditation
(3:20)  3. Black Orpheus
(2:54)  4. O Grande Amor
(2:10)  5. Bonita
(4:02)  6. Dindi
(2:20)  7. Mas que Nada
(3:05)  8. The Shadow of Your Smile
(2:16)  9. Fly me to the Moon
(2:41) 10. A Man and a Woman
(3:33) 11. So Danco Samba
(2:56) 12. She is Carioca

Sadao Watanabe has long had a split musical personality. He alternates excellent bebop dates with pop albums. Watanabe learned clarinet and alto in high school, and in the 1950s he moved to Tokyo, joining Toshiko Akiyoshi's bop-oriented group in 1953. When the pianist moved to the U.S. in 1956, Watanabe took over the band. He attended Berklee during 1962-1965 and had the opportunity to work with Gary McFarland, Chico Hamilton, and Gabor Szabo. However, throughout his career Watanabe has remained mostly based in Japan, where he is a major influence on younger players. He has recorded steadily through the years, most notably with Chick Corea in New York (1970) and with the Galaxy All-Stars (1978). Watanabe's bop records are inspired by Charlie Parker, and his pop dates by Brazilian-flavored music. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/artist/sadao-watanabe-mn0000282544/biography

Personnel:  Sadao Watanabe (Sax, flute); Sadanori Nakamure (Guitar); Masabumi Kikuchi (Piano); Isao Suzuki (Bass); Msahiko Togashi (Drums); Hideo Miyata (Cavasa).

Fly me to the Moon