Wednesday, April 18, 2018

Terry Bowness - Regeneration

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:17
Size: 108.3 MB
Styles: Hammond organ jazz
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[7:09] 1. Olivia's Dream
[5:57] 2. Her Raven Hair
[3:07] 3. Tears For Bill
[6:04] 4. Neil Young
[5:17] 5. Nimbus
[3:47] 6. Song For Nina
[3:17] 7. Big Nose Stella
[4:03] 8. Blue Bell Knoll
[2:09] 9. K.B
[6:21] 10. Kind Of Pink

Jazz pianist/composer Terry Bowness ventures into the realm of the organ trio with his 3rd release on Aardvark Records. Accompanied by the deep and versatile talents of Bruce Saunders on guitar and the chops of drummers Ernie Durawa, Steve Schwelling and Kyle Thompson, this work is not your grandfather’s organ trio. The nine original compositions and an interpretation of The Cocteau Twins’“Blue Bell Knoll” paint a sonic landscape with textures of americana, psychedelia, and Miles Davis’ “In A Silent Way.”

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Leslie Pintchik - Quartets

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:50
Size: 127.8 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[5:31] 1. Happy Days Are Here Again
[6:52] 2. Too Close For Comfort
[5:53] 3. A Simpler Time
[6:21] 4. Not So Fast
[5:49] 5. Over Easy
[7:13] 6. Private Moment
[6:48] 7. Fugu
[5:35] 8. Small Pleasures
[5:44] 9. Somewhere Berimbau

Both quartets on Quartets include pianist Leslie Pintchik, bassist Scott Hardy and drummer Mark Dodge. One quartet extends its percussion section with Satoshi Takeishi, who played drums and percussion on Pintchik's first release, So Glad to Be Here (Ambient Records, 2004). The other quartet features Scott Wilson on alto or soprano saxophone.

A strength of this disc is its three standards, inventively arranged by Pintchik and Hardy. "Happy Days Are Here Again" moves at a stately pace, starting with an aura of hushed wonder, enhanced by Takeishi's rattling and tinkling and Dodge's cymbals. The mood gradually builds to a contained exuberance. "Too Close For Comfort" drives along in a percussive Brazilian groove in which all players bear down hard on the "too close" figure. (Ken Dryden's liner notes point out that they actually use two different dance rhythms.) Pintchik enriches with bluesy chords and figures, and Hardy plays an agile, swinging solo.

Among Pintchik's compositions, the upbeat "A Simpler Time" has an organic form and triplet phrasing over a duple meter. "Over Easy" has an active melody that, like other Pintchik compositions, repeats a phrase in different keys with rhythmic displacements. Wilson plays the lead on soprano and takes two interesting solos. "Small Pleasures" is a catchy tune, served well by the dark and rich tone of Wilson's soprano. Pintchik's solo hints at the style of Herbie Hancock in her use of arpeggios, blues-riff ornamentation, and alternation of single notes and octaves on a melodic line.

"Private Moments" has a long, songlike melody mixing duple and triple rhythms. Throughout, Pintchik's playing moves through tonal centers, suggesting light following shadow. Wilson takes the lead on soprano and plays an emotive solo. As an inspiration for the composition, Pintchik cites Pierre Bonnard's paintings of his wife bathing. I can feel a connection between her musical style and the painter's use of spare outlines with underlying meticulous brushwork that conveys complex light and color.

An intriguing departure from Pintchik's other compositions here, "Not So Fast" is a minor blues in a finger-snapping shuffle groove, with an angular melody reminiscent of "Something's Coming" and "Cool" from West Side Story (an association reinforced by the disc's closing "Somewhere/Berimbau"). A more weighty character emerges through Pintchik's boppish solo and then Wilson's solo full of blazing runs. As background to Dodge's deft solo, the other musicians play a modal-jazz rework of the tune based on its opening motif.

Hardy's composition "Fugu" is a samba poised between major and minor. As Pintchik plays the melody quietly, Hardy interpolates a falling half-step for a moving call-response effect. Hardy uses the singing character of his instrument to complement and extend the inherently percussive sound of the piano.

The closing standard, "Somewhere," is a standout. The song is effectively framed by a contrasting introduction and ending. The musicians ply varied tempos and grooves to convey the song's ambiguous message (should we believe and rejoice, or sigh at the futility?). For the introduction, Pintchik plays a descending-fifth motif over a four-measure chord vamp, which Dodge and Takeishi embellish and Hardy enhances with melodic swells. Pintchik improvises as the tempo increases and then falls back. The pitch drops a half step and then another, and they begin the theme. The simultaneous rise in intensity and fall in key is briefly disorienting.

Pintchik's treatment of the melody reflects the yearning quality of the Bernstein-Sondheim song in its original setting. At the same time, Hardy's walking bass with pedal points, as well as Dodge and Takeishi's percussion that includes cymbals, bells, and occasional snare rolls, add a tension and forward momentum that's almost marchlike. When the opening vamp returns, Pintchik solos with a bluesy touch. The tempo speeds up and then drops back for the return of the head. In the original arrangement, the "somewhere" cadence in parallel major triads has a modal flavor. Pintchik pares that down to parallel fourths, which suggests tenuous hope. But on the final "somewhere," she shifts its accent to create the instrument-mimicking introductory figure of Baden-Powell's "Berimbau," ending the piece in a joyful Brazilian groove. ~Virginia A. Schaefer

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Duduka Da Fonseca Trio - Plays Dom Salvador

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:08
Size: 112.5 MB
Styles: Brazilian jazz
Year: 2018
Art: Front

[4:18] 1. Farjuto
[4:20] 2. Transition
[4:28] 3. Mariá
[5:47] 4. Antes Da Chuva
[3:11] 5. Samba Do Malandrinho
[5:36] 6. Temátrio
[4:31] 7. Gafiera
[4:18] 8. Para Elis
[4:57] 9. Valsa De Esquina
[4:13] 10. Clauditi
[3:24] 11. Meu Fraco é Café Forte

Duduka Da Fonseca - drums; David Feldman - piano; Guto Wirtti - bass.

Duduka Da Fonseca Trio Plays Dom Salvador was born from the leader’s love of Salvador and his music and Fonseca’s effort to make a proper tribute to his friend and mentor. The featured trio was born of a 2000 meeting with pianist David Feldman, who was studying then at the New School in New York, and with whom Fonseca recorded with later in 2009 in Brazil, where he also met the trio’s bassist, Guto Wirtti.

In the efforts to make the best recording and present Salvador’s music in the best light, Fonseca reached out to Salvador for lead sheets for his compositions. Feldman also took time to consult Salvador and learn the repertoire from its source, removing any doubts about structural and interpretive nuances. Many of Salvador’s songs seem simple but have difficult elements, most notably in the rhythmic combinations. Fonseca traveled to Brazil three times: the first to rehearse the music, the second to record over two days, and the third to mix and master. The trio aimed to make the recording as natural as possible, eventually using many first or second takes.

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Nathan Davis - Happy Girl

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:15
Size: 85.3 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1965/2014
Art: Front

[4:51] 1. The Flute In The Blues
[7:02] 2. Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most
[7:16] 3. Happy Girl
[7:15] 4. Evolution
[5:09] 5. Theme From Zoltan
[2:19] 6. Along Came Byrd
[3:21] 7. Mister E

Bass – Jimmy Woode; Drums – Billy Brooks; Piano – Larry Young; Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Flute – Nathan Davis; Trumpet – Woody Shaw.

Nathan Davis has split his career between being a fine tenor saxophonist and a jazz educator. He played briefly with Jay McShann in 1955, attended the University of Kansas, spent time in the Army in Berlin (1960-1963), and stayed in Paris where he worked with Kenny Clarke (1963-1969), Eric Dolphy (1964), and Art Taylor. He also toured Europe with Art Blakey (1965) and Ray Charles. Since 1969, Davis has been a professor of jazz at the University of Pittsburgh and Moorhead State University. His two most important musical associations have been heading the Paris Reunion Band (1985-1989) and leading Roots (which he formed in 1991). ~Scott Yanow

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Tubby Hayes, Tony Coe - Jazz Tete A Tete

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:25
Size: 104.0 MB
Styles: Bop Saxophone jazz
Year: 1993
Art: Front

[ 8:10] 1. Freedom Monday
[10:52] 2. Everybody Split
[ 4:34] 3. The Jeep Is Jumpin'
[ 5:47] 4. The Blues We Played Last Night
[ 4:32] 5. Blues For Sunday
[ 3:43] 6. Polka Dots And Moonbeams
[ 7:43] 7. Tenderly

This CD contains seven selections performed at the Students Union Hall at Bristol University by three separate British jazz groups. At times sounding close to Stan Getz tonewise, tenor saxophonist Tubby Hayes has two lengthy numbers while joined by trumpeter Les Condon, pianist Mike Pyne, bassist Ron Matthewson and drummer Tony Levin. In contrast, tenorman Tony Coe (who is featured on three songs, including a version of "Tenderly" not released until this 1993 CD) often recalls Paul Gonsalves, particularly on "The Jeep Is Jumpin'." He is joined by trombonist John Picard, pianist Collin Purbrook, bassist Peter Ind and drummer Jackie Dougan. In addition, there are two numbers (a blues and "Polka Dots and Moonbeams") performed by guitarist Frank Evans in a trio with Ind and Dougan. Overall, Coe takes solo honors during the concert, and it is unfortunate that he does not get to team up with Hayes. ~Scott Yanow

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Cyrus Chestnut - Cyrus Plays Elvis

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:16
Size: 126.5 MB
Styles: Neo bop, Piano jazz
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[4:37] 1. You Ain't Nothin But A Hound Dog
[5:29] 2. Don't Be Cruel
[3:49] 3. I Can't Help Fallin In Love With You
[4:57] 4. Love Me Tender
[5:11] 5. It's Now Or Never
[5:31] 6. Don't
[5:07] 7. Graceland
[6:01] 8. Suspicious Mind
[5:25] 9. Hearbreak Hotel
[5:01] 10. In The Ghetto
[4:02] 11. How Great Thou Art

You've got to give Cyrus Chestnut credit for not playing by the rules. Although he had little familiarity with the music of Elvis Presley, 15 years into his recording career the gifted jazz pianist decided -- virtually on a whim -- to record an album of Elvis songs. Chestnut did some homework, and working with his trio members bassist Dezron Douglas and drummer Neal Smith, set out to explore. It's a great idea -- in theory, but not always in practice. Like any standards -- and Elvis' catalog certainly falls into that category at this point in time -- the Presley canon is ripe for interpretation. Presley never wrote his own material, but he had the best in the business at his disposal, and the more substantial songs he chose to record (that would mean no "Do the Clam") certainly boasted memorable melodies -- the key component to an artist seeking to offer his own interpretive non-vocal take on a song. But Chestnut doesn't always make the most of those melodies here. Cyrus Plays Elvis is most satisfying when the pianist breaks loose from the original setting and leaves it way behind. On the album's opening track, "Hound Dog," he sticks cautiously close to the root melody and tempo until it's solo time, at which point Chestnut turns out a thrilling cascade of tuneful keyboarding. Like a number of other tracks on the album, it's reminiscent of the Ramsey Lewis Trio's approach to interpreting pop in the mid-'60s, not a bad thing by any means, but not very challenging jazz.

At its lamest, Cyrus Plays Elvis is too simplistic and loungey, adding nothing to these familiar songs. The smooth jazz treatment utilized on tunes like "Can't Help Falling in Love" and "Suspicious Minds" probably makes sense if Chestnut's sole aim is to get those songs played on "lite" radio stations, but as an involving listening experience it leaves something to be desired. "It's Now or Never," despite the clever Brazilian/Latin swing arrangement, feels ready-made for a noisy hotel bar where it will be played to oblivious tourists over the sounds of clanking glasses and dumb pickup lines. And "Suspicious Minds," though performed deftly by the trio, doesn't really possess the desperate sense of impending loss that Elvis' version did. There are moments of brilliance, to be sure, and three of them close out the album. "Heartbreak Hotel" is as close to free and adventurous as this record gets, a rolling, unleashed improvisation loosely based on the theme. The first segment of the track serves as a showcase for the drummer, and when Chestnut takes over midway through he immediately proves just how inventive he can be, and how willing he is to let go and venture into uncharted waters. Most of the song sounds nothing at all like the Elvis tune, and it works because of its lack of allegiance to the original melody, not in spite of it. "In the Ghetto" is soulful and heartfelt, as it should be -- Chestnut is closer to the song's intent than he is to, say, "Don't Be Cruel" -- but it's the final track, "How Great Thou Art," one of many religious-themed songs Elvis recorded over the years, that suggests just how special the entire effort could have been. Like Elvis, Chestnut is a man of faith -- he's recorded in the Christian vein before -- but he eschews a standard gospel format here and instead delivers a solo piano rendition that is regal, warm, and, yes, inspirational. Perhaps next time Chestnut should stick with Cyrus Plays Elvis Gospel. ~Jeff Tamarkin

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Nick Finzer - Hear & Now

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:07
Size: 130.8 MB
Styles: Trombone jazz
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[4:49] 1. We The People
[6:07] 2. The Silent One
[4:50] 3. Single Petal Of A Rose
[8:55] 4. Again And Again
[6:30] 5. Race To The Bottom
[8:04] 6. New Beginnings
[7:31] 7. Lullaby For An Old Friend
[5:01] 8. Dance Of Persistence
[5:15] 9. Love Wins

Nick Finzer: trombone; Lucas Pino: tenor sax, bass clarinet; Alex Wintz: guitar; Glenn Zaleski: piano; Dave Baron: drums; Jimmy MacBride: drums.

New York-based trombonist Nick Finzer has benefited from mentorships under trombone masters Wycliffe Gordon and Steve Turre; but his third CD release, Hear And Now also brings the original trombones master, J.J. Johnson to mind. One of Johnson's last CDs, the minor masterpiece, Heroes (Verve Records, 1995), featured a sextet configuration with an enormously-talented pianist, Renee Rosnes, in the mix. Hear & Now is a sextet outing with an up-and-coming, unlimited potential talent, Glenn Zaleski, sitting in front of the eighty-eights. Both the albums are filled with cerebral-yet-always engaging tunes, all of them very artfully arranged—Johnson was a master at that craft. It seems that Nick Finzer is developing on a b-line in that direction.

On a nine tune set, featuring eight Finzer originals, along with Duke Ellington's "Single Petal Of A Rose," everything from the opener—the propulsive barn burner, "We the People," through to the dreamily gorgeous closer "Love Wins"—comes wrapped in often delicate, always intricate arrangements, featuring snappy interplay and back and forth harmonics between Zaleski's piano and Alex Wintz' guitar; with intimate conversations between the leader's muscular notes and Lucas Pino's searing tenor sax and his mellifluously beautiful bass clarinet work; all of this anchored by the solid yet-flexible bass/drums team of, respectively, Dave Baron and Jimmy Macbride.

The sextet broods in dark tones on "The Silent One." The music is, in part, Finzer's reaction to America's social framework, to events transpiring here and now. This tune changes directions and tempos; Pino's saxophone lets loose and anguished cry; Baron and MacBride churn up a disconcerting turbulence, before Finzer and Pino harmonize into a soothing—or perhaps slightly exhausted by the whole affair (the framework, not the music)—conclusion. The group's take on Ellington's "The Single Petal of a Rose," from the under recognized "The Queen's Suite," is a idiosyncratic examination of one of Duke's most beautiful tunes, with Zaleski displaying a light, floating touch on the piano, and Finzer and Pino (on bass clarinet here) sounding as if they'd fit into Ellington's orchestra, from any era. Finzer has crafted a complex showcase for his vision throughout the set, with music that goes moves from the timelessness of Ellington into more modern territory as it lays down an unsettled feeling with "Again And Again," into the frenetic, wired tight "Race To the Bottom." As for Finzer, it sounds as if he may be on track toward a race to the top, as much as an arranger/composer/conceptualist as he is a trombonist.

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Joni James - The Broadway Hits

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:28
Size: 111.0 MB
Styles: Vocal, Easy Listening
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[4:23] 1. Hey There!
[3:31] 2. Till There Was You
[3:36] 3. I've Grown Accustomed To His Face
[4:21] 4. Bali Ha'i
[3:29] 5. Isn't It Romantic
[4:47] 6. If I Loved You
[4:31] 7. Mr. Wonderful
[3:55] 8. Baubles, Bangles And Beads
[4:29] 9. Bewitched
[3:18] 10. Hello Young Lovers
[4:22] 11. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
[3:41] 12. The Party's Over

Pop songstress Joni James was born Giovanna Carmella Babbo in Chicago on September 22, 1930. After studying drama and ballet throughout her adolescence, she joined a local dance troupe on a tour of Canada upon graduating high school, later working as a chorus girl at the Windy City's Edgewater Beach Hotel. A fill-in gig at an Indiana roadhouse convinced James to pursue a career as a singer, and while appearing in a TV commercial she was spotted by executives at MGM, signing to the label in 1952. Her single "Why Don't You Believe Me" sold over a million copies, topping the U.S. charts for six weeks and falling just shy of the Top Ten in Britain.

An overnight sensation, James enjoyed an incredible run of hits over the next year, among them the double-sided "Have You Heard"/"Wishing Ring," "Purple Shades," Hank Williams' "Your Cheatin' Heart," "Is It Any Wonder," "Almost Always," "My Love, My Love," "You're Fooling Someone," "Nina-Non (A Christmas Lullaby)," and "You're My Everything." By 1954, however, James' early success seemed to dissipate entirely, and after returning to the Top Ten twice the following year with "How Important Can It Be?" and "You Are My Love" she never reached to the upper rungs of the charts again, although she continued cracking the Top 100 for the remainder of the decade. In 1964, she retired from music to tend to her ailing husband, musical director Anthony Acquaviva, and spent the next three decades essentially removed from the public eye; finally, during the mid-'90s she returned to touring while also supervising the re-release of her classic MGM recordings. ~ Jason Ankeny

The Broadway Hits

Frank Wess - The Flute Mastery Of Frank Wess

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:48
Size: 134.6 MB
Styles: Flute jazz
Year: 1981/2013
Art: Front

[6:16] 1. Lover Come Back To Me
[5:59] 2. Spring Is Here
[5:04] 3. Riled Up
[6:25] 4. There Is No Greater Love
[5:15] 5. Nada Mas
[5:36] 6. Battle Royal
[6:38] 7. Lover Come Back To Me (Alt Take 1)
[5:47] 8. Spring Is Here (Alt Take 1)
[6:48] 9. There Is No Greater Love (Alt Take 3)
[4:53] 10. Nada Mas (Alt Take 1)

This excellent 1981 date from Frank Wess is, as its title suggests, the first -- and only -- all-flute session from the man who brought the instrument to prominence as a soloist in creative mainstream jazz during the 1950s. Wess -- also a fine saxophonist -- has a list of credits including the Billy Eckstine Orchestra in the late '40s and Count Basie's legendary 1950s band with Frank Foster. He won the Down Beat critic's poll for flute for six consecutive years between 1959 and 1964. The Flute Mastery of Frank Wess was produced by Gus Statiras, and the session's other personnel include bassist George Mraz, pianist Tommy Flanagan, and drummer Ben Riley. The original six-track program includes lovely readings of the standards "Lover Come Back to Me," "Spring Is Here," and "There Is No Greater Love," Duke Ellington's "Battle Royal," and two excellent Wess originals in "Nada Mas" and "Riled Up." In addition are bonus cuts that feature alternate takes of the standards as well as "Nada Mas." ~Thom Jurek

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Cy Touff & Richie Kamuca - Primitive Cats

Styles: Trumpet And Saxophone Jazz 
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:34
Size: 118,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:41)  1. Primitive Cats
(5:27)  2. It's Sand, Man
(5:27)  3. Prez-Ence
(3:53)  4. Half Past Jumping Time
(7:01)  5. A Smooth One
(7:53)  6. Keenster Parade
(4:58)  7. TNT
(4:25)  8. What Am I Here For
(4:13)  9. Groovin' Wailin'
(2:32) 10. A Smooth One

When these recordings were made, Cy Touff had been sitting in the Woody Herman trombone section for almost two years. His ungainly looking instrument seldom has been heard in the Jazz field. It sounds much like a valve trombone, but seems to be more flexible and more personal than the bone. Richie Kamuca, who co-featured with Cy on these sessions, was also a member of the Herman Herd. Both men have Lester Youngs spirit in their playing. They typify the mainstream school of Jazz. The groups on this CD achieve a compulsive swing and joy that is practically guaranteed to make you pat a hole in the floor with your foot. The quintet sides are marked by lengthier solos from Cy and Richie, and presented them with an auspicious bow as recorded leaders. Johnny Mandel and Ernie Wilkins charts provide ample chance for the octet to get a walking, pulsing, Basie-ish beat going behind all the soloists. https://www.freshsoundrecords.com/cy-touff-richie-kamuca-albums/4582-primitive-cats.html

Personnel:  Cy Touff (bass trumpet), Richie Kamuca (tenor sax), Matt Utal (alto sax, baritone sax), Pete Jolly (piano), Leroy Vinnegar (bass), and Chuck Flores (drums).

Primitive Cats

Roy Ayers - Virgo Vibes

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 1967
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:28
Size: 122,7 MB
Art: Front

( 7:35)  1. The Ringer
( 5:21)  2. Ayerloom
( 6:56)  3. In the limelight
(12:49)  4. Virgo vibes
( 7:49)  5. Glow flower
( 5:09)  6. Mine Royd
( 7:45)  7. Number Seven

Long before he switched to playing disco and pop music, Roy Ayers was considered a promising young jazz vibraphonist. This LP, his second as a leader, was one of his finest. On four of the five selections (obscurities and pieces by group members), Ayers teams up with trumpeter Charles Tolliver, tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson, bassist Reggie Workman, drummer Bruno Carr, and the mysterious pianist Ronnie Clark (Herbie Hancock under a disguised name). On "Glow Flower," Ayers and Tolliver are joined by Harold Land on tenor, pianist Jack Wilson, bassist Buster Williams, and drummer Donald Bailey. The music is primarily advanced hard bop with some freer moments on Tolliver's "The Ringer." This underrated music is long overdue to be reissued on CD and displays Roy Ayers' long before he was known as an R&B artist. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/virgo-vibes-mw0000739066  

Personnel: Roy Ayers (vibraphone); Joe Henderson (tenor saxophone); Charles Tolliver (trumpet); Ronald Clark (piano).

Virgo Vibes

Fredrik Kronkvist - Afro-Cuban Supreme

Styles: Saxophone, Flute And Clarinet Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:57
Size: 179,7 MB
Art: Front

(2:32)  1. Intro - Tierra Africana part 1
(5:31)  2. A Love Supreme - Acknowledgement
(5:48)  3. A Night in Tunisia
(7:10)  4. Caravan
(1:29)  5. Interlude No.1
(4:22)  6. Afro Blue
(5:40)  7. Satellite
(6:36)  8. Manteca
(0:51)  9. Interlude No.2
(5:14) 10. Naima
(0:32) 11. Interlude No.3
(4:59) 12. Gillespiana
(4:26) 13. Be-Bop
(1:55) 14. Tierra Africana part II
(5:30) 15. On Green Dolphin Street
(0:42) 16. Interlude No.4
(4:40) 17. Yemaya
(1:33) 18. Interlude No.5
(6:12) 19. Eternal Light
(2:03) 20. Outro - Acknowledgement

Alto saxophone star Fredrik Kronkvist delivers his eclectic mix of Afro-Cuban rhythms and Coltrane inspired jazz and in an adventurous and colorful musical experience. New views on Latin-Jazz gives us an explosive rhythm fiesta that touches both body and soul. Inspired by Dizzy Gillespie’s idea of bringing together people, music and rhythms from different continents and countries, the award-winning and Swedish Grammy nominated alto saxophonist Fredrik Kronkvist has created a diverse mix of Afro-Cuban rhythms and Coltrane-influenced jazz with his new group Afro-Cuban Supreme. On the occasion of Dizzy’s 100-year anniversary in 2017 Fredrik Kronkvist releases the album Afro-Cuban Supreme with superstars Jason Marsalis(USA) on drums, conga virtuoso Eliel Lazo(CUB) and Miriam Aïda(MAR/SWE) on vocals. The music ranges from legendary songs like A Night in Tunisia, Afro Blue and Manteca in eventful arrangements to exciting original compositions with contemporary approaches to timeless Latin Jazz. https://fredrikkronkvist.wordpress.com/music-2/afro-cuban-supreme/

Personnel:  Fredrik Kronkvist – saxophones, flutes and bass clarinet;  Miriam Aïda – vocals;  Martin Sjöstedt – piano;  Johnny Åman – bass;  Eliel Lazo – congas;  Jason Marsalis – drums

Afro-Cuban Supreme

Oliver Nelson, Eric Dolphy - Straight Ahead

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1961
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:11
Size: 85,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:48)  1. Images
(7:18)  2. Six And Four
(5:04)  3. Mama Lou
(9:57)  4. Ralph's New Blues
(5:36)  5. Straight Ahead
(3:27)  6. 111-44

Contrast is everything. Think of food for example: A big salty hunk of mature cheese is nicely offset by a couple of sweet grapes. Gastronomes would never dream of eating a rich foie-gras without the accompaniment of the honeyed sweetness of a glass of Sauternes. The same is true with music; a whole album of fast-paced music quickly becomes draining. Likewise, an hour of chilled-out dub can send you to sleep. The saxophonist and composer Oliver Nelson was obviously acutely aware of this when choosing his musical sparring partners. Nelson's decision to share the frontline on three albums with the multi-instrumentalist Eric Dolphy is often described as brave. I believe that Nelson knew exactly what he was doing. Dolphy, a hero of the avant-garde, has a style so diametrically opposed to Oliver Nelson’s that the two just can’t help but complement each other. This synergy is beautifully demonstrated on the 1961 recording Straight Ahead. Both soloists play a number of instruments, with Nelson on alto/tenor saxophone and clarinet and Dolphy on bass clarinet, alto saxophone and flute. Oliver Nelson was a jazz composer par excellence, and this album does not disappoint. It contains a number of memorable themes, such as “Six and Four,” “Mama Lou” and “Straight Ahead.” Best of all: the soloing. The high-speed elasticity of Dolphy’s runs contrast perfectly with the pure, soaring tone of Nelson. The two horn players spark each other and generate music of genuine intensity. It is worth noting that Oliver Nelson and Eric Dolphy played together on a number of other albums, the highlight of which must be the classic chamber-jazz of The Blues and the Abstract Truth. Pass the grapes.....~ Keiran Smalley https://www.allaboutjazz.com/straight-ahead-oliver-nelson-fantasy-jazz-review-by-keiran-smalley.php

Personnel: Oliver Nelson: alto saxophone, tenor saxophone, clarinet; Eric Dolphy: alto saxophone, bass clarinet, flute; Richard Wyands: piano; George Duvivier: bass; Roy Haynes: drums

Straight Ahead

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Jack Sheldon - Jack Sheldon & His All Stars

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:03
Size: 80.3 MB
Styles: West Coast jazz
Year: 1976/2001
Art: Front

[3:04] 1. Green Dolphin Street
[4:42] 2. I'm Also A Person
[3:30] 3. I Had The Craziest Dream
[3:43] 4. Arrivederci
[2:56] 5. Brown Cow
[3:21] 6. Anyhow
[3:24] 7. Julie Is Her Name
[3:44] 8. Aplomb
[2:56] 9. Sunset Eyes
[3:38] 10. J.S

Alto Saxophone – Art Pepper, Herb Geller, Lennie Niehaus; Piano – Paul Moer; Baritone Saxophone – Billy Root; Bass – Buddy Clark; Drums – Mel Lewis; French Horn – Vince De Rosa; Piano – Pete Jolly; Tenor Saxophone – Harold Land; Trumpet – Chet Baker, Conte Candoli, Jack Sheldon; Tuba – Red Callender; Valve Trombone – Stu Williamson.

Although the liner notes to this album state that these two sessions were Jack Sheldon's first as a leader, he actually led two full sets for Jazz West during 1954 and 1956, plus three titles for Pacific Jazz in '55. However, this was the initial album to gain wide recognition and helped to introduce the L.A.-based trumpeter's talents to the East Coast. Five selections feature Sheldon with a ten-piece band arranged by Lennie Niehaus and some have spots for valve trombonist Stu Williamson, pianist Pete Jolly and baritonist Billy Root. The later session features the writing of Paul Moer and such fine soloists as trumpeter Chet Baker (in a rare sideman outing for another trumpeter), altoists Art Pepper and Herb Geller, tenorman Harold Land and valve trombonist Williamson. High-quality and consistently swinging West Coast jazz. ~Scott Yanow

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Dick Cary's Tuesday Night Friends - Catching Up

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:26
Size: 158.9 MB
Styles: Swing, Bop, Big band
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[5:06] 1. Catching Up
[3:48] 2. Oofy
[3:35] 3. September Etude
[3:55] 4. The Albatross
[6:14] 5. Late Sunday
[3:18] 6. Gramercy Park
[4:07] 7. Shim-Me-Sha Wobble Shim-Me-Sha-Wabble
[2:31] 8. Black And Blue
[4:31] 9. Between Prone And Supine
[5:34] 10. December Song
[4:52] 11. Rialto
[3:54] 12. Sea Of Cortez
[2:39] 13. B-E-T-T-Y O'-H-A-R-A
[4:44] 14. Recado
[3:45] 15. White April
[6:43] 16. Sgt. Pee Wee

Alto Saxophone – Dick Hamilton; Baritone Saxophone – Betty O'Hara, Fred Cooper, Randy Aldcroft, Tommy Newsome; Bass – Herb Mickman; Clarinet – Abe Most, John Bambridge, Tommy Newsome; Drums – Jerry White; Euphonium – Betty O'Hara; Guitar – Dave Koonse; Leader – Dick Hamilton; Piano – Dick Hamilton; Soprano Saxophone – Tommy Newsome; Tenor Saxophone – John Bambridge, Terry Harrington; Trombone – Betty O'Hara, Ernie Tack; Trumpet – Dick Hamilton, Jack Trott.

Dick Cary’s friends are keeping alive his astonishing output of undated, unclassifiable compositions and arrangements. Cary’s most visible musical roles were as pianist, trumpeter, mellophonist and alto horn operator in bands playing Dixieland. The term Dixieland rankled him but he was stuck with it because of his associations. In the early 1940s Cary was house pianist at Nick’s traditional jazz emporium in Greenwich Village. His highlights as a player came with Louis Armstrong’s original All-Stars and in a productive association with Bobby Hackett in the 1950s. Throughout his career he also worked as an arranger, for Benny Goodman, Jimmy Dorsey, Glen Gray, Hackett and his own bands, among others.

For his last couple of decades Cary, who died in 1994, held sessions once a week at his house which were populated by Los Angeles studio musicians eager to play his intriguing, unconventional charts. This album has some of those friends playing 16 of his pieces. The music is full of rich textures, unexpected rhythmic displacements, written lines that sound improvised, pungent 20th century classical harmonies, exuberance, wryness, subtlety and nothing that sounds like Dixieland. Most of the pieces are Cary’s, but when he tackled a standard like “Black and Blue” he transformed it. Cary’s arrangements inspire fine solos from the ensemblists, especially clarinetist Abe Most, tenor saxophonist Tommy Newsom and the late trombonist Betty O’Hara. Newsom, a focused and consistently interesting soloist, radiates the spirit of Al Cohn and Zoot Sims. Dick Hamilton, who leads the group, is impressive on piano, trumpet and the alto horn he inherited from Cary. ~Doug Ramsey

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Isabelle Georges - Une Etoile Et Moi ...à Judy Garland

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:06
Size: 84.9 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[3:18] 1. I Don't Care
[2:38] 2. Make Someone Happy
[3:02] 3. The Trolley Song
[3:56] 4. Gotta Have Me Go With You
[2:28] 5. By Myself
[5:27] 6. You Made Me Love You Medley
[3:06] 7. Embraceable You
[2:20] 8. How About You
[4:54] 9. Over The Rainbow
[2:12] 10. By Myself, Pt. 2
[3:40] 11. La Voix De Mes Rêves

"Those who loved Isabelle Georges’ tribute show to Judy Garland will appreciate hearing all the songs on this CD. For those who missed it, it’s an ideal opportunity to discover Judy Garland’s universe and Isabelle Georges’ talent. Now muffled and sensual, now jazzy and rhythmical, all these songs are to be enjoyed with great pleasure. If on stage there is only the piano, on the CD nine musicians accompany Isabelle Georges. The musical direction is impeccable, and Mathieu Gonet’s arrangements are brilliant!" ~Thierry Quinson

Une Etoile Et Moi ...à Judy Garland mc
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Jimmy Bruno - Like That

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:50
Size: 139.3 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 1996
Art: Front

[4:40] 1. E.V
[5:05] 2. Raezer's Edge
[5:43] 3. Waltz For Nancy
[6:13] 4. There Is No Greater Love
[4:26] 5. The Iguana's Uncle
[5:24] 6. Pat's House
[6:17] 7. Night Dreamer
[6:26] 8. The Way You Look Tonight
[4:49] 9. Like That
[3:28] 10. Stars Fell On Alabama
[8:15] 11. Unit Seven

Acoustic Bass, Electric Bass – Craig Thomas; Drums – Steve Holloway; Guitar – Jimmy Bruno; Organ – Joey DeFrancesco; Trumpet – Joey DeFrancesco. Recorded August 30, 1995 - August 31, 1995.

An aptly titled album if there ever was one, "Like That" is a tour de force in hard bop jazz, featuring the talents of guitarist Jimmy Bruno, who can burn and still balance his chops with very tasteful licks, and tone things down when it's the right time to do it. Joining him on this 1996 album is organist Joey Defrancesco, as hot on the B-3 as anybody who ever played one. Plus, he excels at trumpet and plays it on a couple of cuts. The year of this release is important to me, because just a scant two years prior Defrancesco partnered with the late legendary Danny Gatton on the last studio album Danny would make before tragically committing suicide in October of 1994. "Relentless" was and is a modern jazz masterpiece, an absolute must have for any jazz and jazz guitar fan reading this review.

So while Joey is the guest on this album, he is given equal time, and the whole ensemble just cooks. There can never be a replacement for Danny Gatton, but Jimmy Bruno is a superb player who stays pretty close to his jazz roots, whereas Gatton was famous or infamous if you're a guitarist who knows when your musical ass has been thoroughly kicked, for being a living encyclopedia of American music, and played whatever style he felt like better than anybody else. But this isn't a Gatton review. Bruno has made his mark and that is one of superb dexterity, beautiful tone, and most importantly, a very strong melodic sense that makes his solos integral to the music, not just icing on a cake that is no good without it. Asking Defrancesco to team up with him is a great idea. I want to point out that amazon.com has for some weird reason itemized a couple of tracks that say "featuring Joey Defrancesco", which is wrong, as Joey plays on the entire album.

"There Is No Greater Love" features Joey on trumpet that is as good as anything Miles Davis ever did. One or two songs are so furiously paced you'd think your player may spontaneously combust. Wes Montgomery fans, and I'm a huge fan, will be interested to see there is a version here of the standard "Unit 7" to close the album. Bruno and Defrancesco turn in a great performance, and Bruno makes sure to throw a few Montgomery trademark octave sweeps. While I will always consider the version of "Unit 7" on Montgomery's legendary live album "Live At The Half Note" untouchable, the song is certainly not treated poorly here. "Like That" is a great album, and after purchasing this and the Bruno/Joe Beck album "Polarity", I'll be checking out more of his CD's. ~Scott Hedegard

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Monaco Swing Ensemble, Diknu Schneeberger - Marais

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:47
Size: 134.6 MB
Styles: Swing, Gypsy jazz
Year: 2017
Art: Front

[6:22] 1. Mocca Swing
[2:48] 2. Place De Brouckère
[6:22] 3. Miserlou
[3:43] 4. Mittelalter
[4:03] 5. Swing Gitan
[5:39] 6. Cry Me A River
[2:52] 7. Monaco Franze
[4:54] 8. Swing 39
[3:54] 9. Nuit De St. Germain De Prés
[3:27] 10. Lulu Swing
[6:44] 11. Bei Dir War Es Immer So Schön
[7:54] 12. Miserlou

In January 2016 we recorded our debut album "Marais". As the main soloist we were able to win our longtime friend, Diknu Schneeberger, who continues to accompany us on as many concerts as possible. You can hear standards from the Gypsy Jazz Canon (Swing Gitan, Swing 39, It was always so beautiful with you), traditional folk songs (Miserlou) and an original composition by Diknu Schneeberger (Middle Ages). Even Mulo Francel from Quadro Nuevo can be heard on a piece that he has specially arranged for us (Mocca Swing) and for which we made a video. Thanks to Tom Peschel and Erdem Enging for the recording and Sebastian Vogel for the cover artwork.

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The John Bunch Quintet - John's Other Bunch

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:35
Size: 152.5 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[5:18] 1. (I Would Do) Anything For You (Take 2)
[6:10] 2. I'll Take New York
[3:41] 3. Lotus Blossom
[5:10] 4. The Man I Love
[4:23] 5. Seventh Avenue Scene (Take 2)
[5:08] 6. My Baby Just Cares For Me
[4:34] 7. Ellington '66 (Take 4)
[4:27] 8. This Can't Be Love
[3:16] 9. Sunday Night
[5:14] 10. (I Would Do) Anything For You (Take 1)
[2:56] 11. Why Shouldn't I (Take 1)
[4:10] 12. Ellington '66 (Take 1)
[4:34] 13. Seventh Avenue Scene (Take 1)
[2:59] 14. Why Shouldn't I (Take 2)
[4:30] 15. Ellington '66 (Take 2)

Bass – Michael Moore; Piano, Leader, Arranged By – John Bunch; Tenor Saxophone – Scott Hamilton; Trumpet – Warren Vaché.

This disc is most notable in that veteran swing pianist John Bunch welcomes two up-and-coming players to his quintet: tenor saxophonist Scott Hamilton and trumpeter Warren Vache. Both Hamilton and Vache had recently been discovered and they are full of fire, inspiring the trio of Bunch, bassist Michael Moore, and drummer Connie Kay. Another plus is the repertoire which matches standards (including heated versions of "I Would Do Anything for You" and "This Can't Be Love") with obscurities (Bunch's "I'll Take New York," "Seventh Avenue Scene," and "Ellington '66"). Hamilton and Vache would soon be recording regularly for Concord, so it is a treat hearing them at the beginning of their productive careers, interacting with the Teddy Wilson-inspired piano of John Bunch. ~Scott Yanow

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Azar Lawrence - Summer Solstice

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1975
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:31
Size: 93,6 MB
Art: Front

(7:52)  1. From The Point Of Love
(6:39)  2. Novo Ano
(6:52)  3. From The Point Of Light
(9:24)  4. Summer Solstice
(9:42)  5. Highway

Azar Lawrence (born November 3, 1952) is an American jazz saxophonist, known for his contributions as sideman to McCoy Tyner, Miles Davis, Freddie Hubbard, and Woody Shaw. Lawrence was the tenor saxophonist Tyner used following John Coltrane's death.Lawrence released Summer Solstice on Prestige Records in 1975, produced by Orrin Keepnews. It featured Raul de Souza, Gerald Hayes, Amaury Tristão, Dom Salvador, Ron Carter, Guilherme Franco on the songs "Novo Ano" and "Highway" which were composed by Amaury Tristão, and Lawrence, Souza, Albert Dailey, Carter and Billy Hart on all other selections.Bridge Into The New Age featured Jean Carn, Woody Shaw, Ray Straughter, Woody Murray, Clint Houston, Billy Hart, Guillerme Franco, Julian Priester, Hadley Caliman, Black Arthur, Joe Bonner, John Heard, Leon "Ndugu" Chancler, Mtume and Kenneth Nash. People Moving featured Patrice Rushen, Jerry Peters, Michael Stanton, John Rowin, Lee Ritenour, Paul Jackson, Jr., Harvey Mason, Ernest Straughter. Musician and screenwriter Herbert Baker taught music and mentored Lawrence, who recalled Baker as "one of the greatest pianists who ever lived." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azar_Lawrence

Personnel:  Azar Lawrence - saxophone;  Raul de Souza - trombone;  Albert Dailey - piano;  Ron Carter - bass;  Billy Hart drums.

Summer Solstice