Thursday, January 26, 2017

Bud Shank - I Told You So!

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:48
Size: 130.0 MB
Styles: Bop, West Coast jazz
Year: 1993
Art: Front

[ 6:52] 1. I Told You So
[ 8:32] 2. My Funny Valentine
[ 7:36] 3. The Continental
[10:09] 4. Emily
[ 7:55] 5. Dance Of The Little Ones
[ 9:01] 6. My Old Flame
[ 6:40] 7. Limehouse Blues

Alto Saxophone – Bud Shank; Bass – Lonnie Plaxico; Drums – Victor Lewis; Piano – Kenny Barron. Recorded live at Birdland, NYC, 26-27 June 1992.

While often associated with the cool school of 1950s and ‘60s West Coast jazz, alto saxophonist Bud Shank is also one of the many worthy adherents to the le jazz hot bebop of alto icon Charlie Parker. Simply put, Shank can be both coolly smooth and yet burn with the best. On TOLD YOU SO (originally issued in 1992), Shank communes with some hard bop aces--the great, underrated pianist Kenny Barron, bassist Lonnie Plaxico, and drummer Victor Lewis--and goes to town on some familiar and not-so-familiar standards. ~Mark Keresman

I Told You So!

Saskia Bruin - Step Inside Love

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:33
Size: 115.7 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[3:56] 1. The Look Of Love
[3:58] 2. And We Will Fly
[3:00] 3. Feel Like Making Love
[4:24] 4. Once I Loved
[3:16] 5. Step Inside Love
[3:49] 6. Wondering
[4:08] 7. You're My Thrill
[3:41] 8. Virginia Moon
[3:33] 9. I Got Lost In His Arms
[4:32] 10. Comes Love
[4:27] 11. Estate
[3:27] 12. Close Your Eyes
[4:16] 13. Caminhos Cruzados (Bonus Track)

Beautiful jazz standards, Bossa Novas and popballads made into a smooth, stylish and sexy chill-out album with substance. Recommended if you like Diana Krall, Eliana Elias, Astrud/Bebel Gilberto and Norah Jones.

Saskia's music received a warm reception including BBC Radio 2 airplay and London's newest radio station 102.2 Smooth FM. ''Although memories of Astrud Gilberto come to mind, Saskia is somehow more alluring''. Desmond Carrington, BBC Radio 2. ''I couldn't be more delighted that we played a record last week by a new comer to the collection, a lady called Saskia. I'm delighted because the reaction was so great that I decided to play another track this week''. David Jacobs, BBC Radio 2.

Step Inside Love

Arthur Prysock - The Best Of Arthur Prysock: The Milestone Years

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:47
Size: 146.0 MB
Styles: Soul-blues-jazz vocals
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[4:15] 1. All My Lovin' Was In Vain
[6:03] 2. Got To Get You Off My Mind
[5:55] 3. Everything Must Change
[4:09] 4. Good Rockin' Tonight
[5:26] 5. I Want To Thank You, Girl
[5:37] 6. Next Time You See Me
[4:00] 7. At This Moment
[4:59] 8. Rainy Night In Georgia
[3:52] 9. Teach Me Tonight
[3:54] 10. I Wonder Where Our Love Has Gone
[3:57] 11. Bring It On Home To Me
[3:59] 12. It's All In The Game
[3:55] 13. Baby (You've Got What It Takes)
[3:41] 14. After The Lovin'

Alto Saxophone – Hank Crawford (tracks: 2, 7, 12); Baritone Saxophone – Howard Johnson (3) (tracks: 2, 7, 12); Bass – Jimmy Lewis (2) (tracks: 1, 3 to 6, 8 to 11, 13, 14), Ralph Hamperian (tracks: 5, 6, 9, 13), Wilbur Bascomb (tracks: 2, 7, 12); Bass, Electric Bass – Leon Lee Dorsey (tracks: 1, 14); Drums – Bernard Purdie (tracks: 2, 7, 12), Don Williams (7); Guitar – Melvin Sparks (tracks: 2, 7, 12), Ralph Caldwell (tracks: 1, 3 to 6, 8 to 11, 13, 14); Keyboards – Lloyd Wilson (tracks: 1, 3 to 6, 8 to 11, 13, 14); Tenor Saxophone – Red Prysock; Trumpet – Alan Rubin (tracks: 2, 7, 12), Lew Soloff (tracks: 2, 7, 12); Vocals – Arthur Prysock, Betty Joplin (tracks: 3, 9, 11, 13). Recorded between 1985 and 1987.

Fourteen digitally remastered diamonds cropped from Prysock's previous albums: Today's Love Songs Tomorrow's, This Guy's in Love With You, and Rockin' Good Way. Prysock's big, deliberate baritone/bass voice is a heart stopper. The only miscue, but nothing major, is his rendition of Solomon Burke's "Got to Get You off My Mind," where he seems uncomfortable with the blues arrangement and the simplistic lyrics. But "All My Lovin' Was in Vain," "Everything Must Change" (he wows you with the first note), "Good Rockin' Tonight," "I Wonder Where Our Love Has Gone," all deserve encores. His incredible renditions of "It's All in the Game" and "Rainy Night in Georgia" proves beyond a doubt that Arthur Prysock was the man! ~Andrew Hamilton

The Best Of Arthur Prysock: The Milestone Years

Greg Abate - Horace Is Here: A Tribute To Horace Silver

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:28
Size: 168.2 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2005/2011
Art: Front

[7:08] 1. Mayreh
[8:08] 2. Horace Is Here
[6:21] 3. Nica's Dream
[7:15] 4. Song For My Father
[6:07] 5. Nutville
[7:21] 6. Silver's Serenade
[7:18] 7. On The Road
[9:56] 8. Peace
[7:45] 9. Filthy Mcnasty
[6:04] 10. Quicksilver

Bass – Marshall Wood; Drums – Artie Cabral; Piano – Hilton Ruis; Tenor Saxophone, Alto Saxophone, Flute, Arranged By – Greg Abate; Trumpet, Arranged By – Claudio Roditi. Recorded Sept. 24-25, 2004.

Many artists have covered pianist Horace Silver's compositions, but few have approached them with a freshness like multi-reed player Greg Abate. Accompanied by trumpeter Claudio Roditi, pianist Hilton Ruiz (on one of his last recording sessions prior to his mysterious death in 2006), bassist Marshall Wood, and drummer Artie Cabral, Abate reharmonized each of the pieces and gave them a new sound while retaining the essence of the original works. "Song for My Father" is a perfect example, with the leader's rich tenor blending with Roditi's mellow trumpet and a less pronounced rhythm. Abate is on alto for "Nica's Dream," which has a more breezy air, almost seeming to float over its hard bop inner soul. Wood's brooding bass introduces "Peace," with Abate's mournful soprano sax beautifully backed by Ruiz's almost reverent piano. Abate also penned two solid tribute to Silver, the hip "Horace Is Here" and the turbulent "On the Road." Greg Abate's salute to Horace Silver will please fans of the hard bop giant's music. ~Ken Dryden

Horace Is Here: A Tribute To Horace Silver

Archie Shepp Quartet - Deja Vu

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:58
Size: 116.7 MB
Styles: Avant-garde jazz
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[4:50] 1. What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life
[9:15] 2. Petite Fleur
[7:25] 3. Les Feuilles Mortes
[7:54] 4. L' Ame Des Poetes
[4:03] 5. Gigi
[6:30] 6. April In Paris
[7:46] 7. Sous Le Ciel De Paris
[3:12] 8. Deja Vu

Bass – George Mraz; Drums – Billy Drummond; Piano – Harold Mabern; Tenor Saxophone – Archie Shepp. Recorded at "The Studio" in New York on June 11 and 12, 2001.

Archie Shepp has long established a reputation as a fiery avant-garde jazz stylist, though he is remarkably restrained in this collection of ballads recorded in 2001. The rhapsodic songs help restrain him somewhat, along with the presence of the terrific rhythm section, consisting of pianist Harold Mabern, bassist George Mraz, and drummer Billy Drummond. "What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life" has a few rough edges to retain Shepp's personal flavor, while the rhumba setting of Sidney Bechet's "Petite Fleur" works well, too. Mabern's lush introduction to "Les Feuilles Mortes" (Autumn Leaves) sets up a touching, spacious arrangement. Shepp opens Lerner & Loewe's infrequently performed "Gigi" unaccompanied, producing a majestic performance. The snappy treatment of "April in Paris" swings like the famous tune should, while he also retains the well-known "Pop Goes the Weasel" quote inserted in Basie's version. All in all, this is an enjoyable date. ~Ken Dryden

Deja Vu

Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra - Shout Me Out

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:30
Size: 152,7 MB
Art: Front

(9:27)  1. Shout Me Out
(6:36)  2. Max
(4:47)  3. Plunger Mute Syndrome
(7:03)  4. Yellow Flowers After
(4:46)  5. Grizzly
(3:35)  6. Day by Day
(5:28)  7. Nice to Meet You
(4:58)  8. One for Horace Tapscott
(2:04)  9. Barbara's Rose
(5:39) 10. I Want a Little Girl
(9:04) 11. How Insensitive

If there were an award for “most improved big band,” the opinion here is that the C–HJO would win going away, as its two most recent albums ( Explosive!, with vibraphonist Milt Jackson, and now Shout Me Out! ) have moved well beyond its earlier endeavors to prove beyond any doubt that this is one of the most talented and exciting ensembles performing anywhere in the lower forty eight. Clearly, the primary role model is Basie, and the C–HJO is emphatically adhering to the swinging blueprint laid bare by the Count and refined during his many years in the big band trenches. Coleader John Clayton’s deeply grooved “Nice to Meet You” is dedicated to Basie, and there are innumerable splashes of the Count’s peerless style elsewhere on the album, from wailing shout–choruses and assertive rhythms (punctuated by co–leader Jeff Hamilton’s assiduous drum work) to pianist Bill Cunliffe’s spare, Basie esque phrasings, crisp unison passages by brass and reeds and boppish narratives by the band’s squadron of accomplished soloists. There are three other dedications, Hamilton’s “Max” (for longtime friend and Jazz supporter Max Ketteman), co–leader Jeff Clayton’s “Barbara’s Rose” (for St. Louis Jazz promoter Barbara Rose) and Charles Owens’ “One for Horace Tapscott,” honoring the pianist who was a leading player on the Los Angeles Jazz scene. Bassist John Clayton, the band’s principal composer / arranger, also wrote “Shout Me Out!,” “Plunger Mute Sydrome” (for 22–year–old phenom Isaac Smith) and “Grizzly,” while trumpeter Clay Jenkins contributed “Yellow Flowers After.” Completing the program are the standards “I Want a Little Girl” (charmingly sung and played by veteran trumpeter Snooky Young) and “Day by Day” (featuring Rickey Woodard’s thundering tenor sax) and Antonio Carlos Jobim’s “How Insensitive” (performed not by the band but as a “conversation” between John Clayton’s arco bass and Hamilton’s drums). The other soloists are baritone Lee Callet, guitarist Jim Hershman and both Clayton brothers (John on bowed bass, Jeff on alto) on "Shout Me Out!"; Woodard, Hamilton, Cunliffe and trumpeter Bobby Rodriguez on "Max"; trumpeter Jenkins on "Yellow Flowers"; trumpeter Oscar Brashear, trombonist George Bohanon and bassist Christoph Luty on "Grizzly"; Woodard, Smith and Brashear on "Nice to Meet You"; Cunliffe, Hamilton and alto Owens on "Horace Tapscott"; Jeff Clayton and trombonist Ira Nepus on "Barbaras Rose." If you want to hear a band that has found its niche and speaks in a clear and confident voice, check this one out. ~ Jack Bowers https://www.allaboutjazz.com/shout-me-out-clayton-hamilton-jazz-orchestra-review-by-jack-bowers.php 

Personnel: Jim Hershman (guitar); Jeff Clayton (flute, piccolo, oboe, alto saxophone); Charles Owens (clarinet, soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Keith Fiddmont (clarinet, alto saxophone); Rickey Woodard (clarinet, tenor saxophone); Lee Callet (bass clarinet, baritone saxophone); Clay Jenkins, Oscar Brashear, Bobby Rodriguez (trumpet); Isaac Smith , George Bohannon, Ira Nepus (trombone); Maurice Spears (bass trombone); Bill Cunliffe (piano); Jeff Hamilton (drums).

Shout Me Out

Ruth Etting - Ten Cents a Dance

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1981
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:56
Size: 142,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:16)  1. Ten Cents a Dance
(2:49)  2. Button Up Your Overcoat
(3:05)  3. Funny, Dear, What Love Can Do
(2:40)  4. But I Do, You Know I Do!
(3:27)  5. Mean to Me
(3:23)  6. I'm Yours
(2:59)  7. If I Could Be With You One Hour Tonight
(3:21)  8. Don't Tell Him What Happened to Me
(3:23)  9. Body and Soul
(3:12) 10. Sam, the Old Accordion Man
(2:43) 11. Dancing With Tears In My Eyes
(2:54) 12. Hello, Baby!
(3:18) 13. What Wouldn't I Do for That Man!
(2:40) 14. Could I? I Certainly Could
(2:56) 15. The Kiss Waltz
(3:10) 16. Shakin' the Blues Away
(3:07) 17. You're the Cream In My Coffee
(3:12) 18. Lonesome and Sorry
(2:52) 19. Laughing At Life
(3:22) 20. Love Me Or Leave Me

One of the most popular singers of the late-'20s/early-'30s period, Ruth Etting was not really a jazz singer (unlike her contemporary, Annette Hanshaw) but a superior middle-of-the-road pop singer who was often accompanied by top jazz musicians. She recorded over 200 songs between 1926-1937, appeared on-stage, was in 35 film shorts and three full-length movies, and was a fixture on radio before her bad marriage cut short her career. She made a minor comeback in the late '40s and was still singing on an occasional basis in the mid-'50s when a semi-fictional Hollywood movie on her life (Love Me or Leave Me) was released. A superb torch singer with a cry in her voice even when she smiled, Etting recorded the definitive versions of "Ten Cents a Dance" and "Love Me or Leave Me." ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/artist/ruth-etting-mn0000806980/biography

Ten Cents a Dance

Peter Zak - Peter Zak Trio

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 61:45
Size: 113,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:36)  1. Better Late Than Never
(7:18)  2. Laughin With RZ
(4:58)  3. Ugly Beauty
(7:41)  4. Namely You
(2:25)  5. Blue Gardenia
(5:31)  6. Grandpa George
(6:55)  7. Mamacita
(6:06)  8. The Worrier
(5:18)  9. Maiden Lane
(4:37) 10. Tyner's Corner
(6:14) 11. Below the Rim

Pianist Peter Zak is something of an unknown quantity to New Yorkers, but on his SteepleChase debut, he makes a considerable first impression. On this disc, which is comprised mostly of originals, he displays a style, which, although clearly touched by his major influences, remains vibrant and singular. During a great gig last month at Smoke, Zak showcased several of the tunes (and one that isn't on the disc, a burner with the hilarious title "The Cream and the Clear, which hopefully will be on a future release).  Zak's mastery is evident from the first tune, "Better Late Than Never, an original in which he he dances along the keys with deftness and facility, accompanied ably by bassist Paul Gill and the estimable Al Foster on drums. The tender "Laughing With RZ, clearly influenced by Wynton Kelly, is both understated and elegant.

Zak's arrangement of "Ugly Beauty follows Monk's original recipe but adds his warm highlights to the coloring. "Namely You is played with maximum economy. Gill's plucked bass solo tells a story in itself, with Foster bouncing on brushes behind the pianist's bright opening statement. Zak follows his warm, thoughtful solo turn on "Blue Gardenia with the supple, Oscar Peterson-flavored blues of "Grandpa George. "Maiden Lane is a somber but lovely ballad that was composed in memory of the 9/11 tragedy. "Tyner's Corner is a perfect rendering of the great pianist's style, with Zak laying down Tyner-like chords in homage, not imitation. The disc closes with "Below the Rim, where the pianist's deft left hand sets a roadrunner tempo for Foster and Gill to follow. Zak sets off no pyrotechnics here; he and his trio simply opt for conciseness and clarity, hallmarks of all fine composing and playing. ~ Terrell Kent Holmes https://www.allaboutjazz.com/peter-zak-trio-peter-zak-steeplechase-records-review-by-terrell-kent-holmes.php
Personnel: Peter Zak: piano; Paul Gill: bass; Al Foster: drums.

Peter Zak Trio

Sonny Rollins - Falling In Love With Jazz

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:57
Size: 108,9 MB
Art: Front

(7:42)  1. For All We Know
(6:18)  2. Tennessee Waltz
(7:41)  3. Little Girl Blue
(4:49)  4. Falling In Love With Love
(7:33)  5. I Should Care
(7:03)  6. Sister
(5:47)  7. Amanda

This average effort from Sonny Rollins and his regular sextet is most notable for two numbers ("For All We Know" and "I Should Care") that find Branford Marsalis joining Rollins in a quintet with pianist Tommy Flanagan. Unfortunately Marsalis makes the fatal error of trying to imitate Rollins (instead of playing in his own musical personality) and he gets slaughtered. Much better are Rollins's romps on "Tennessee Waltz" and "Falling in Love with Love."~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/falling-in-love-with-jazz-mw0000653871

Personnel: Sonny Rollins (tenor saxophone); Jerome Harris (electric guitar, electric bass); Branford Marsalis (tenor saxophone); Clifton Anderson (trombone); Mark Siskin, Mark Soskin, Tommy Flanagan (piano); Bob Cranshaw (electric bass); Jack DeJohnette, Jeff "Tain" Watts (drums).

Falling In Love With Jazz

Alice Coltrane - Lord of Lords

Styles: Harp And Piano Jazz
Year: 1973
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:18
Size: 97,9 MB
Art: Front

( 9:04)  1. Andromeda's Suffering
( 6:11)  2. Sri Rama Ohnedaruth
( 5:45)  3. Excerpts from the Firebird
(11:17)  4. Lord of Lords
( 9:59)  5. Going Home

Lord of Lords, released in 1973, was Alice Coltrane's final album for Impulse! It was the final part of a trilogy that began with Universal Consciousness and continued with the expansive World Galaxy. Like its immediate predecessors, the album features a 16-piece string orchestra that Coltrane arranged and conducted, fronted by a trio in which she plays piano, Wurlitzer organ, harp, and timpani with bassist Charlie Haden and drummer Ben Riley. Riley was familiar with the setting because he had been part of the sessions for World Galaxy. The first two pieces, "Andromeda's Suffering" and "Sri Rama Ohnedaruth" (titled after the spiritual name for her late husband, John Coltrane), are, in essence, classical works. There is little improvisation except on the piano underneath the wall of strings. They are scored for large tone clusters and minor-key drone effects, but also engage in creating timbral overtones. They are quite beautiful, yet have little or nothing to do with jazz except for the seemingly free passages toward the end of the latter track, but even these feel scored, because of the control of tension and dynamic. "Excerpts from The Firebird," which uses the organ to open the piece, features the strings playing almost (because with Alice Coltrane, she interpreted in her own way) directly from Igor Stravinsky's score. The droning organ is so gorgeous underneath those reaching strings that it's breathtaking. As to why she chose this piece as the centerpiece for her own album, she claimed that Stravinsky came to her in a vision and passed something on to her in a glass vial, a liquid that she drank!

Riley and Haden appear in earnest on the title track, a long modal piece where drones, rhythms, and time signatures are registered through the direction of Coltrane's piano and harp, creating a blissful kind of tension and dynamic. It cracks open at about six minutes, and Coltrane (on the organ), Haden, and Riley engage in some lively improvisation, with the strings offering trilling high-end swooping in the background. The set ends with Coltrane's transformation of a gospel hymn called "Going Home." Her harp introduces Riley's brushes and the strings, which in turn offer a root chord for her to play the melody and improvise upon it on the organ. Here the blues make their presence known. It offers a kind of understanding for the listener that Coltrane, no matter where this musical direction was headed (even as it went further toward the Cosmic Music she and her late husband envisioned together), continued to understand perfectly where her musical root was. The interplay between the three principals is lively and engaging, based on droning blues chords, and her soloing even amid flurries of notes comes right back to the root, and she quotes quite directly from Delta blues riffs and other gospel songs. Haden's bass is a beautiful anchor here (although mixed a bit low), and the strings offer a lovely response to her organ and harp. Riley's cymbals are shimmering shards of light throughout, ending Lord of Lords on a very high note. While it's true that Alice Coltrane's later Impulse! music may not be for everyone, even those who followed her earlier, more jazz-oriented recordings on Impulse!, it was obvious from the beginning that she was seeking to incorporate Indian classical music's drone center into her work, and was literally obsessed with the timbral, chromatic, and harmonic possibilities of strings. She succeeds here, in ending her Impulse! period with elegance, grace, and soul. ~ Thom Jurek http://www.allmusic.com/album/lord-of-lords-mw0000470434

Personnel:  Alice Coltrane : harp, piano, organ, tympani, percussion;  Charlie Haden : bass;  Ben Riley : drums, percussion

String Orchestra - Murray Adler (concertmaster), Nathan Kaproff, Lou Klass, William Henderson, Ronald Folsom, Leonard Malarsky, Gordon Marron, Janice Gower, Gerald Vinci, Sidney Sharp, James Getzoff and Bernard Kundell : violins; Myra Kestenbaum, Rollice Dale, Leonard Selic, David Schwartz, Samuel Boghosian and Marilyn Baker : violas; Jesse Ehrlich, Jerry Kessler, Jan Kelly, Anne Goodman, Edgar Lustgarten, Ray Kelley and Raphael Kramer : cellos

Lord of Lords

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Nobuki Takamen - Live In Japan

Size: 124,6+129,4 MB
Time: 54:09+56:16
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz: Guitar Jazz
Art: Front

CD 1:
01. Freddie's Mood (Live) (9:38)
02. Smile (Live) (9:13)
03. All Waltz (Live) (9:24)
04. Gee, Seventh Avenue (Live) (8:56)
05. Akatonbo (Live) (7:44)
06. Sjecanja Za Pamcenje (9:11)

CD 2:
01. No Easy Days (Live) ( 8:25)
02. Jimi's Swing (Live) ( 5:51)
03. Homeward Bound (Live) (12:20)
04. Strolling In Downtown (Live) (16:22)
05. Wonderful Days (Live) ( 3:08)
06. Blues For Riley (Live) (10:09)

When last heard from, guitarist/composer Nobuki Takamen had released his first solo album, Solo Guitar (2014). He is active on the New York scene, but has returned to his native Japan for an annual tour for many years. For his sixth album he has chosen to document live performances of his trio with bassist Toshiyuki Tanahashi and drummer Naoki Aikawa, long-time musical collaborators for more than a decade.

Takamen is definitely a bebop-oriented player. Although this is an all-original double-CD set—so there are no covers—he makes reference to the tradition in various ways. "All Waltz" is an especially clear example. Dedicated to legendary guitarist Jim Hall, it is an "All The Things You Are" contrafact in waltz time. The composition refers to Hall's repertoire, and the trio's highly interactive interpretation is in line with Hall's nearly telepathic trios, especially the one with bassist bassist Don Thompson and drummer Terry Clarke. "Gee, Seventh Avenue" was inspired by a friend's story about an Art Blakey show at Sweet Basil. It's hard bop all the way, with an appropriate drum solo (and a bass solo as well).

There are also influences from outside of jazz. The opener "Freddie's Mood" is a latin tune with a definite Bo Diddley beat. "Jimi's Swing" uses a Jimi Hendrix chord riff for the intro and breaks, putting Hendrix into a swing context, just as the title promises. Takamen arranged a Japanese nursery song, "Akatonbo" (Red Dragonfly), which features a lovely lyrical arco bass solo. Another cultural influence surfaces in ''Sjecanja za Pamcenje'' (Memories to Remember) inspired by a European tour: it has a folksong quality.

The closer "Blues For Riley" brings the music firmly back to its jazz roots, with a structure reminiscent of "Willow Weep For Me" and a couple of choice Thelonious Monk quotes. A fitting ending to a program full of variety and highly empathetic group interaction. Sometimes there's no substitute for the familiarity that a long playing partnership brings. This is jazz guitar trio music at its finest. ~Mark Sullivan

Personnel: Nobuki Takamen: guitar; Toshiyuki Tanahashi: bass; Naoki Aikawa: drums.

Live In Japan CD 1
Live In Japan CD 2

Mallory Chipman - Nocturnalize

Size: 141,7 MB
Time: 61:20
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Angular Symphony (4:13)
02. Vermillion Moon (For Toby) (6:22)
03. Sister To Sister (7:03)
04. With Friends (5:35)
05. Ode To The Unsung Diva (4:05)
06. My Funny Valentine (7:40)
07. Awakenings (4:56)
08. Cry For Somewhere (7:25)
09. Starstruck (5:53)
10. Brooklyn At Midnight (5:45)
11. Make Someone Happy (2:17)

Revered for her "rich, expressive voice" and hailed as "an old school jazz chanteuse with new school attitude" (GigCity), Mallory Chipman is taking the Canadian jazz scene by storm with her thoughtful compositions, fearless improvisation, and unforgettable performances. Highlights from her career include performing with artists such as PJ Perry, Lee Konitz, Tommy Banks, and John Stetch; touring abroad to London, Amsterdam, and Dublin; and singing back-up for the legendary rock group HEART. Nocturnalize is Mallory's debut album.

Nocturnalize

Lisa Hilton - Day & Night

Size: 152 MB
Time: 48:31
File: FLAC
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz: Piano Jazz
Art: Front

01. Caffeinated Coffee (3:31)
02. Day And Night (4:07)
03. Begin The Beguine (4:51)
04. Sunrise (3:26)
05. Stepping Into Paradise (7:05)
06. A Spark In The Night (7:09)
07. Seduction (6:19)
08. Dark Sky Day (2:03)
09. So This Is Love (6:38)
10. Sunset On The Beach (3:17)

“Day & Night echoes my commitment to discover and savor every day moments: to see the beauty in a day from the first glow of sunrise to the dimming sky at sunset, and to acknowledge and share these these rich times with others. When composing and creating this album, the great American composer Cole Porter was one inspiration. Although we are both from small towns, Porter was a true musical genius who, while attending Yale University, wrote three hundred compositions, was the President of the Glee Club, and class valedictorian before heading on to Harvard Law School. I have always appreciated Porter’s lush melodies and gentle Latin rhythms. The cool blues of composer/pianists Horace Silver and “Count” Bill Basie have also found their way into the soul of my music. I believe composers today can be inspired by our rich musical heritage in America, while creating music for our current century.”

Nineteen albums in, after working with the top-drawer jazz masters, like Antonio Sanchez, Christian McBride, Nasheet Waits, Sean Jones, Marcus Gilmore, Steve Wilson, Jeremy Pelt, Lewis Nash, Billy Hart, Larry Grenadier, Rudy Royston, and Bobby Militello, among others, LISA HILTON strips her music down to the essentials and returns to the solo format with DAY & NIGHT to be released on the Ruby Slippers Productions label (#1021) with a street date of December 16th 2016 and heading to radio on January 2nd . Hilton was last heard in a solo piano setting with her acclaimed 2010 release, NUANCE, which All About Jazz said was “a recording that focuses and captures the exquisite subtleties of life”.

For this album, Hilton looked to the great American composer Cole Porter—one of her favorite composers, for inspiration, (the CD title DAY & NIGHT is a nod to Porter’s classic, Night and Day). As Hilton noted, “I have always appreciated Cole Porter’s lush melodies and gentle Latin rhythms – and, interestingly, we’re both from small towns!” (Porter from Peru, Indiana and Hilton in San Luis Obispo, California). Hilton includes a searing and simple take on Porters classic, “Begin the Beguine”, which turns wondrously seductive under her touch. Her original tunes, “Stepping into Paradise”, “A Spark in the Night” and “So This is Love” do convey the some of Porter’s cosmopolitan essence, but also embedded in Hilton’s realization of her nine original compositions is the vibrating energy and bluesy soul of fellow composer/pianists “Count” Bill Basie, and Horace Silver. Hilton has wound an underlying concept through the music of DAY & NIGHT. Mirroring her solo format, the theme Hilton writes of in her liner notes is introspective: “Day & Night echoes my commitment to discover and savor every day moments: to see the beauty in a day from the first glow of sunrise to the dimming sky at sunset, and to acknowledge and share these these rich times others.” DAY & NIGHT begins with the upbeat samba charmer, “Caffeinated Culture” before the title track delivers its sophisticated drama. Hilton’s “Seduction” an earlier composition from her NOCTURNAL album—attests to Hilton’s fluid pianistic style, but with traces of the Basie and Silver influences holding sway. “Sunrise” and “Sunset on the Beach” both feature Hilton as a strong impressionist—one of the unique qualities of her compositions, while “Dark Sky Day” hints of Hilton’s classical training. Hilton has composed her pieces to treat the traditional in new ways, combining multiple rhythmic and genre ideas as if to try and shine a different light to the scene of a shared cup of coffee, a jostle of memories or the simmer of passions held dear to the heart.

Twenty - three time Grammy winning engineer, Al Schmitt lends his masterful talents to these ten tracks that were recorded at the legendary Capitol Studios in Hollywood – a treat for any audiophile. There is a remarkable intimacy and immediacy that brings you right inside the sound – Hilton has worked with Schmitt and Grammy award winning Gavin Lurssen, for over a decade.

Hilton is considered one of the most distinctive composers and pianists in jazz today, her compositions drawing on classical traditions, twentieth century modernists, and the avant-garde as much as they look back to icons of American jazz and blues. Hilton’s blues inflected trans-genre or poly-genre style influences extend beyond jazz legends Thelonious Monk, Count Basie, Horace Silver and Duke Ellington, to include bluesman Muddy Waters and Robert Johnson, minimalists like Steve Reich, current rockers Black Keys or modernists Prokofiev, Stravinsky and Bartok. Originally from a small town on California’s central coast, Hilton studied classical and twentieth century piano formally from the age of eight, where she was inspired by her great uncle, Willem Bloemendall, (1910-1937), a young Dutch piano virtuoso. In college though, due to the lack of creativity in the program, she became a music school drop out, switching majors and receiving a degree in art instead. Ever since becoming a professional musician, this background in the fine arts has well informed Hilton’s composition process. “While Louis Armstrong was performing, Monet was painting water lilies and French composers like Debussy were using harmonic ‘impressionism’. As a composer today, I explore music as art, building the composition with musical elements then ‘painting’ texture and color through various jazz approaches,” Hilton explains. “I might apply Seurat’s pointillism ideas to improvisation, creating new ways of expressing our life today.”

Day & Night

Joey Locascio - Joey Locascio Meets The Legend (Feat. Joey DeFrancesco)

Size: 166,6 MB
Time: 71:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. Joey's A Tramp (7:05)
02. I Who Have Nothing (5:57)
03. Fly Me To The Moon (5:53)
04. Never Gonna Fall In Love Again (6:21)
05. That's Life (5:02)
06. What A Wonderful World (5:59)
07. Mack The Knife (3:13)
08. Georgia (5:28)
09. We Gotta Get Out Of This Place (5:59)
10. A Song For You (6:35)
11. Over The Rainbow (6:31)
12. You Don't Know Me (7:39)

Joe's 'charismatic persona' combined with his silkily smooth 'dynamic vocal personality' will captivate and mesmerizes an audience every time.

His Music is Eclectic and very versatile.
- 1950's through the 1970's.

Joe 'specializes in Tributes' to the following Legendary artists:
Buddy Holly, Elvis, Bobby Darin, Tony Bennett, Sam Cook, Louis Armstrong, Beatles, Ray Charles, Joe Cocker, Jerry Butler, Jim Croche, Willie Nelson, Little Anthony, Beach Boys, Johnny Cash, Johnny Mathis, James Taylor, Hank Williams, Ricky Nelson, Dino (Dean Martain) & Frank Sinatra, Everly Brothers, Jay and the Americans, Bee Gees, Gerry and the PacemakersJimmy Buffett, the Drifters, the Platers, Roger Miller, and many more.

Joey Locascio Meets The Legend

Joan Chamorro - Joan Chamorro Presenta La Magia De La Veu & Jazz Ensemble

Size: 117,3 MB
Time: 49:53
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2017
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Laugh, Clown, Laugh (4:37)
02. Stardust (5:08)
03. Baiao De Quatro Toques (4:19)
04. I Got Rhythm (4:03)
05. Por Toda A Minha Vida (4:02)
06. I Cried For You (3:14)
07. Skylark (4:27)
08. Triste (3:56)
09. I Like To Hear It Sometimes (2:52)
10. My Funny Valentine (3:55)
11. Sister Sadie (5:02)
12. Mood Indigo (4:11)

This time, Joan Chamorro retakes La Màgia de la Veu (The Magic of Voice), adding the voices and instruments of Alba Armengou (sax, trumpet), Alba Esteban (saxs, clarinet), Elia Bastida (violin and tenor sax) and Abril Saurí (trumpet).

With Andrea Motis, Rita Payés, Joan Mar Sauqué, Joan Codina, Joan Martí, Josep Traver, Ignasi Terraza, Esteve Pi, and Chamorro himself, they will play last century’s standards with special arrangements for “small big band” written by Joan Monné.

Joan Chamorro Presenta La Magia De La Veu & Jazz Ensemble

Wynton Marsalis, Willie Nelson - Two Men With The Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:34
Size: 122.6 MB
Styles: Country, Jazz
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[5:19] 1. Bright Lights Big City
[5:43] 2. Night Life
[3:26] 3. Caldonia
[5:09] 4. Stardust
[4:56] 5. Basin Street Blues
[4:40] 6. Georgia On My Mind
[5:44] 7. Rainy Day Blues
[4:57] 8. My Bucket's Got A Hole In It
[7:28] 9. Ain't Nobody's Business
[6:08] 10. That's All

The event was simply billed as “Willie Nelson Sings the Blues,” but the historic two-night stand on January 12 and 13, 2007 at Jazz at Lincoln Center was far more than that. Call it a summit meeting between two American icons, Willie Nelson & Wynton Marsalis, two of the most significant figures in modern-day country and jazz, who discovered common ground in their love for jazz standards and the blues. Their performance stirred the sounds of New Orleans, Nashville, Austin and New York City into a brilliantly programmed mix that was equal parts down-home and cosmopolitan, with plenty of swing and just a touch of melancholy. To say that these shows were a hot ticket would be an understatement. Luckily, the tapes were rolling and the results of this unique collaboration now constitute the Blue Note album Two Men With The Blues for everyone who couldn’t cram into The Allen Room. 

Two Men With The Blues               

The Don Friedman Trio - I'd Like To Tell You

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:38
Size: 125.1 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[8:49] 1. Delayed Gratification
[4:33] 2. I'd Like To Tell You
[7:49] 3. Song For Abdullah
[4:47] 4. It Could Happen To You
[8:21] 5. Summer's End
[5:59] 6. You Go To My Head
[6:34] 7. Donsong
[7:42] 8. All Or Nothing At All

An excellent if underrated pianist, Don Friedman started off playing on the West Coast in 1956 with Dexter Gordon, Shorty Rogers, Buddy Collette, Buddy DeFranco (1956-1957), Chet Baker, and even the then-unknown altoist Ornette Coleman. After moving to New York in 1958, Friedman played in many settings, including with his own trio, Pepper Adams, Booker Little (recording with him in 1961), the Jimmy Giuffre Three (1964), a quartet with Attila Zoller, Chuck Wayne's trio (1966-1967), and, by the end of the decade, Clark Terry's big band. He continued working in New York as both a jazz educator and a pianist with wide musical interests, and was featured on Concord's Maybeck Recital Hall series (1993). Friedman also recorded for Riverside, Prestige, Progressive, Owl, Empathy, and several Japanese labels, and continued doing sessions in New York throughout the '90s and 2000s. Friedman died on June 30, 2016. He was 81 years old. ~bio by Scott Yanow

I'd Like To Tell You 

Alexis Cole with One For All - You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:10
Size: 128.6 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[4:17] 1. Golden Earrings
[5:31] 2. I Will Wait For You
[5:31] 3. Moon River
[6:06] 4. Delilah
[5:18] 5. Cry Me A River
[5:38] 6. Alone Together
[5:20] 7. A Beautiful Friendship
[3:47] 8. All The Things You Are
[4:44] 9. So In Love
[5:15] 10. You've Changed
[4:36] 11. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To

Bass – John Webber; Drums – Joe Farnsworth; Piano – David Hazeltine; Tenor Saxophone – Eric Alexander; Trombone – Steve Davis; Trumpet – Jim Rotondi; Vocals – Alexis Cole. Recorded at Avatar Studios in New York on April 28 & 29, 2010.

Alexis Cole, born into a musical family in Queens, New York, began her professional career after obtaining a master's degree from the Aaron Copland School of Music at Queens College. She has performed with Slide Hampton, Rufus Reid and Harry Pickens among others, and so far released four CDs on independent labels. Following her superb debut from the Japanese Venus Records (Someday My Prince Will Come, available on HQCD and vinyl LP), her eagerly awaited second album is something of a coup - she recorded the entire album with the all-star hard bop group One For All! As far as I know, the supergroup that includes Eric Alexander and David Hazeltine has never accompanied a singer for an entire album!

The familar standards are tastefully and intelligently arranged, and Cole's attractive voice and the ability to swing are in full display. Her voice is rich and strong. She has impeccable technique and control, and a confident jazz style that hints an influence from Carmen McRae. And, as expected, the ensemble and solo work of the band is simply phenomenal! A rare album that satisfies fans of vocal jazz and fans of serious hardbop, instrumental jazz!

You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To

Gregg Karukas - Soul Secrets

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:43
Size: 161.9 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[5:13] 1. Do Watcha Love
[4:17] 2. Soul Secrets
[5:03] 3. Gk's Funky Joint
[3:50] 4. Elegant Nights
[4:44] 5. Only You
[4:53] 6. Rio Drive
[5:09] 7. Snack Shack
[5:10] 8. Cafe Agogo
[6:23] 9. Secret Smile
[5:25] 10. Above The Clouds
[5:16] 11. Walking On Air
[5:07] 12. Told You Twice
[4:58] 13. Time Alone (For Ty Malone)
[5:08] 14. Randy Heads Uptown

"Along with the privilege of being a musical artist and composer comes the realization that music is a mysterious and powerful force that can reach deep into our Souls and bring happiness. We all have unspoken Secrets there, and every song I write is my attempt to make that connection. The whole process, the journey, the wonderful feedback I get from listeners is what keeps me coming back to the piano. Revealing SOUL SECRETS".

2013 Grammy winner Gregg Karukas is back with a new collection of all-original songs featuring his signature piano touch, pristine production, and melodies that are both soulful and sophisticated. Organic, funky, and melodic is how Gregg describes his latest, long awaited 12th solo project, "Soul Secrets", due in early Fall 2014. Gregg's elegant grand piano and deep grooves are everywhere, and this time around he digs into his roots and also features the classic Fender Rhodes, Wurlie, Minimoog and Hammond B3 keyboards he grew up with quite a bit. With guest appearances along the way by friends Rick Braun, Euge Groove, Ricardo Silveira, Eric Valentine, Nate Phillips, Michael O'Neill, James Harrah, Adam Hawley, violinist Charlie Bisharat, Luis Conte, Shelby Flint, Ron Boustead and 21 year old rising sax star Vincent Ingala.

Karukas has been so consistently acclaimed for his melodic keyboard magic for so long that it might be superfluous to call “Soul Secrets” his best album ever – but there’s no doubt it’s one of contemporary jazz’s best albums of 2014.

Soul Secrets

The Kingston Trio - Collectors Series

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:43
Size: 125.3 MB
Styles: Folk-pop
Year: 1990
Art: Front

[2:17] 1. Scarlet Ribbons (For Her Hair)
[3:05] 2. Tom Dooley
[2:07] 3. Raspberries, Strawberries
[2:48] 4. The Tijuana Jail
[3:14] 5. M.T.A.
[3:26] 6. A Worried Man
[2:17] 7. Coo Coo-U
[2:25] 8. El Matador
[2:36] 9. Bad Man's Blunder
[2:19] 10. Everglades
[3:02] 11. Where Have All The Flowers Gone
[2:34] 12. Scotch And Soda
[2:50] 13. Jane, Jane, Jane
[2:57] 14. One More Town
[2:49] 15. Greenback Dollar
[3:13] 16. Reverend Mr. Black
[2:47] 17. Desert Pete
[2:04] 18. Ally Ally Oxen Free
[2:53] 19. The Patriot Game
[2:52] 20. Seasons In The Sun

The first serious compilation of the Kingston Trio's work is broader than any of the various "best of" albums that ever showed up on LP, although it also lacks some important tracks that were on those 12" discs ("Take Her Out of Pity" is especially missed). The Dave Guard era is especially well represented and at the time of this disc's release, the sound was better than anything heard from the group up to that time. However, the emphasis on singles -- albeit all hits -- limits the range of the music represented, and also creates an impression of the group that is somewhat skewed from most fans' memories. After 1960, the Kingston Trio was one of the relatively few pop acts of the period (Frank Sinatra was another, curiously also on Capitol) who sold albums more easily than singles, and this became more true as the John Stewart years progressed. As a result, Kingston Trio fans (and one assumes that those are the people who would buy this collection) often took in the group's songs 12 at a time rather than one or two at a time. It's for that reason that the four-CD set The Capitol Years can be recommended more highly to those who really want to understand the group's appeal and music, or just to remember the stuff they heard back when. This disc is a good introduction to one side of the Kingston Trio's work, but it shouldn't be the last compilation that one buys on the group. ~Bruce Eder

Collectors Series