Friday, January 6, 2017

Count Basie, Tony Bennett - Basie Swings, Bennett Sings

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:51
Size: 70.6 MB
Styles: Big band, Vocal jazz
Year: 1959/2009
Art: Front

[2:52] 1. Life Is A Song (Let's Sing It Together)
[1:32] 2. With Plenty Of Money And You
[2:07] 3. Jeepers Creepers
[2:48] 4. Are You Havin' Any Fun
[2:22] 5. Anything Goes
[1:34] 6. Strike Up The Band (Strike Up The Band)
[2:05] 7. Chicago
[3:02] 8. I've Grown Accustomed To Her Face
[3:30] 9. Poor Little Rich Girl
[3:34] 10. Growing Pains
[1:45] 11. I Guess I'll Have To Change My Plans
[3:35] 12. After Supper

The Roulette half of the two Bennett/Basie sessions is a band singer's paradise, with the Basie band caught at a robust and swinging peak and Bennett never sounding happier or looser in front of a microphone. The Count himself, alas, appears on piano only on two numbers ("Life Is a Song" and "Jeepers Creepers"), while Bennett's perennial pianist Ralph Sharon takes over on the remaining ten tracks and does all the charts. Yet Sharon writes idiomatically for the Count's style, whether on frantic rave-ups like "With Plenty of Money and You" and "Strike Up the Band" or relaxed swingers like "Chicago." Though not a jazz singer per se, the flavor of jazz is everywhere in Bennett's voice, which in those days soared like a trumpet. The 1990 CD included an atmospheric unissued Neal Hefti ballad "After Supper," but even this bonus track does little to extend the skimpy playing time (about 31 minutes) of what is still a great, desirable snapshot from American showbiz of the late 1950s. ~Richard S. Ginnell

Basie Swings, Bennett Sings

Kerry Ellis - K E

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:05
Size: 89.5 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[3:57] 1. Let It Go
[3:33] 2. I Could Have Danced All Night
[4:03] 3. Take That Look Off Your Face
[2:56] 4. As Long As He Needs Me
[3:07] 5. Who Will Buy
[4:53] 6. On The Street Where You Live
[3:23] 7. I Dreamed A Dream
[2:57] 8. The Way We Were
[2:57] 9. Gimme Love
[2:40] 10. Alfie
[4:33] 11. (I've Had) The Time Of My Life

Kerry Ellis has fast become recognized as the First Lady of West End musicals from her starring roles in London and on Broadway, she has also achieved chart-topping success as a recording artist signed to Universal Decca with her debut album Anthems.

Kerry originated the role of Meat, in Queen's We Will Rock You and was the first British Elphaba in the West End smash, Wicked, for which Kerry won the 2008 Whatsonstage.com Award for 'Best Takeover in a Role'. She then immediately transferred to Broadway and played Elphaba at the Gershwin Theater for 6 months, where she won the Broadway.com Audience Award for Favourite Female Breakthrough Performance, before returning to London for 6 months in 2009. Her many other leading role credits include Nancy in Oliver! at the London Palladium, Eliza Doolittle My Fair Lady, Ellen in Miss Saigon and Fantine in Les Miserables.

Kerry's first major CD release was the amazing Wicked in Rock, which is still flying high in the Dress Circle's bestseller list. Wicked in Rock was collaboration with long time friend and Queen guitarist, Brian May. This led to her being signed to Universal as a solo recording artist and her debut album Anthems was released in 2010 on Decca Records. The success of the album, which reached No.15 in the UK album chart, and No.10 in the UK pop club charts (for Defying Gravity), led to a major tour Anthems: The Concert throughout 2011, which kicked off at the Royal Albert Hall. She has performed internationally promoting the album, including performances at the Royal Variety Performance, at the Laurence Olivier Awards, duetting with Barry Manilow on BBC Television and Radio, at G.A.Y., on Loose Women, Alan Titchmarsh Show, BBC Breakfast, at the Henley Festival alongside John Barrowman, the Queen's Jubilee Concert at Buckingham Palace and most recently a run of An Audience With Kerry Ellis at the Shaw Theatre.

K E

Bert Joris, Brussels Jazz Orchestra - Smooth Shake

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:32
Size: 154.6 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[7:26] 1. O.U.T
[8:24] 2. Smooth Shake
[6:27] 3. Only For The Honest
[7:44] 4. Brussel-Parijs
[6:57] 5. Spaces
[8:23] 6. How Could We Forget
[8:49] 7. Mr. Dado
[8:12] 8. Nasty Boy
[5:06] 9. Smooth Shake (Radio Edit)

The new CD by Bert Joris with Brussels Jazz Orchestra is called Smooth Shake. This is the fourth large-scale production with Bert in which he shines as a soloist, composer and arranger, following Signs and Signatures (2010), Dangerous Liaison (2006) and the double CD The Music of Bert Joris in 2002. Bert Joris says: "A warm sound – that’s what I had in mind for this album. A sound that envelops you, fills you with energy, like a meaningful friendship. The result is a serene record which invites you to move nonetheless, to dance. Not too exuberantly, but smoothly."

Jazz trumpeter Bert Joris (°1957) has built a solid reputation as improvisor, composer, arranger and teacher. His work is performed by musicians allover the world. Joris received several awards and prizes for his work and his most recent solo album ‘Only for the honest’ was widely acclaimed by the press. Bert Joris has published three albums with the Brussels Jazz Orchestra so far. Over the years, Joris and the BJO toured together from Sweden to the USA.

Smooth Shake

Chet Atkins - Chet Picks On The Grammys

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:01
Size: 98.5 MB
Styles: Country
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[2:43] 1. Tears
[2:37] 2. Nut Sundae
[2:14] 3. Snowbird
[3:19] 4. I'll See You In My Dreams
[2:17] 5. The Entertainer
[3:16] 6. Caravan
[4:08] 7. Ready For The Times To Get Better
[4:09] 8. Cosmic Square Dance
[3:16] 9. So Soft, Your Goodbye
[4:02] 10. Poor Boy Blues
[4:24] 11. Sneakin' Around
[3:13] 12. Young Thing
[3:18] 13. Jam Man

So many gallons of ink have been spilled singing the praises of Chet Atkins that it's difficult for reviewers to find new ways to describe the quality that made his guitar style so special. There had been other good pickers before Atkins. Merle Travis used a similar style earlier, called "Travis picking," but was also known as the singer of classics like "Smoke, Smoke, Smoke That Cigarette." Joe Maphis, a contemporary of Atkins, worshiped at the alter of speedy licks, trading individual style for "fire on the strings." Atkins' style, both urban and refined, was always identifiable. This was true whether he was playing holiday songs or the Beatles. Chet Picks on the Grammys collects 13 instrumentals that won Grammys between 1967 and 1996. Even over such a long period with disparate changes in production, Atkins' combination of chords and thumb technique remained distinct. There are a number of choice items here and many will be familiar as hits by other artists. "Snowbird" harks back to 1971 and "Ready for the Times to Get Better" to 1981. As though to prove he wasn't just a country boy with a guitar, Atkins also tackles "The Entertainer" and offers a fascinating rendering of Duke Ellington's "Caravan." Chet Picks on the Grammys offers a good overview of Atkins' instrumental work and a fine excuse for reviewers to spill a few more gallons of ink singing the praises of Mister Guitar. ~Ronnie D. Lankford Jr.

Chet Picks On The Grammys

Sammy Nestico, SWR Big Band - No Time Like The Present

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:54
Size: 176.1 MB
Styles: Swing, Big band
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[5:41] 1. Ya Gotta Try ... Harder
[6:00] 2. Freckle Face
[4:31] 3. Tangerine
[5:54] 4. No Time Like The Present
[5:30] 5. Charlie The Whale
[4:31] 6. Satin 'n' Glass
[9:41] 7. The Blues Machine
[5:20] 8. Night Flight
[6:33] 9. Crosswinds
[7:11] 10. A Warm Breeze
[7:19] 11. Smack Dab In The Middle
[5:03] 12. After You've Gone
[3:34] 13. Strike Up The Band

Acoustic Bass, Electric Bass – Decebal Badila; Alto Saxophone, Clarinet, Flute – Klaus Graf; Alto Saxophone, Piccolo Flute, Flute, Flute [Alto] – Axel Kühn; Baritone Saxophone – Pierre Paquette; Drums – Holger Neil; French Horn – Gregor Fas, Heinrich Lohr, Raymond Warnier; Guitar – Klaus-Peter Schöpfer; Percussion – Jörg Gebhardt; Piano, Electric Piano [Fender- Rhodes] – Klaus Wagenleiter; Tenor Saxophone, Flute, Flute [Alto] – Andreas Maile, Jörg Kaufmann; Trombone – Ernst Hutter, Georg Maus, Ian Cummings, Marc Godfroid; Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Claus Reichstaller, Felice Civitareale, Karl Farrent, Rudolf Reindl; Vibraphone – Matthias Haus. Recording Dates: Track 1 to 15 on Nocv. 09 - 11,2005 at SWR Sendesaal, Villa Berg, Stuttgart; Track 16 on May 05,2005 at KKL,Hegelsaal, Stuttgart.

Famous for his arrangements for the Count Basie orchestra, Sammy Nestico -- a cousin of tenor saxophonist Sal Nistico -- has always had a productive, if lesser-known, solo career. Self-taught on the trombone, at age 17 Nestico was skilled enough to be a studio musician in Pittsburgh. He served in the military, gained a music degree at Duquesne University in 1950 and was staff arranger for the U.S. Air Force Band for many years. Nestico was also a busy freelance arranger: he worked with the U.S. Marine Band starting in 1963 and led the orchestra that performed at functions at the White House. Nestico started contributing arrangements to Basie in 1967 and during the next 15 years would occasionally write for an entire Basie album (including Have a Nice Day, ) Prime Time, Warm Breeze and the big band tracks on 88 Basie Street). Nestico has also written extensively for films and television, has been a significant jazz educator and recorded one album as a leader: Dark Orchid (a 1982 Palo Alto release). ~bio by Scott Yanow

No Time Like The Present

Earl Hines - Earl Hines Plays Duke Ellington (2-Disc Set)

During a four-year period, pianist Earl Hines recorded enough of Duke Ellington's compositions to fill up four LPs. This double CD contains 20 of his better performances including both Ellington's better-known standards and a few obscurities (most notably lengthy versions of "The Shepherd" and "Black Butterfly"). The music is satisfying, although one wishes that New World had reissued all of the music from this extensive project on three CDs. ~Scott Yanow

Album: Earl Hines Plays Duke Ellington (Disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:33
Size: 140.9 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 1988
Art: Front

[5:17] 1. Love You Madly
[4:16] 2. Sophisticated Lady
[4:16] 3. I'm Beginning To See The Light
[3:54] 4. Black And Tan Fantasy
[7:28] 5. Warm Valley
[3:46] 6. Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me
[4:33] 7. C Jam Blues
[5:59] 8. Caravan
[4:38] 9. Everything But You
[7:00] 10. Mood Indigo
[5:10] 11. Just Squeeze Me
[5:10] 12. Come Sunday

Earl Hines Plays Duke Ellington (Disc 1)

Album: Earl Hines Plays Duke Ellington (Disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:25
Size: 136.0 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 1988
Art: Front

[ 7:10] 1. The Creole Love Call
[ 6:38] 2. I Ain't Got Nothin' But The Blues
[10:48] 3. The Shepherd
[ 6:59] 4. Don't Get Around Much Anymore
[10:43] 5. Black Butterfly
[ 6:22] 6. Take Love Easy
[ 5:49] 7. Heaven
[ 4:53] 8. The Jeep Is Jumping

Earl Hines Plays Duke Ellington (Disc 2)

Nancy LaMott - The Best Of Nancy LaMott Vols 1 & 2

Though she was popular on the cabaret club circuit (especially NYC) for several years, NLM had a relatively short recording career — sadly truncated by her death late in 1995.

That said, Nancy’s short recording career was a prolific one — yielding five excellent LPs. Five releases may not sound like that big a deal, but they came in those very tough years when the American Songbook was digging out from the dearth of the 80’s — ahead of the likes of Diana Krall. Producing more than an album per year, in that tenuous time, is remarkable — especially when you look at the one release every three or so years we get from artists these days.

The quality of Nancy’s live recordings, her very devoted fan base and the passionate support of David Friedman — who produced each of Nancy’s LPs — lead to several posthumous album releases. Together with those late LP additions and the two 2011 “Best of…” releases Nancy has an impressive body of work … definitely worth exploring if you haven’t done so yet.

Album: The Best Of Nancy LaMott: American Popular Standards Vol 1
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:50
Size: 98.1 MB
Styles: Standards
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[3:05] 1. Moon River
[2:51] 2. The Best Is Yet To Come
[5:28] 3. Come Rain Or Come Shine
[6:06] 4. Autumn Leaves When October Goes
[3:01] 5. Don't Get Around Much Anymore
[3:53] 6. P.S. I Love You
[2:57] 7. You're Getting To Be A Habit With Me
[4:11] 8. Blue Skies
[4:04] 9. I Got The Sun In The Morning
[3:08] 10. The Shadow Of Your Smile
[4:00] 11. Not Exactly Paris

The Best Of Nancy LaMott: American Popular Standards Vol 1

Album: The Best Of Nancy LaMott: Great American Songbook Vol 2
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:55
Size: 105.1 MB
Styles: Standards
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[4:38] 1. You Must Have Been A Beautiful Baby
[4:08] 2. Talk To Me Baby
[3:54] 3. Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive
[3:07] 4. On The Atchison, Topeka And The Santa Fe
[3:47] 5. That Old Black Magic
[2:47] 6. Look Of Love/Speak Low
[5:37] 7. Hit The Road To Dreamland
[6:16] 8. Days Of Wine And Roses/Whistling Away The Dark
[3:43] 9. Ordinary Miracles
[4:08] 10. I Have Dreamed
[3:46] 11. Two For The Road

The Best Of Nancy LaMott: Great American Songbook Vol 2

Warren Hill - La Dolce Vita

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:07
Size: 119.3 MB
Styles: Smooth jazz
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[4:14] 1. Mojo
[5:24] 2. La Dolce Vita
[4:13] 3. Sunshine
[5:14] 4. Daydreamer
[4:21] 5. Gimme Some
[5:06] 6. The Jive Samba
[4:32] 7. Skinny Dippin'
[5:12] 8. We'll Survive
[5:23] 9. Warm Rain
[4:22] 10. Hill Be Jammin'
[4:02] 11. Light My Fire

Pop superstar Natasha Bedingfield wasn't the only artist bringing a "Pocketful of Sunshine" to the musical landscape in 2008. Thanks to veteran contemporary jazz saxman Warren Hill's equal penchant for colorful vocals, his vibrant and romantic singalong "Sunshine" is an early highlight on his compelling, melodically and groovingly irresistible Koch Records debut, La Dolce Vita. Hill is so optimistic that even when the clouds come, they pour out a graceful soprano ballad full of balmy acoustic guitar harmony and "Warm Rain." Like a lot of artists in his genre who have been around since NAC became "smooth jazz," Hill's a survivor, heading to smaller labels when the majors jumped ship and always finding a comfortable home to funk around in. Song for song, this collection is as high-spirited, sensual, and colorful as any he's ever done, starting with the cool struttin' "Mojo" on down through the seductive horn-doubling extravaganzas "Daydreamer" and "Gimme Some," and digging down and dirtier on the old-school jam "Skinny Dippin'." Nearly 20 years into his career, Hill was still enjoying a little balmy exotica among his in-the-pocket can't-miss radio-ready tracks; here, he shuffles down to Rio on the moody, cosmopolitan, and vibes-kissed "The Jive Samba" and mixes Jamaican "industrialism" with sensual Latin dance grooves and horn snazziness on the appropriately titled "Hill Be Jammin'." The erstwhile rock & roller also keeps his longstanding history of doing classic rock tunes alive with a smoothed-out, dreamily hypnotic twist on "Light My Fire." As the title implies, Hill plays with a lot of sugar, as in instantly catchy ear candy. But there's enough blister and edge to make this a rich artistic triumph as well. Along for the ride are some of smooth jazz's always dependable "usual suspects," including Nathan East, Paul Jackson, Jr., and labelmates Jeff Golub and Philippe Saisse. ~Jonathan Widran

La Dolce Vita

Eddie Higgins - Romantic Higgins

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:45
Size: 155.1 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[5:22] 1. You Don't Know What Love Is
[5:34] 2. My Funny Valentine
[4:16] 3. Over The Rainbow
[5:01] 4. Danny Boy
[4:05] 5. Again
[4:51] 6. It's Magic
[3:48] 7. Once Upon A Summertime
[4:44] 8. My Old Flame
[3:37] 9. Easy Living
[3:55] 10. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
[3:10] 11. If Dreams Come True
[5:06] 12. Corcovado
[3:53] 13. The Things We Did Last Summer
[4:52] 14. How Long Has This Been Going
[5:23] 15. My One And Only Love

A solid bop-based pianist, Eddie Higgins has never become a major name, but he has been well-respected by his fellow musicians for decades. After growing up in New England, he moved to Chicago, where he played in all types of situations before settling in to a long stint as the leader of the house trio at the London House (1957-1969). Higgins moved back to Massachusetts in 1970 and went on to freelance, often accompanying his wife, vocalist Meredith D'Ambrosio, and appearing at jazz parties and festivals. Eddie Higgins has led sessions of his own for Replica (1958), Vee-Jay (1960), Atlantic, and Sunnyside; back in 1960, he recorded as a sideman for Vee-Jay with Lee Morgan and Wayne Shorter. bio by Scott Yanow

Romantic Higgins

Thursday, January 5, 2017

Joe Venuti, Dutch Swing College Band - The Dutch Swing College Band Meets Joe Venuti

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:01
Size: 82.5 MB
Styles: Swing, Dixieland
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[4:08] 1. Duff Campbell's Revenge
[3:56] 2. Body And Soul
[2:46] 3. Stealin' Apples
[2:47] 4. Wild Dog
[3:31] 5. Black And Blue
[2:30] 6. Ragging The Scale
[4:16] 7. I Remember Johnny
[2:26] 8. Wild Cat
[3:04] 9. Blues In C
[4:29] 10. Royal Garden Blues
[2:02] 11. I Got Rhythm

Banjo, Guitar – Arie Ligthart; Bass – Henk Bosch Van Drakestein; Clarinet, Alto Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Bob Kaper; Cornet – Bert De Kort; Drums – Huub Janssen; Leader, Clarinet, Tenor Saxophone, Baritone Saxophone, Piano – Peter Schilperoort; Trombone – Dick Kaart; Violin – Joe Venuti.

Violinist Joe Venuti is actually only on half of this LP, playing three songs from his earlier days, two standards and a blues with the Dutch septet. The remaining five selections are between Dixieland and swing and feature fine playing by leader Peter Schilperoort and Bob Kaper on reeds, cornetist Bert De Kort and trombonist Dick Kaart. ~Scott Yanow

The Dutch Swing College Band Meets Joe Venuti

Betty Carter - 'Round Midnight

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:51
Size: 84.4 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 1963/2005
Art: Front

[2:41] 1. Nothing More To Look Forward To
[3:13] 2. Who What Why Where When
[3:22] 3. Heart And Soul
[3:56] 4. Call Me Darling
[2:57] 5. When I Fall In Love
[3:21] 6. 'round Midnight
[2:34] 7. I Wonder
[2:46] 8. Theme From Dr. Kildare (Three Stars Will Shine Tonight)
[2:31] 9. The Good Life
[2:46] 10. Everybody's Somebody's Fool
[2:09] 11. Two Cigarettes In The Dark
[2:10] 12. Shine On Harvest Moon
[2:21] 13. One Note Samba

Betty Carter recorded only two albums during the 1961-1968 period. Her chance-taking style and unusual voice were mostly ignored and it would not be until the late '70s that she was finally "discovered." This Atlantic CD finds Carter backed by orchestras arranged by Claus Ogerman and Oliver Nelson. Her style was a lot freer than it had been in her earlier records but was still more accessible than it would be. Her repertoire, which includes the title cut, "Theme from Dr. Kildare," "Two Cigarettes in the Dark" and her own "Who What Why Where When" was already becoming eclectic. This is an interesting historic release. ~Scott Yanow

'Round Midnight

John Stein, Ron Gill - Turn Up The Quiet

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:43
Size: 161.9 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[4:38] 1. A Weaver Of Dreams
[4:00] 2. Be My All
[3:45] 3. Detour Ahead
[5:52] 4. My Flaming Heart
[3:40] 5. Love Dance
[5:00] 6. If It's Magic/Too Shy To Say
[7:56] 7. Something In Your Smile/I'll Be Easy To Find
[8:54] 8. Our Love Will See Us Through
[3:40] 9. So This Is Love
[4:46] 10. In A Sentimental Mood
[4:20] 11. Gentle Rain
[4:50] 12. My Foolish Heart
[6:29] 13. One Minute To Zero/When I Fall In Love
[2:46] 14. Wonder Why

John Stein, guitar and acoustic bass; Ron Gill, vocals; Gilad Barkan, piano.

Ron Gill and John Stein find their love of fine songs turn them to dancing with words, lofting pretty chords, and capturing passionate ideas about togetherness. Collaboration - so often a tricky treat, a windy street - they negotiate openhandedly with wit and diplomacy . . . Stein, a subtle and sensitive guitarist, has many sharp arrows in his quiver, with varied, song-rich albums and an enduring presence in Boston's lively jazz scene. He can make a note sing and a chord ring like Kenny Burrell, and always thinks "melody first" . . . Few singers in my ken capture the innocent simplicity of great songs as well as Ron Gill. His voice is immediately endearing and convincing: his blatant honesty charms the dots off snake-eyes . . . Three's no crowd with their inviting aboard Gilad Barkan's bright voice on piano. Check out his nifty melodizing . . . and his earthy interplay with Stein's bass. ~Fred Bouchard

Turn Up The Quiet

Charlie Apicella & Iron City - 2 albums: The Business / Sparks

Album: The Business
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:34
Size: 106.6 MB
Styles: Jazz-blues-funk
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[5:24] 1. The Business
[6:11] 2. 64 Cadillac
[6:04] 3. Donny Brook
[4:43] 4. Ironicity
[4:44] 5. Can't Help Falling In Love
[5:13] 6. Cantaloupe Woman
[4:36] 7. Shaw Shuffle
[9:36] 8. Stanley's Time

Charlie Apicella - guitar; Stephen Riley - tenor saxophone; Dave Mattock - organ; Mayra Casales - congas; Alan Korzin - drums.

"Apicella is a no-nonsense player of unquestioned chops and whose soul drips from each note... This is 'organic' music, and Apicella is an exciting young player." ~ John Heidt

The Business

Album: Sparks
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:51
Size: 105.0 MB
Styles: Jazz-blues-funk
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[6:05] 1. Sookie Sookie
[5:33] 2. Sparks
[6:36] 3. Blues In Maude's Flat
[5:02] 4. Play It Back
[5:12] 5. Caracas
[6:17] 6. A Decade In The Making
[5:51] 7. Billie Jean
[5:11] 8. Sweet And Sounded

Charlie Apicella - guitar; Stephen Riley - tenor saxophone; Dave Mattock - organ; Alan Korzin - drums. with John Blake, Jr. - violin on "Sookie, Sookie".

"Apicella is a lithe, swinging guitarist with an affinity for the contrasting styles of both Grant Green and Wes Montgomery... An all-around impressive debut by a guitarist of substance." ~ Mark Gardner

Sparks

Duane Eddy - $1,000,000 Worth Of Twang

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:42
Size: 72.6 MB
Styles: Rock N Roll, Instrumental Rock
Year: 1960/2006
Art: Front

[2:19] 1. Rebel Rouser
[1:52] 2. Cannonball
[1:57] 3. The Quiet Three
[2:16] 4. Bonnie Came Back
[1:58] 5. Because They're Young
[2:10] 6. Theme For Moon Children
[2:09] 7. Moovin' 'n' Groovin'
[1:38] 8. The Lonely One
[2:08] 9. Forty Miles Of Bad Road
[1:17] 10. Some Kinda Earthquake
[2:06] 11. First Love, First Tears
[2:49] 12. Kommotion
[2:56] 13. The Secret Seven
[1:58] 14. Lost Island
[2:01] 15. Shazam!

This reissue of Duane Eddy's original greatest hits release from 1960, $1,000,000.00 Worth Of Twang, has received rousing endorsements for its high-quality sound, extra tracks, liner notes on Duane's career and previously unreleased photos. Jamie/Guyden is gaining recognition, finally, as an original label offering high-quality reissues of its original artists, which has stimulated interest in all five Duane Eddy CDs on the label.

$1,000,000 Worth Of Twang

Various - Mack The Knife

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:49
Size: 120.9 MB
Styles: Assorted Jazz styles
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[8:14] 1. Barney Wilen - Mack The Knife
[6:34] 2. Pharoah Sanders - In A Sentimental Mood
[5:24] 3. Lee Konitz - My Funny Valentine
[6:22] 4. Eddie Harris - Georgia On My Mind
[5:56] 5. Carmen Leggio - Street Of Dreams
[7:03] 6. Archie Shepp - The Thrill Is Gone
[6:44] 7. Phil Woods - Souvenir
[6:28] 8. Barney Wilen - I Cover The Waterfront

About the song 'Mack the Knife": "Mack the Knife" was composed on a whim by Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill while they were putting the finishing touches on Die Dreigroschenoper in 1928. As the story goes, the diva-esque tenor who was playing the part of Mackie Messer, aka Macheath or Mack the Knife, suggested that a whole song should be written to introduce his character before he comes on stage. As one columnist recently wrote, "the essence of the song is: Oh, look who's coming onstage, it's Mack the Knife - a thief, murderer, arsonist, and rapist." The song, which became the opening number, was composed in less than 24 hours and added to the show at the final hour. Little did Weill and Brecht know it would be one of their most well-known legacies.

In some ways, The Threepenny Opera, tagged by Brecht and Weill as a show "by and for beggars," revolutionized musical theater. Die Dreigroschenoper was revolutionary because it was a fun musical that doubled as biting satire, throwing stone after stone at the corruption of the German government and its supporters without naming any names. It also integrated contemporary trends like tango and foxtrot. It was also historically fascinating because it was actually a re-write of a musical composed a full two hundred years before, John Gay's Beggar's Opera. In the early 1700s, the Beggar's Opera—which poked light fun at London's bourgeois classes—became wildly popular as the first comic opera. The parody, which featured a Robin Hood-type Macheath who stole from the rich, was later popular in the British colonies in New York and was supposedly enjoyed by George Washington. The Beggar's Opera was translated into German and became a popular play in 1920s Berlin because it spoke to the excesses of post-World War I Germany.

Not surprisingly, Brecht and Weill were pushed out of Germany by the Nazis in 1933, and their works were banned. They both ended up in the U.S. after seeking refuge in several European countries. Given that his life as a writer was devoted to calling out corruption and that he spent about a decade hiding from the Nazis, it is ironic that Brecht, who emigrated to the U.S. in the 1940s, was called before the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1947 and fled the U.S. for fear of political persecution.

Brecht and Weill's interpretation of the John Gay play is more sinister and intense than the amusing Robin Hood themes that showed up in the original. Macheath, the show's anti-hero, goes from being a bit of a crook to being a pretty serious one: he is portrayed as a murderer, rapist, and arsonist who is openly frightening but butters up the people around him, especially women, to keep on their good side. In The Threepenny Opera, he is known as Mackie Messer (Messer is German for knife).

Mack The Knife

Jimmy McGriff - Let's Stay Together

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:10
Size: 73.7 MB
Styles: Soul/Jazz/Funk
Year: 1972/2004
Art: Front

[2:41] 1. Let's Stay Together
[4:16] 2. Tiki
[3:56] 3. Theme From Shaft
[4:30] 4. What's Going On
[5:03] 5. Old Grand Dad
[6:40] 6. Georgia On My Mind
[5:01] 7. April In Paris

Congas – James Peacock; Drums – Willie Jenkins, St. Jenkins; Guitar – Lawrence Frazier, Thornel Schwartz; Organ – Jimmy McGriff; Saxophone [Tenor] – Harold (Sampson) Bennett;Trombone – L. E. Lofton; Trumpet – William Skinner.

This early-'70s title features a mixed program by the great soul-jazz organist Jimmy McGriff. McGriff not only digs into some Jimmy Smith-style, early '60s-era organ trio numbers like his original "Old Grad Dad" and Hoagy Carmichael's "Georgia on My Mind," but he also includes the kind of contemporary soul fare he had turned to by the late '60s; McGriff spares no expense, going for the heart of soul royalty with Al Green's "Let's Stay Together," Isaac Hayes' "Theme From Shaft," and Marvin Gaye's "What's Going On." Inspired by their attractive melody lines and challenging chord sequences, McGriff and band enliven these already great songs with fine horn arrangements and superb solos (Harold Bennett's passionate and assured flute solo on "What's Going On" especially stands out). McGriff registers some nasty, in-the-pocket solos himself and contributes one of the hottest tracks here, the chicken-shack cooker "Tiki." Let's Stay Together is a great set by one of the masters of the Hammond B-3 organ sound. ~Stephen Cook

Let's Stay Together

Carol Welsman - The Language Of Love

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:50
Size: 121.0 MB
Styles: Easy Listening
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[3:12] 1. Taking A Chance On Love
[3:42] 2. You Take Me Away
[2:39] 3. On A Slow Boat To China
[5:43] 4. A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square
[3:31] 5. Can't Help Falling In Love
[3:31] 6. Just One Of Those Things
[4:11] 7. Coracao Leviano
[4:38] 8. Every Breath You Take
[4:00] 9. A Fool I Know
[4:47] 10. There's No Such Thing As Love
[4:12] 11. The Man I Love
[4:25] 12. Chanson De Maxence
[4:14] 13. Senza Fine

Acoustic Guitar – Oscar Castro-Neves; Backing Vocals – Kate Markowitz; Bass – Dave Carpenter; Drums, Percussion – Alex Acuña; Electric Guitar – Ramon Stagnaro; Flute – Gary Meek; Percussion – Calos Del Rosario; Violin, Viola – Charlie Bisharat.

Carol Welsman’s love letter sends its message around the world. She sings in English, French, Italian and Portuguese on this album of treasured memories. Traces of tango, samba and bossa nova mingle casually with sensual ballads and traditional fare. Poignant arrangements of “A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square” and Sting’s “Every Breath You Take” sweep away the clouds and reveal a veteran vocalist with heart.

The Language Of Love is Welsman’s fifth album. Based in Toronto, and the granddaughter of Frank S. Welsman (founder and first conductor of the Toronto Symphony) has eluded the U.S. limelight. Until now. Starting out as a piano performance major at Berklee and a vocal student of Christiane Legrand in Paris, Welsman has become fluent in several languages: French, Italian, and Jazz. Her vocal preferences lie in the mainstream: pure swing with genuine passion and traces of creative invention. Welsman appears as comfortable with wordless scat singing as she does interpreting lyrics. Bongos and conga drums support her as casually as the guitars, bass and drums. Welsman’s piano accompaniment and brief solo sections enhance her vocal delivery, as do the other supporting instrumentalists. The album includes a lovely duet with Arnold McCuller on “Can’t Help Falling In Love.” But it’s the vocal impressions of Carol Welsman that take center stage on her Savoy Jazz debut. Recommended, this album heralds the arrival of an exquisite jazz singer to a wider audience. ~Jim Santella

The Language Of Love

Marco Confalonieri Trio - An Evening In New York

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:25
Size: 145.2 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[4:14] 1. A Foggy Day (Take Two)
[3:44] 2. All The Things
[4:50] 3. Corcovado
[3:00] 4. Days Of Wine And Roses
[3:44] 5. Green Dolphin Street
[2:58] 6. How High Is The Moon
[4:26] 7. How Insensitive (Violin Version)
[4:22] 8. How Insensitive
[4:53] 9. My Foolish Heart
[4:30] 10. My One And Only Love
[6:01] 11. Over The Rainbow
[3:52] 12. St. Thomas
[3:39] 13. Triste
[4:58] 14. Wave
[4:09] 15. Yesterdays

Nato a Milano il 24/06/1983. Intraprende gli studi classici di pianoforte dall’età di 7 anni, presso la scuola civica di musica di Cinisello Balsamo. Dal 2006, presso la medesima scuola, studia pianoforte jazz con Marco Detto. Nel Febbraio 2012 consegue il Diploma Accademico di I livello in Jazz presso il Conservatorio Verdi di Milano. Dal 2009 insegna pianoforte, teoria e musica d’insieme presso la “Ricordi Music School” di Milano e l'Accademia Musicale di Monza. Suona regolarmente in formazioni jazzistiche e soul/blues nel milanese, partecipando a festival quali “Ah Hum”, “Novara Jazz”, “Taste in Jazz” (Bergamo), “Bià-Jazz”. Ha partecipato come pianista all'incisione del disco “Porpora”, di Antonello Monni (con la partecipazione di Tony Arco, Roberto Cipelli, Giampiero Spina, Daniele Petrosillo).

An Evening In New York

Wednesday, January 4, 2017

Art Farmer, Jim Hall - Big Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:40
Size: 79.4 MB
Styles: Bop
Year: 1979/2013
Art: Front


[ 8:45] 1. Whisper Not
[ 7:40] 2. A Child Is Born
[ 7:24] 3. Big Blues
[10:50] 4. Pavane For A Dead Princess

Bass – Mike Moore; Drums – Steve Gadd; Flugelhorn – Art Farmer; Guitar – Jim Hall; Vibraphone – Mike Mainieri. Recorded at Electric Lady Studios, February 1978.

Flügelhornist Art Farmer and guitarist Jim Hall had a regular group for a time in the mid-'60s but (with one exception) didn't play together again until this 1978 LP. It's an unusual effort for CTI in that it is a quintet set without added horns, strings, or keyboards. Farmer and Hall are joined by vibraphonist Mike Mainieri, bassist Michael Moore, and drummer Steve Gadd for two standards, the title cut, and a jazz adaptation of a piece by Ravel. Since Farmer and Hall have long had very complementary styles (both being lyrical, harmonically advanced, and thoughtful in their improvisations), it is little surprise that this set is a complete success. ~Scott Yanow

Big Blues

João Gilberto - Collection

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:38
Size: 136.5 MB
Styles: Bossa Nova, Brazilian jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[4:12] 1. Desafinado
[2:09] 2. Bim Bom
[4:33] 3. Corcovado
[5:04] 4. Para Machuchar Meu Coração (To Hurt My Heart)
[3:36] 5. So Danço Samba
[2:51] 6. Um Abraço No Bonfá
[2:43] 7. Doralice
[5:49] 8. Only Trust Your Heart
[4:03] 9. Meditation (Meditação)
[2:16] 10. O Pato (The Duck)
[5:37] 11. Ligia
[6:01] 12. Pra Que Discutir Com Madam
[3:08] 13. Samba De Monha Terra
[2:52] 14. Vivo Sonhando (Dreamer)
[4:37] 15. Wave

Bossa nova, that most personal and international of Brazilian musical forms, has been blessed with numerous gifted composers. By far the greatest was Antonio Carlos (Tom) Jobim. Alone or in partnership with poet Vinicius de Moraes, fellow composer Newton Mendonça, and other illustrious collaborators, Jobim created some of the most famous and enduring bossa nova standards, such as “Garota de Ipanema,” “Desafinado,” and “Corcovado.”

Tom Jobim and Vinicius de Moraes, the seminal bossa nova songwriting team, met in 1956, but the songs they turned out at the time were not particularly innovative. For two years, Jobim/de Moraes tunes sounded like traditional samba-canção (samba-song, a slower and more lyrical version of samba). Nobody got particularly excited over them. Then a certain young singer and guitarist came out of nowhere to give these songs a new vocal interpretation and a new beat. The year was 1958, and the new beat was soon known throughout the world as bossa nova. That singer and guitarist was João Gilberto. His seductive vocals caressed the ear as well as the soul, while his guitar set an insouciant swinging rhythm going. The voice pulled in one direction, the beat in another. The combination was mesmerizing and highly addictive, refreshing and modern. It opened a new page in the history of popular music. Yet it all began at the most traditional roots.

Collection