Saturday, February 3, 2018

Harold Land - A New Shade Of Blue

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:30
Size: 120.2 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1971/2017
Art: Front

[ 9:48] 1. A New Shade Of Blue
[10:37] 2. Mtume
[ 6:05] 3. Ode To Angela
[ 8:34] 4. Deliberation
[ 8:35] 5. Short Subject
[ 8:48] 6. Dark Mood

Harold Land: tenor saxophone; Bobby Hutcherson: vibraphone; Bill Henderson: piano, electric piano; Buster Williams: bass; Billy Hart: drums: Mtume: congas.

What came first, craft beers or the revival of vinyl records? I ask because both revolutions have moved your collective attentions away from corporate culture to smaller more specialized boutiques. That means better beer and certainly a more diverse choice in music. Case in point, saxophonist Harold Land's A New Shade Of Blue originally issued on Los Angeles' Mainstream Records in 1971. When the big record companies were touting their answer to rock-and-roll with electric Miles and Herbie, producers like Bob Shad were advancing modern jazz without ignoring its past. Land cut his teeth on hard bop before adopting modal sounds and joined vibraphonist Bobby Hutcherson's sessions for Blue Note Records (1968-1971).

The pair were living in Los Angeles in 1971 when these sides and Choma (Burn) were recorded for Mainstream. Back in the day, if this disc were released by Columbia or Blue Note it would have garnered praise it deserved with the stellar lineup of Hutcherson, Bill Henderson, Buster Williams, Billy Hart, and James Mtume. The music is a mix of modal jazz with undercurrents of hard bop. The title track is a casual blues piece suitable for players to stretch out a bit. Land solos first followed by Hutcherson, Henderson, and the sweetness that is Williams' bass. "Short Subject" is a knockout swinger and "Dark Mood" a modal piece with Land acknowledging the influence of John Coltrane on his sound. Although it was the only piece here not written by Land, "Mtume" is the centerpiece of the recording. It was also a composition recorded the same year on Hutcherson's release Head On (Blue Note) with an eleven-piece ensemble. The music, dedicated to the conga player, is a nod towards world music (a term not yet applied to the style) and it samples both African and Spanish flavors, with Henderson on electric piano. Even though it may have taken nearly fifty years to get the attention it deserves, A New Shade Of Blue is indeed a minor classic of jazz. The music is available in digital format, CD, and of course as an LP. ~Mark Corroto

A New Shade Of Blue 

The Real Thing - Oh No! Not... The Real Thing... Again!

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:06
Size: 112.4 MB
Styles: Soul jazz, B3 Organ jazz
Year: 2018
Art: Front

[5:13] 1. Relaxin' At Smoke
[4:28] 2. Pat On The Shoulder
[4:54] 3. Dog Food
[4:44] 4. My Song For You
[5:16] 5. Backdoor Creeper
[6:28] 6. Melancolico
[3:42] 7. Doctor's Orders
[4:04] 8. Absolutely Yeah Yeah
[4:42] 9. Split Decision
[5:31] 10. Battle Hymn Of The Republic

Dave Edge (sax); Staffan William-Olsson (g); Paul Wagnberg(Hammond org); Hermund Nygård (ds).

The Real Thing is a Soul Jazz Band from Oslo, Norway, founded in 1992 when Sigurd Køhn and Palle Wagnberg formed the forerunner, The B3 Blues Band with Vidar Busk and Hamlet Pedersen. They changed the name when Staffan William-Olsson and Fredrik Carl Stormer joined the band. Størmer was replaced by Torstein Ellingsen in 1995, and Ellingsen again by Børre Dalhaug in 1998. Due to the sudden death of the band's saxophonist Sigurd Køhn in December 2004 The Real Thing was hibernating until a reunion in 2010.[1][2]

The quartet released eight albums, their debut in 1992 with the album The Real Thing and later both live and studio recordings. They for the most play original music, combining influences from American Blue Note jazz (represented by people such aslike Jimmy Smith, George Benson and Wes Montgomery) and elements from modern popular music. The result is a mixture of genres including swing, blues, soul, Latin, funk and rock.

Oh No! Not... The Real Thing... Again! mc
Oh No! Not... The Real Thing... Again! zippy

Hot Club D'Europe - Kouvola Junction

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:02
Size: 100.8 MB
Styles: Swing, Gypsy jazz
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[3:58] 1. Anniversary Song
[4:45] 2. Cheek To Cheek
[3:31] 3. Others Of Us (Toiset Meistä)
[3:28] 4. Songe D'automne
[4:33] 5. Concierto De Aranjuez (Theme) Joseph, Joseph
[2:22] 6. Nuages
[3:08] 7. French Heels (Ranskalaiset Korot)
[2:56] 8. Fly Me To The Moon
[3:07] 9. Dark Eyes
[8:19] 10. Autumn Leaves
[3:49] 11. Kouvola Junction

Behind this ambitious Hot Club of Europe that comes his debut album this summer hiding three names already well known gypsy jazz: Paulus Schäfer, Sinti famous guitarist from Holland, author of three books including the recent and very successful Twelfth Year . Beside her, a young 22 year old Finnish Olli Soikkeli, the festival regulars Samois already know well, having crossed regularly over the years on the stand and AJL in Late Samoreau jams. Finally, the bass is provided by the inevitable Arnoud van den Berg, solid Dutch musician who already have a good CV (Voet Reiner, Jimmy Rosenberg, Robin Nolan, Nomy Rosenberg, Tolga during ...).

Convened in March by the producer Jarno Kanerva side of Kouvola in Finland, the trio recorded an album in a day comprised mostly of standar...ds: nothing new in that directory rather conventional, if not a few occasions of local composer Finnish Rauno Lehtinen (the lovely bossa Others of us ) and vibraphonist Erik Lindström (blues shuffle very French Heels ) and an original composed by the team, Kouvola Junction, bluesy swing (in the spirit of the Blues clear Django) and that naturally gives its name to the album: questions / answers from the duo We offer great flights of joining on a nice theme in unison.

The two guitarists are not the same age, nor the same experience. On the one hand, Paulus Schäfer proposes a game very safe, built, and virtuoso borrowing a nice feeling. We feel perfectly into his sentences the influence of the Dutch school through Stochelo Rosenberg and Wasso Grünholz. Especially since it is expressed here on acoustic guitar kind Selmer (it is also very good on archtop ...). Olli in young guitarist in the making that sign still here his second album, we appreciate the impeccable technique, already very safe sound and the fury: one feels that he wants to budge, the guitar itch, but fortunately never it is set loose and keep tempo Olli knows!

The clash of two swordsmen programmed turns so nicely to the friendly help of two musicians who enjoy playing together while they learn. A highly contagious fun!"

Kouvola Junction mc
Kouvola Junction zippy

Luciana Souza - Brazilian Duos

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:15
Size: 96.7 MB
Styles: Brazilian jazz vocals
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[5:23] 1. Baiao Medley- Romance
[3:54] 2. Suas Maos
[2:41] 3. Pra Que Discutir Com Madame
[3:39] 4. Pra Dizer Adeus
[3:00] 5. Amanha
[2:36] 6. Eu Nao Existo Sem Voce
[4:00] 7. Doce De Coco
[3:31] 8. As Praias Desertas
[4:36] 9. Docemente
[2:05] 10. O Bolo
[3:58] 11. Viver De Amor
[2:46] 12. Saudade De Bahia

Luciana Souza - voice; Romero Lubambo - guitar; Marco Pereira - guitar; Walter Santos - guitar.

Luciana Souza’s second record for Sunnyside, Brazilian Duos, is a departure in two respects. First, the gifted vocalist is backed not by a jazz quartet, but rather by three different acoustic guitarists — Romero Lubambo, Marco Pereira (playing eight-string), and Walter Santos (her father). Second, Souza turns away from original material and toward classic Brazilian songs by figures like Dori Caymmi, Luiz Gonzaga, Djavan, Jobim, Toninho Horta, and her parents, Walter Santos and Tereza Souza. The range of moods is astounding, from the tongue-twisting virtuosity of the opening "Baião Medley" and the playfulness of "O Bolo" to the heartbreaking strains of "Pra Dizer Adeus," "Docemente," and "Suas Mãos." Souza’s voice, poised and attractive enough on its own, becomes a thing of transcendent beauty when matched with these sparse yet vibrant accompaniments. ~David R. Adler

Brazilian Duos mc
Brazilian Duos zippy

Tim Warfield - Eye Of The Beholder

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:24
Size: 156.6 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[ 8:52] 1. Blues For Mr. Bill
[ 9:19] 2. The Undaunted
[ 2:46] 3. Tide A Dish I
[10:29] 4. I Remember You
[ 8:58] 5. The Backwards Step
[ 3:23] 6. Tide A Dish-II
[ 7:53] 7. Ramona's Heart
[ 7:58] 8. Second Thoughts
[ 8:41] 9. Forever, One Day At A Time

Tim Warfield (Ts / Ss); Nicholas Payton (Tp); Cyrus Chestnut (P); Rodney Whitaker (B); Clarence Penn (D). Recorded October 9, 2012 in Brooklyn, NY.

On Eye Of The Beholder, his seventh leader recording for Criss Cross (and 12th label appearance overall), tenor and soprano saxophonist Tim Warfield draws on musical relationships that have shaped his artistry from the very start. Pianist Cyrus Chestnut and drummer Clarence Penn, both of whom appeared on Warfield's 1994 debut and several other sessions, bring their powerful and sensitive presence to this new quintet date. Rodney Whitaker provides an unshakable yet flexible foundation on bass. Trumpet great Nicholas Payton, who featured Warfield in his own incendiary quintet of the mid to late '90, comes on board and contributes brilliant playing as well as original music.

Highlights include the exploratory Blues For Mr. Bill, the sumptuous ballad Ramona's Heart, and inspired reworkings of Payton's The Backwards Step, Marlon Jordan's The Undaunted and the standard I Remember You.

Eye Of The Beholder mc
Eye Of The Beholder zippy

Bob Mintzer, Michael Brecker - Twin Tenors

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:02
Size: 135,8 MB
Art: Front

( 5:49)  1. The Saxophone
( 6:09)  2. Giant Steps (Version 1)
( 3:45)  3. Three Pieces
( 6:34)  4. Tenorman's Lament
( 8:17)  5. Two T's
( 5:29)  6. Sonny
(12:27)  7. Body And Soul / Everything Happens To Me
( 5:29)  8. Three Little Words
( 5:01)  9. Giant Steps (Version 2)

?Bob Mintzer and Michael Brecker appear together and individually on this date for Novus from the early '90s, joined by a fine rhythm section consisting of pianist Don Grolnick, bassist Michael Formanek, and drummer Peter Erskine. Mintzer is the dominant voice on the CD, playing without Brecker on six of the nine tracks and contributing five originals. His moving ballad "Tenorman's Lament" is a warm tribute to Wayne Shorter, while the driving blues "The Saxophone" is bursting with energy. Brecker is on hand for a joint romp through John Coltrane's "Giant Steps" (a second version features only Mintzer), Mintzer's intricate blues"Two T's," and on his own for a lush interpretation of "Body and Soul," the latter which is combined in a medley with Mintzer's setting of "Everything Happens to Me." While the CD title is a bit misleading, the performances are consistently at a high level. With the demise of the label, this out of print release has turned into a sought-after collectable. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/twin-tenors-mw0000116541

Personnel: Bob Mintzer, Michael Brecker (tenor saxophone); Don Grolnick (piano); Michael Formanek (bass); Peter Erskine (drums)

Twin Tenors

Nina Hagen - Big Band Explosion

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2003
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 42:42
Size: 79,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:47)  1. Let me entertain you
(3:26)  2. Sugar blues
(2:35)  3. I want to be happy
(4:14)  4. The Lady loves me (duet with Lucas Alexander)
(3:06)  5. Rythm & Romance
(4:28)  6. Rainbow
(2:38)  7. If you ever should leave
(4:53)  8. Fever
(3:11)  9. Love & Kisses
(3:34) 10. All over nothing @ all
(3:28) 11. Let's call the whole thing off (duet with Lucas Alexander)
(4:17) 12. Starlit Hour

A big-band album from a Teutonic dominatrix that used to be pictured dressed in PVC and restraining ropes? Sure, why not? Just don't fall for the pretty bindi wear and butterflies flying out of her mouth on the cover. Nina Hagen is still Nina Hagen and time has made her gritty voice even grittier. The lady was born to entertain, and if you're warm to her in-your-face absurdity, Big Band Explosion is a heck of a lot of fun. You'll be on the edge of your seat as the singer delivers the tunes straight-faced, but you just know that any moment she's going to bust out the brash Nina of old. That's the way the most of the songs go almost to the point of being formulaic  but if anyone is going to pull it off it's Nina. Her greatest moment or most grating, depending on your tolerance  comes at the end of "I Want to Be Happy" when her guttural scatting ends in a cough and an "oh my God!" She's Betty Boop one minute and Godzilla the next, which is why her fans love her. The Leipzig Big Band does a fine job with the accompaniment, but they could have been pushed up a little higher in the mix, and you just have to wonder what the look on their faces was like. Wonder if naughty Nina's untied them yet. ~ David Jeffries https://www.allmusic.com/album/big-band-explosion-mw0000357186

Personnel:  Nina Hagen – vocals, concept, cover photo, creative consultant;  Frank Nowicky - alt sax (Bandleader);   Michael Arnold – tenor sax;    Andrea Bauer – baritone sax;  Wolfram Dix – percussion;   Torsten Hell – trumpet;  Matthias Büttner - trombone;  Hans-Peter Fechner - bass trombone;  Jack Roth – drums;  Ralf Schrabbe – keyboards, piano

Big Band Explosion

Barney Kessel - Autumn Leaves

Styles: Guitar Jazz 
Year: 1968
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:14
Size: 137,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:55)  1. Autumn Leaves
(3:28)  2. Corcovado (Quiet Nights)
(4:47)  3. On a Clear Day, You Can See Forever
(5:06)  4. Aquarius
(4:17)  5. You're the One for Me
(4:10)  6. The Look of Love
(3:21)  7. I Will Wait for You
(3:35)  8. Watch What Happens
(4:06)  9. Blue Soul
(7:40) 10. Comin' Home
(3:09) 11. Shufflin'
(3:20) 12. Quail Bait
(5:17) 13. Watch the Birds Go By

This CD reissue contains a sleepy trio session by guitarist Barney Kessel who teams up with bassist Kenny Napper and drummer John Marshall for a variety of current pop tunes (including Burt Bacharach's "The Look Of Love" and two Michel Legrand songs) plus a few overly relaxed standards and originals. The CD is rounded out by three bouncy numbers from 1969 that feature Kessel with a big band that includes tenor-saxophonist Teddy Edwards and pianist Jimmy Rowles. Overall the lethargic performances function best as superior background music. ~ Scott Yanow  https://www.allmusic.com/album/autumn-leaves-mw0000613741

Personnel Barney Kessel (guitar); Teddy Edwards (tenor saxophone); Jimmy Rowles (piano); John Marshall (drums).

Autumn Leaves

Wycliffe Gordon - Dreams of New Orleans

Styles: Trombone And Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:32
Size: 170,0 MB
Art:

(4:33)  1. When the Saints Go Marching In
(4:17)  2. Darktown Strutters' Ball
(5:34)  3. St. Louis Blues
(4:08)  4. Chinatown
(6:24)  5. Panama
(3:10)  6. Lil' Liza Jane
(7:07)  7. Some of These Days
(4:02)  8. Tiger Rag
(4:52)  9. Avalon
(5:12) 10. Royal Garden Blues
(5:53) 11. St. Louis Blues
(5:36) 12. Won't You Come Home Bill Bailey
(4:54) 13. Back Home Again in Indiana
(2:44) 14. Down by the Riverside
(4:05) 15. Sweet Papa, Mama's Getting Mad

Trombone player Wycliffe Gordon is best known for his work with the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra, under the direction of jazz maestro, Wynton Marsalis. The versatile trombonist can scat, multi-note, slide, and plunge, just like he stepped out of the 1930s. Gordon has played with many jazz luminaries, including Dizzy Gillespie, Joe Henderson, Branford Marsalis,Lionel Hampton, Tommy Flanagan, and Shirley Horn. His musical colleagues call him "Pine Cone," since he grew up in the piney woods of Georgia. It must have been this Ellington era quality that caught the ears of jazz educator Wynton Marsalis, who heard Gordon play while the trumpeter was giving a workshop at Gordon's alma mater, Florida A&M University. Their fortuitous meeting resulted in Gordon joining the Wynton Marsalis Septet, as well as the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra, in 1989. As a member of the illustrious band, Gordon contributed as both musician and composer. Gordon, who like Charles Mingus says he hears music in his head all the time, has managed to write some of it down, and then hear it performed all over the world by the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra. Whether they know it or not, National Public Radio fans are familiar with the musician's work: In 1993, Gordon composed the NPR theme song. Gordon, an admirer of Louis Armstrong, J.J. Johnson, and Jack Teagarden, prefers the melodic approach to playing and composition. The listener can hear that on any of his outstanding recordings. His first outing was with fellow trombonist Ron Westray on their 1996 release, Bone Structure. More good things came with Slidin' Home, recorded in 1999. Joined by Victor Goines, Eric Reed, Rodney Whitaker, Herlin Riley, Milt Grayson, Joe Temperley, and Randy Sandke, Gordon really struts his stuff on this one, showing a wide range of influences from big band to gospel.

The Search, recorded in 2000, ranges as far and wide as the title suggests, and includes Gordon holding forth on the didgeridoo. Gordon, whose father was the pianist at the church the trumpeter grew up in, devotes himself to his gospel roots on The Gospel Truth, (2000). What You Dealin' With, (2001), continues in a jazz vein with original compositions and jazz standards. Gordon's 2002 release We may be his best yet, as the trombonist collaborates with pianist Eric Reed on jazz and gospel tunes. Besides performing and educating at his own music school in his hometown of Augusta, GA, Gordon has another important project: writing the score for the Oscar Micheaux 1925 silent film, Body and Soul. Paul Robeson starred in the movie about race, religion, and small town life in the South. Gordon drew upon his own Southern upbringing to produce music from the church, the bars, and the home, to be performed by the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra. Gordon has begun to evidence an interest in vocalizing, something which he says he plans to do increasingly. The results are sure to be top drawer, as the exuberant Wycliffe Gordon throws himself into things, body and soul. ~ Rose of Sharon Witmer  https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/dreams-of-new-orleans/557724173

Personnel: Wycliffe Gordon (trombones, trumpet, vocals), Jon Erik-Kellso (trumpet, backing vocals), Adrian Cunningham (clarinet, soprano saxophone), Michael Dease (trombone, tenor and baritone saxophone, trumpet, backing vocals), Matt Munisteri (guitar, banjo, vocals), Ibanda Ruhumbika (tuba), Marion Felder (drums)

Dreams of New Orleans

Greg Osby - Banned in New York

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:11
Size: 133,6 MB
Art: Front

(12:54)  1. 13th Floor
(13:24)  2. Pent-Up House
(11:47)  3. I Didn't Know About You
(14:09)  4. Big Foot
( 2:42)  5. Big Foot (excerpt)
( 3:12)  6. 52nd Street Theme

“Banned in New York” is Greg Osby’s 4th Blue Note release and was recorded live at an undisclosed venue in New York City. A surprisingly good recording considering the lone piece of equipment was a “mini-disk recorder” placed on a table in front of the band. Nevertheless, Osby and his exceptional band flaunt their range of musical gifts on this fast paced up-beat excursion.Osby’s original composition “13th Floor” opens the set in glowing fashion. Pianist Jason Moran sets the pace with huge “McCoy Tyner-esque” block chords, a quick dexterous right hand and astute phrasing. Here, Moran clearly identifies himself as a shrewd band mate and crafty improviser. He possesses the skills that could easily project him into numerous session dates and share the limelight with others twice his age. A mid-tempo number, “13th Floor” also features some burning heat from Osby’s alto while the rhythm section of Atsushi Osada (b) and Rodney Green (d) handle the peaks and valleys. Osada and Green seem ready to explode here but opt to tease and insinuate while displaying consideration for Osby’s articulate yet sinewy phraseology.The Quartet also performs admirable renditions of Sonny Rollins’ “Pent Up House”, Monk’s 52nd Street Theme and Duke Ellington’s sublime “I Didn’t Know About You”. Charlie Parker’s “Big Foot” is given classic be-bop treatment. On “Big Foot” Osby brandishes his superior chops while making it all sound so easy."Banned In New York” is being sold at a reduced price and is several notches above your proverbial home grown analog bootleg recording. A quality effort, which receives high, marks for representing Osby’s terrific band as a serious “live” act minus some of the normal fluff and cosmetics. Nice work guys! ...Recommended. ~ Glenn Astarita https://www.allaboutjazz.com/banned-in-new-york-greg-osby-blue-note-records-review-by-glenn-astarita.php

Personnel:  Greg Osby - alto saxophone;  Jason Moran - piano;  Atsushi (Az'Shi) Osada - bass;  Rodney Green - drums

Banned in New York

Friday, February 2, 2018

Jerry Garcia - The Very Best Of Jerry Garcia (2-CD set)

This special 2-CD collection salutes one of the most legendary figures in all of rock n' roll, beloved Grateful Dead lead guitarist, vocalist and eternal good will ambassador Jerry Garcia. Outside the realm of the Grateful Dead, Jerry pursued a broad array of folk, bluegrass, blues, and roots rock side projects throughout his storied career. His solo albums capture the heart & soul as well as the rich talents of this incomparable music icon. Disc 1 - studio tracks, Disc 2 - live tracks.

Album: The Very Best Of Jerry Garcia (Disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:23
Size: 177.2 MB
Styles: Roots rock
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[3:10] 1. Deal
[4:24] 2. Bird Song
[5:52] 3. Sugaree
[4:06] 4. Loser
[4:01] 5. The Wheel
[3:10] 6. Let It Rock
[3:03] 7. Russian Lullaby
[3:50] 8. Might As Well
[4:59] 9. Mission In The Rain
[9:24] 10. I'll Take A Melody
[5:14] 11. Rubin And Cherise
[5:27] 12. Cats Under The Stars
[5:08] 13. Rhapsody In Red
[3:38] 14. Run For The Roses
[7:27] 15. Knockin' On Heaven's Door
[4:23] 16. Without Love

Album: The Very Best Of Jerry Garcia (Disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:49
Size: 178.1 MB
Styles: Roots rock
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[ 4:05] 1. Catfish John
[ 6:01] 2. Deep Elem Blues
[ 4:26] 3. Ripple
[10:40] 4. Positively 4th Street
[12:38] 5. The Harder They Come
[ 6:36] 6. Gomorrah
[11:37] 7. Dear Prudence
[ 7:45] 8. Señor (Tales Of Yankee Power)
[ 4:47] 9. Evangeline
[ 9:11] 10. Deal

The Very Best Of Jerry Garcia (Disc 1), (Disc 2)   

Jean Frye Sidwell - For All We Know

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:18
Size: 128.9 MB
Styles: Easy Listening
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[4:53] 1. East Of The Sun (West Of The Moon)
[5:05] 2. My Foolish Heart
[3:29] 3. Give Me The Simple Life
[4:55] 4. For All We Know
[4:03] 5. It's All In The Game
[5:10] 6. This Is Always
[4:32] 7. They Can't Take That Away From Me
[4:53] 8. On Green Dolphin Street
[4:59] 9. Skylark
[3:21] 10. Love
[5:37] 11. A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square
[5:16] 12. You've Got A Friend

L.A. jazz scene jazz singer Jean Frye Sidwell sustains a largely quiet (though hardly sleepy) ambience throughout the CD's 12 selections. Vocal jazz from Gershwin's "They Can't Take That Away," her swing is artfully subdued, and her wry, expressive approach to "L-O-V-E" is pure charm. Yet Frye shines most luminously on classic jazz gems such as "For All We Know" and "A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square." And her Fresh approach to "You've Got A Friend", is brilliant. Anyone in search of a smooth jazz album ideal for watching city lights at 2 a.m. should keep " For All We Know in mind."

"Like a mink draped over mahogany, Jean Frye Sidwell's luxuriously supple alto adorns the vintage 30's & 40's songs of romance. This jazz singer has a palpable aura of glamour and late-night cool. Her ostensibly effortless command of phrasing and intonation, whether the mood is seduction or a sweet sassiness, further fortifies the opinion that the Los Angeles, California based vocalist possesses one of the great female jazz voices to surface.

For All We Know mc
For All We Know zippy

Matt Belsante - Nice 'N' Easy

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:12
Size: 128.7 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2018
Art: Front

[4:11] 1. Nice 'n' Easy
[4:39] 2. Cheek To Cheek
[4:18] 3. Since I Fell For You
[4:34] 4. There Will Never Be Another You
[4:45] 5. I Got It Bad And That Ain't Good
[4:47] 6. The Look Of Love
[3:33] 7. They Can't Take That Away From Me
[3:04] 8. After You've Gone
[4:18] 9. Moon River
[5:10] 10. In A Sentimental Mood
[4:42] 11. Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow
[3:42] 12. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
[4:24] 13. One For My Baby

Every once in awhile there comes along a singer who reminds you of something familiar yet something so new that it leaves you smiling; a young crooner’s voice that wraps around you like a warm coat on a cold winters day. Matt Belsante is that rare kind of artist who has something new to offer.

A Naperville, Illinois native, Matt started to sing in the jazz choir in high school during his junior year while continuing to play sax in the band. His mindset was to continue to sing jazz with the big band because he loved it, but never really thought about it as a career.

At Vanderbilt University, Matt also sang and arranged music for an a cappella group called the Dodecaphonics. In his senior year, Matt got the opportunity to sing the songs of Frank Sinatra with the Nashville Jazz Orchestra, a group of Nashville’s top jazz musicians.

Nice 'N' Easy mc
Nice 'N' Easy zippy

Steve Khan - Let's Call This

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:28
Size: 140.7 MB
Styles: Fusion, Guitar jazz
Year: 1991/2014
Art: Front

[7:00] 1. Let's Call This
[6:04] 2. Masqualero
[6:21] 3. Backup
[7:03] 4. Out Of This World
[6:05] 5. Played Twice
[8:10] 6. Little Sunflower
[5:05] 7. Buddy System
[7:47] 8. Street Of Dreams
[7:48] 9. Mr. Kenyatta

Best-known for his fusion recordings, Steve Khan (ten years after recording the purely acoustic solo date Evidence) stretches out on this pure jazz date. Accompanied by bassist Ron Carter and drummer Al Foster, Khan explores a variety of superior jazz standards (including songs by Thelonious Monk, Wayne Shorter, Larry Young, Freddie Hubbard and Lee Morgan) along with his own "Buddy System." This is one of Steve Khan's finest recordings to date and is highly recommended to those listeners not familiar with this side of his musical personality. ~Scott Yanow

Let's Call This mc
Let's Call This zippy

Robin McKelle - Introducing Robin McKelle

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:07
Size: 89.6 MB
Styles: Adult Contemporary, Vocal jazz
Year: 2006
Art: Front

[3:13] 1. Something's Gotta Give
[3:34] 2. Bei Mir Bist Du Schon
[3:46] 3. Night & Day
[4:40] 4. For All We Know
[2:49] 5. You Brought A New Kind Of Love
[2:56] 6. Dream
[2:20] 7. Yes, My Darling Daughter
[3:47] 8. Deep In A Dream
[2:17] 9. I've Got The World On A String
[3:29] 10. Come Rain Or Come Shine
[3:01] 11. The Lamp Is Low
[3:11] 12. On The Sunny Side Of The Street

The debut of vocalist Robin McKelle is a throwback to an earlier era, when singers were backed by big bands as they sang songs destined to become standards. Although McKelle doesn't break new ground in her interpretations of this material and doesn't take many chances, she is an expressive performer, opening with an exuberant, slightly breathy "Something's Gotta Give," followed by an enchanting cha cha treatment of "Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen." Vocalist Robbie Wykoff joins her for her a duet of "You've Brought a New Kind of Love to Me." She's clearly having fun in "Yes, My Darling Daughter," a forgotten number from the big band era, with a brief detour into a Latin setting. The orchestra, which sometimes adds a string section, brings life to the charts adapted or transcribed by trumpeter Willie Murillo and trombonist David Stout, while the band includes veteran jazz instrumentalists like clarinetist Gary Foster, guitarist Larry Koonse and tenor saxophonist Pete Christlieb. ~Ken Dryden

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Introducing Robin McKelle zippy

Stan Getz - Live At Montmartre Vols 1 & 2

On January 28 and 30, 1977, Stan Getz performed live at the Café Montmartre Jazz-Hus in Copenhagen, Denmark, with pianist Joanne Brackeen, bassist Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen, and drummer Billy Hart. The excellent music recorded at these gigs was initially issued by Steeplechase on the albums Stan's Party and Live at Montmartre. All 11 tracks became available on CD in 2002 and again in 2008, courtesy of Japan's Video Arts label. This is a supremely satisfying spread of straight-ahead jazz, using a rich palette of melodies composed by Billy Strayhorn, Chick Corea, Wayne Shorter, Dizzy Gillespie, Steve Swallow, Milton Nascimento, and Stan Getz. Investigation reveals that there are a surprising number of different tunes that share the title "Lady Sings the Blues." The one performed by the Stan Getz Quartet on this live compilation album is not the famous air by Billie Holiday and Herbie Nichols but a more ruminative offering penned by Alec Wilder. ~arwulf arwulf


Album: Live At Montmartre Vol 1
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:26
Size: 117.7 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1977/1985

[12:51] 1. Morning Star
[ 8:00] 2. Lady Sings The Blues
[ 8:46] 3. Cancao Do Sol
[ 4:43] 4. Lush Life
[ 8:07] 5. Stan's Blues
[ 8:57] 6. La Fiesta

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Live At Montmartre Vol 1 zippy

Album: Live At Montmartre Vol 2
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:05
Size: 135.3 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1977/1985
Art: Front

[ 6:36] 1. Infant Eyes
[13:26] 2. Lester Left Town
[12:27] 3. Eiderdown
[ 8:21] 4. Blues For Dorte
[18:14] 5. Con Alma

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Live At Montmartre Vol 2 zippy

Alex Sipiagin - From Reality and Back

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:14
Size: 163,3 MB
Art: Front

( 9:49)  1. Around the Bend
(10:03)  2. With the Tide
( 7:51)  3. From Reality and Back
(10:54)  4. End Of...
( 9:17)  5. Here and Now
( 7:41)  6. Chain Reaction
( 6:47)  7. Son Uvedeny Posle (Dream Seen Later)
( 8:50)  8. The Maze

From Reality And Back comes off as notable before a note of music ever reaches the ears. In fact, this album presents itself as a bit of a jazz PR dream: bassist Dave Holland makes a rare sideman appearance here, guitarist Pat Metheny contributed an original written strictly for this project ("Son, Uvedeny Posle"), and the rest of the band is rounded out by A-listers like pianist Gonzalo Rubalcaba, whose label 5passion serves as the record's home. After hearing all of that, it's tempting to say that trumpeter Alex Sipiagin is supremely lucky, but luck has little to do with this album's merits; better or more accurate to say that Sipiagin is skilled, motivated, talented and determined.  The Russian-born, Long Island-based Sipiagin is one of the most consistently creative trumpet forces on the scene today, but that's not news to most people who closely follow this art form. He's cemented his reputation as one of the best with a string of probing leader dates on the Criss Cross label, a stint with the late, great Michael Brecker, a thirteen-years-and-counting association with Holland and his band(s), and work with the Mingus Big Band. From Reality And Back is merely his latest foray into the great wide open, but words like "merely" downplay the significance of this outing; and make no mistake about it...this one is significant. 

Sipiagin spreads a wealth of musical ideas across eight tracks, creating music that's alternately edgy and clean cut, focused and far-reaching, and flexible and tight; the rhythm tandem of Holland and the indefatigable Antonio Sanchez on drums helps to rectify that last pair of opposing ideals, but everybody truly contributes to the broad scope of this record from the outset: Rubalcaba's electric piano creates the mood on the album-opening "Around The Bend," which balances its askance structure atop Holland's bass lines. Sanchez constantly twists and tweaks the rhythmic tides that he creates, and saxophonist Seamus Blake matches Sipiagin in the creativity department. Together, the two horn men run in stride, dovetail their lines, and take inspirational cues from all parties at play; they make for a formidable front line here and everywhere else. A list of highlights would have to include the brilliantly driven "End Of..." and Sipiagin's head-turner-of-a-solo on "With The Tide," but such lists are pointless when everything on a record could make the cut; not a weak spot can be found on From Reality And Back. ~ Dan Bilawsky https://www.allaboutjazz.com/from-reality-and-back-alex-sipiagin-5passion-review-by-dan-bilawsky.php

Personnel: Alex Sipiagin: trumpet; Seamus Blake: tenor saxophone; Gonzalo Rubalcaba: piano; Dave Holland: bass; Antonio Sanchez: drums.

From Reality and Back

Natasha Miller - Spinvintage

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:22
Size: 131,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:59)  1. Summertime
(4:06)  2. The Very Thought of You
(4:36)  3. At Last
(5:54)  4. Blue Skies
(6:31)  5. What's New
(1:57)  6. Smile
(6:29)  7. The Nearness of You
(4:13)  8. Cry Me a River
(6:13)  9. My Funny Valentine
(6:43) 10. God Bless The Child
(5:35) 11. My Romance

Sooner or later, most singers get the urge to make a standards record. And they always try to make it different, says Natasha Miller, the sterling Bay Area-based jazz singer prized for her rich sound, streamlined phrasing and unforced feeling. I wanted to make a standards album that was different different. Miller pulls that off brilliantly on her pleasing new CD, SpinVintage, a collection of classic songs that sound anything but standard. She puts a bracing spin on some of the best known tunes in the American Songbook, among them the Gershwin s Summertime, Irving Berlin s Blue Skies and Rodgers & Hart s My Funny Valentine. A deft musician with a keen sense of dynamics, tone color and timing, Miller brings spontaneity to the music while staying true to the melodies and lyrics. Her supple voice dances and floats through Adam Theis daringly original arrangements. His quirky and grooving charts, with their popping horn lines and moody film-noir flavors, frame and underscore the graceful melodies Miller sings, creating the yin-yang that gives this recording its singular sound. Adam is a wild man genius, says Miller, who s worked with the creative Bay Area arranger, trombonist and bandleader and his genre-crossing Jazz Mafia crew over the years. I needed his playful insight into this music. I wanted him to take the standards I d chosen songs that were familiar to listeners and were my favorites and basically create new songs from them. Produced by Miller for her Poignant Records label, SpinVintage is a major departure from the vocalist s last two successful recordings, Don t Move, from 2006, and I Had a Feelin , releases two years earlier. 

They both featured the music of Bobby Sharp, the brilliant but forgotten songwriter who composed the 1961 Ray Charles classic Unchain My Heart. Miller brought Sharp back to public attention, showcasing many of his songs that had never been performed until she brought them to life. With this new record, I wanted to give the audience something they didn't expect from me, says Miller, a highly trained classical violinist from Des Moines who played with orchestras and chamber groups in the Midwest before moving to San Francisco in 1995 to write and perform her original songs. She worked in advertising while performing at night until the music took over and she gave up the day gig. Her signing career took off. Miller became a favorite on the Bay Area club and festival scene, and her two Bobby Sharp recordings brought her wider acclaim.

Reviewing a performance of Sharp s songs, Los Angeles Times jazz critic Don Heckman praised the way Miller sang the material with sensitivity and insight, her cool musicality and clear articulation illuminating the unfamiliar pieces. A versatile jazz artist who can create a mood of hushed intimacy or hothouse exuberance, Miller draws inspiration for a wide range of musicians, from the classical violinists Itzhak Perlman and Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg to singer-songwriter Ricki Lee Jones, the Police and operatic diva Frederica von Stade. Miller does the one operatic number on SpinVintage Summertime from the 1935 Gershwin opera Porgy and Bess in a decidedly un-operatic manner. She sings it in a lower octave than the original, giving the song a bittersweet reading in a dark-hued Theis arrangement set in 6/4 time. It s followed by Ray Noble s lovely The Very Thought of You, which sails along in relaxed bossa nova groove perfectly suited to the smiling sensuousness of Miller s vocal. I wanted to bring out the beauty and simplicity of the song, says the singer, who turns up the heat on a funky and joyous ride through the classic Etta James vehicle At Last. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/SpinVintage-Natasha-Miller/dp/B003ZMWZGM

Spinvintage

Bill Meyers & David Benoit - The Invitation From L.A.

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:26
Size: 100,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:21)  1. Killing Me Softly With His Song
(4:55)  2. Bridge Over Troubled Water
(3:32)  3. Flash Dance
(3:31)  4. Just The Way You Are
(3:55)  5. That's What Friends Are For
(3:58)  6. Sailing
(3:42)  7. Saving All My Love For You
(4:15)  8. The Way We Were
(5:06)  9. You've Got A Friend
(5:06) 10. We Are The World

A jazz/classical pianist and synthesist, Meyer bridges the gap between jazz, rock, and new-age. His is very high-quality music from a compositional perspective.~ Paul Koher https//www.allmusic.com/artist/bill-meyers-mn0000767072/biography

One of the more popular performers in the idiom somewhat inaccurately called "contemporary jazz," David Benoit has mostly performed light melodic background music, what critic Alex Henderson has dubbed "new age with a beat." Benoit has done a few fine jazz projects (including a tribute to Bill Evans and a collaboration with Emily Remler) but most of his output for GRP has clearly been aimed at the charts. He studied composition and piano at El Camino College and, in 1975, played on the soundtrack of the Robert Altman-film Nashville. After recording with Alphonse Mouzon and accompanying singer Gloria Lynne, he was signed to the AVI label when he was 24, recording sets like 1977's Heavier Than Yesterday that paved the way for his later output. In 1986, Benoit signed as a solo artist with GRP, a relationship that would last until 2003. Albums like 1989's Waiting for Spring and 1999's Professional Dreamer showcase his smooth, lyrical style, while projects like his 2000 tribute to Vince Guaraldi's Peanuts scores, Here's to You, Charlie Brown!: 50 Great Years!, demonstrate where his own tastes lie. A decade after their first joint venture, Benoit and Russ Freeman collaborated on Benoit/Freeman Project 2, released by the Concord-associated label Peak in 2004. For 2005's Orchestral Works he was joined by the Czech National Symphony Orchestra and members of the Asia America Symphony Orchestra. He released two studio albums including Full Circle in 2006 and Standards, which appeared later that same year. In 2008, Benoit paid tribute to some of his musical idols with the album Heroes. The album saw him covering songs by Elton John, the Beatles, Dave Brubeck, and others. Two years later, Benoit delivered the Clark Germain-produced electronica-inflected album Earthglow, and in 2012, he returned with Conversation, which featured the classical trio-meets-jazz-trio title track taken from his "Music for Two Trios" suite. n 2014, Benoit contributed to former Ambrosia guitarist David Pack's Napa Crossroads set with Alan Parsons, Ray Manzarek, Larry Carlton, Mindi Abair, and others. Benoit shifted focus on his next outing. Deciding to record an all-originals vocal album, he collaborated with lyricists Lorraine Feather, Mark Winkler, and Spencer Day. Released in the June of 2015, 2 in Love featured Grammy-nominated jazz vocalist Jane Monheit. She was also featured heavily on Believe, a Christmas recording that appeared just four months later. In 2017, Benoit paired with guitarist Marc Antoine for So Nice! on Shanachie Records. Also that year, he delivered the solo piano date The Steinway Sessions. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/david-benoit-mn0000635760/biography

Personnel:  Keyboards – Barnaby Finch, Bill Meyers (tracks: 1, 5, 6, 8, 9), David Benoit (tracks: 2 to 4, 7, 10);  Backing Vocals – Darlene Koldenhoven (tracks: 7, 10), John Lekman (tracks: 7, 10), Joyce Wilson (tracks: 7, 10);  Bass – Niel Stubenhaus;  Drums – Vinnie Colaiuta; Guitar – Mike Landau;  Percussion – Luis Conte, Oliver C. Brown (tracks: 3, 4, 7, 10);  Saxophone – Brandon Fields (tracks: 1, 4 to 6, 8, 9), Gary Herbig (tracks: 2, 3, 7);  Vocals – Clydene Jackson Edwards* (tracks: 7, 10), Harold Payne (tracks: 4, 10)       

The Invitation From L.A.

Manhattan Jazz Quintet - Live At Pit Inn

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 1986
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:51
Size: 163,2 MB
Art: Front

( 8:10)  1. So This
(11:02)  2. Angel Eyes
(12:04)  3. Round Midnight
( 9:13)  4. Misticized
(10:37)  5. S.u. Blues
(15:29)  6. Autum Leaves
( 4:14)  7. Rosario

The Manhattan Jazz Quintet are an unusual group in that they very rarely perform as a unit in the United States (much less Manhattan) but have been a major hit in Japan, both for their recordings and occasional tours. Originally comprised of leader/pianist David Matthews, trumpeter Lew Soloff, tenor saxophonist George Young, bassist Eddie Gomez, and drummer Steve Gadd, the band (which emphasizes straight-ahead hard bop swinging) first came together in 1983 at the suggestion of the King label and the top Japanese jazz magazine Swing Journal. To everyone's surprise, its first recording (simply called Manhattan Jazz Quintet) became such a big seller that it was awarded Swing Journal's annual 1984 Gold Disk Award as the number one album in Japan. Several years later the group broke up when Gomez and Gadd needed more time to pursue their individual projects and all of the quintet members later became quite successful in their own careers but this edition of the MJQ recorded reunions in 1990 (which found John Scofield guesting on a few selections) and in 1993. Victor Lewis replaced Gadd that year, and subsequently Young was replaced by Andy Snitzer and Gomez by Charnett Moffett. The Manhattan Jazz Quintet recorded primarily for King in Japan (those dates were mostly made available in the U.S. by Projazz) during the 1980s, although they cut some later recordings among the comparative very few that actually took place in Manhattan! for the Sweet Basil label. During the new millennium the Manhattan Jazz Quintet have recorded regularly for Video Arts.~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/manhattan-jazz-quintet-mn0000674690/biography  

Personnel: Lew Soloff trumpet; George Young tenor saxophone;  David Matthews piano; Eddie Gómez bass;  Steve Gadd drums.

Live At Pit Inn