Sunday, July 1, 2018

Hank Crawford - Mr. Blues Plays Lady Soul

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:46
Size: 84.2 MB
Styles: Jazz/Funk/Soul
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[2:37] 1. Groovin'
[3:34] 2. I Can't See Myself Leaving You
[3:26] 3. Never Let Me Go
[3:38] 4. Baby, I Love You
[3:11] 5. Lady Soul
[3:32] 6. Soul Serenade
[3:54] 7. Ain't No Way
[2:13] 8. Since You've Been Gone (Sweet Sweet Baby)
[3:12] 9. Take A Look
[7:24] 10. Going Down Slow

Alto Saxophone – Frank Wess, Hank Crawford; Baritone Saxophone – Pepper Adams; Bass – Charles Rainey, Jerry Jemmott; , Ron Carter; Drums – Bernard Purdie; Guitar – Eric Gale; Organ, Piano – Paul Griffin; Tenor Saxophone – Seldon Powell; Tenor Saxophone, Flute – David Newman; Trombone – Benny Powell, Jimmy Cleveland; Trumpet – Bernie Glow, Ernie Royal, Snookie Young, Joe Newman.

With an unmistakable blues wail, full of emotion and poignancy, altoist Hank Crawford bridges the gap between that tradition and that of jazz more completely than any other living horn player. Born in Memphis, Crawford was steeped in the blues tradition from an early age. He began playing piano but switched to alto when his father brought one home from the army. He claims his early influences as Louis Jordan, Earl Bostic, and Johnny Hodges. Crawford hung out with Phineas Newborn, Jr., Booker Little, and George Coleman in high school. Upon graduating, Crawford played in bands fronted by Ike Turner, B.B. King, Junior Parker, and Bobby "Blue" Bland at Memphis' Palace Theater and Club Paradise. In 1958 Crawford went to college in Nashville where he met Ray Charles. Charles hired Crawford originally as a baritone saxophonist. Crawford switched to alto in 1959 and remained with Charles' band -- becoming its musical director -- until 1963. The phrasing and voicings he learned there proved invaluable to him as the hallmark of his own sound. He also wrote and arranged a tune for Charles. The cut, "Sherry," his first for the band, was put on the Live at Newport album. Crawford cut a slew solo albums for Atlantic while with the band, and when he formed his group, he remained with the label until 1970. He signed with Creed Taylor's Kudu in 1971 and cut a series of fusion-y groove jazz dates through 1982. In 1983 he moved to Milestone and returned to form as a premier arranger, soloist, and composer, writing for small bands -- that included guitarist Melvin Sparks, organist Jimmy McGriff, and Dr. John -- as well as large. Crawford has been constantly active since then, as a leader and sideman, recording the best music of his long career. ~ Thom Jurek

Mr. Blues Plays Lady Soul mc
Mr. Blues Plays Lady Soul zippy

Brubeck Brothers Quartet - Timeline

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:58
Size: 160.2 MB
Styles: Cool Jazz
Year: 2018
Art: Front

[7:28] 1. Blue Rondo A La Turk
[6:52] 2. Far More Blue
[6:11] 3. Easy As You Go
[5:41] 4. Since Love Had Its Way
[6:30] 5. Boundward Home
[7:43] 6. Tritonis
[4:35] 7. The Golden Horn
[6:29] 8. 3 Wise Men
[4:32] 9. North Coast
[7:00] 10. Prime Directive
[6:51] 11. Thank You (Dziekuje)

Chris Brubeck: electric bass, bass trombone; Dan Brubeck: drums, hand drums, percussion; Mike DeMicco: guitar; Chuck Lamb: piano.

This album by the Brubeck Brothers—led by Chris and Dan Brubeck, sons of legendary pianist Dave Brubeck—commemorates the 60th anniversary of "President Eisenhower's Special International Program for Cultural Presentations," the 1958 State department tour in which prominent jazz musicians traveled to 14 countries to give 80 concerts in 90 days. This grueling schedule was endured by such luminaries as Louis Armstrong, Dizzy Gillespie, Duke Ellington, and the Dave Brubeck. For Brubeck, the inspiration was mutual, reflected in compositions that incorporated the local musical traditions he was hearing. Several of these are included on this record. Probably the most well-known is "Blue Rondo a la Turk," in which Dave melds the 9/8 rhythms of Istanbul's street musicians with American jazz and blues, creating a unique and indelible composition that has been covered by everyone from Al Jarreau to The Canadian Brass. Here, this beloved tune is freshened by master trombonist/bassist Chris Brubeck's arrangement, which begins with dazzling drummer Dan Brubeck's electric hand drumming and moves through sections that are separated just enough to highlight their different origins. This twist provides a new perspective on music that is so often played, reminding the listener of the global influences that were merged during that historic trip.

Apart from its historic value—enhanced by the intriguing factoids in the liner notes—this is an exciting and varied outing, recorded crisply and with great warmth. The "Timeline" it reflects is not just in years, but also in a legacy which—lucky for all of us—continues its powerful forward movement today. ~Dr. Judy Schlesinger

Timeline mc
Timeline zippy

Pere Soto - Gypsy Jazz 2018

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:02
Size: 98.5 MB
Styles: Gypsy jazz
Year: 2018
Art: Front

[4:56] 1. 1000 Years No Gigs
[3:15] 2. A Second Love
[3:19] 3. Dancing With Mr. Joan Marti
[4:05] 4. Prisoner Of Love
[3:53] 5. Menor-K Blues
[5:44] 6. Rumbatron
[5:35] 7. The Ballad Of The Moons
[4:45] 8. Pomping Into A Black Hole
[4:25] 9. Esperant La Lluna Plena
[2:59] 10. Hele Guify

Born in Badalona (Catalonia, Spain). Guitar player, composer, arranger, music producer. His family was of humble class, and for this reason, he could never afford a quality electric guitar until he was 20 years old, seeing his dad who was accumulating credibility thanks to his concerts, radio programs and the local press decided to buy his first guitar, a Gibson Les Paul Deluxe. It was the first left-handed Gibson guitar that came to Spain, they told him at the New-Phono music store in Barcelona. Until that moment He had always been asking for borrowed a guitar to anyone, either by a friend or like once happens by a missionary from the Carmelite Church, where he was playing every Sunday in the church band. That missioner lent him a guitar "Framus" for a long time. Perhaps that is the reason that at present he can also play the guitar with the strings upside down (since he is left-handed) because of the habit of playing with "normal" borrowed guitars for so long.

At age 17 he decided to finish his studies in mercantile expertise after a problem of mental exhaustion because he worked ten hours a day, and another four continued his studies at night and on weekends playing wherever he could. Apart combined all that with his favourite hobby was to play Ping Pong (table tennis) at a club in the city and becoming champion of Badalona later on. That took him to a level of stress that caused an emotional relapse and nervous breakdown of great magnitude. Then he had no choice but to stop working on anything that was not music which caused him a big problem with his father, who was an entrepreneur and one of the best European printing technicians. It should be added that every time he tried to study at the music conservatory in his city, regularly he was forbidden to examine and get the degree, himself because he was left-handed and in those moments that the country was governed by the dictatorship of General Franco that was forbidden. He understood that his training should be self-taught and launched for it.

He is known in the international scene for his esthetical flexibility that covers styles as unalike as gypsy jazz, free jazz, Avantgarde, jazz fusion, Bebop and, in classical music, contemporary and electroacoustic music, mostly XX century styles. Currently, his work as a composer exceeds the amount of 1000 registered compositions at the SGAE, (Sociedad General de Autores de España) among Jazz music and classical music. He is also currently active as a music producer, with his own recording studio and as a consultant-engraver for music publishing companies, schools, etc. He is publishing his works with three publishing Co.; from Catalonia - Clivis publication and La Ma de guido, and from Denmark - Bergmann Edition.

Gypsy Jazz 2018 mc
Gypsy Jazz 2018 zippy

Lucy Ann Polk - Lucky Lucy Ann

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:04
Size: 78.0 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 1957/1985
Art: Front

[2:50] 1. Sitting In The Sun
[1:46] 2. How About You
[3:54] 3. I'm Just A Lucky So And So
[2:52] 4. Squeeze Me
[3:03] 5. When The Sun Comes Out
[2:54] 6. Makin' Whoopee
[2:29] 7. Don Cha Go Way Mad
[3:20] 8. Sittin' And A'rockin'
[2:37] 9. Memphis In June
[2:16] 10. Time After Time
[3:21] 11. Easy Living
[2:38] 12. Looking At You

Bass – Buddy Clark; Drums – Mel Lewis; Guitar – Tony Rizzi; Piano – Marty Paich; Tenor Saxophone – Bob Hardaway; Valve Trombone – Dick Noel. Recorded on July 1957, Hollywood, California.

Lucy Ann Polk's lone Mode/VSOP session pairs the singer with a sextet led by pianist and arranger Marty Paich, whose nuanced, spacious orchestrations perfectly complement Polk's sultry yet supremely controlled style. The strength of Lucky Lucy Ann is its subtlety -- not a note is wasted or extraneous, and for all the modernist elements converging in Paich's arrangements, he never obscures the clarity of perennials like "Makin' Whoopee" and "Time After Time." Polk likewise shades the universal themes of the lyrics with a style and fierce intelligence all her own -- for all the power of her voice, it's her restraint that rings loudest and clearest. ~Jason Ankeny

Lucky Lucy Ann                

Burton Cummings - Massey Hall

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:58
Size: 173.9 MB
Styles: Rock
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[5:51] 1. No Sugar Tonight / New Mother Nature
[3:08] 2. Albert Flasher
[4:21] 3. Clap For The Wolfman
[3:17] 4. Laughing
[4:13] 5. Guns Guns Guns
[4:43] 6. Stand Tall
[3:47] 7. Hand Me Down World
[3:57] 8. Above The Ground
[4:45] 9. Runnin' Back To Saskatoon
[3:48] 10. Undun
[4:41] 11. I'm Scared
[3:48] 12. We Just Came From The Usa
[3:57] 13. These Eyes
[4:55] 14. American Woman
[4:11] 15. Timeless Love
[2:39] 16. Star Baby
[4:44] 17. No Time
[5:03] 18. Share The Land

Cummings was born and raised in the Canadian city of Winnipeg, Manitoba, as were all of the other original members of The Guess Who. In 1969, The Guess Who scored an international hit with “These Eyes”, co-written by Cummings and guitarist Randy Bachman. It was followed up by hit “Laughing”, again written by Cummings and Bachman. Another Guess Who song “Undun” featured Cummings on a jazzy flute solo. In 1970, the band hit no. 1 in Canada with “American Woman.”

Ultimately, conflict between Cummings and bandmate Randy Bachman – partially ignited by Bachman’s then-deepening Mormon religious beliefs—caused a rift in the band. Bachman left and went on to form the band Brave Belt with former The Guess Who mate Chad Allan, which later evolved into Bachman–Turner Overdrive.

Cummings became the band’s leader and continued to chart with songs such as: “Share the Land,” “Hand Me Down World,” “Albert Flasher,” “Rain Dance,” “Sour Suite,” “Glamour Boy,” “Star Baby,” “Clap for the Wolfman,” and “Dancin’ Fool.”

Massey Hall mc
Massey Hall zippy

Chuck Folds & His Sweet Basil Friends - Remember Doc Cheatham

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:02
Size: 142.0 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[2:51] 1. I Double Dare You
[2:21] 2. A Kiss To Build A Dream On
[5:48] 3. After I Say I'm Sorry
[2:04] 4. I Thought About You
[1:39] 5. Love Will Find A Way
[5:16] 6. That Old Gang Of Mine
[4:23] 7. The Man I Love
[5:24] 8. My Buddy
[3:56] 9. Sweet Lorraine
[4:16] 10. Duke Ellington Medley
[2:13] 11. I've Got A Feeling I'm Falling
[7:11] 12. Lover Man
[3:26] 13. Someday You'll Be Sorry
[5:10] 14. I Want A Little Girl
[3:06] 15. Medley Don't Worry 'bout Me; How Am I To Know'
[2:50] 16. Medley

Chuck Folds, piano; Spanky Davis, trumpet; Irvin Stokes, trumpet; Frank Tate, bass; Jackie Williams, drums.

In his solo work, Chuck Folds plays piano with a gentleness and grace that arises from the popular songs of faraway decades. He can then effortlessly shift into a rollicking New Orleans style solo, competing with the extraverted trumpets of Irvin Stokes and Spanky Davis. All of this fun can be heard on the new release: Chuck Folds and his Sweet Basil Friends Remember Doc Cheatham.

The great trumpet master Doc Cheatham played a regular Sunday gig in the Greenwich Village club Sweet Basil from 1980 to 1997, until his death at the age of 92. The musicians on this disc had various musical relationships with Doc Cheatham. Pianist Chuck Folds and the drummer Jackie Williams were regular band members throughout the Sweet Basil years. During this time either trumpet player, Stokes or Davis, would substitute for Cheatham or share the bandstand with him. Frank Tate, the bassist, was a regular sub during the Cheatham years, and since 1998 has been the house bassist.

These long musical relations have resulted in band with a comfort level that is palpable. Take a listen as “The Duke Ellington Medley” shifts from the delicately beautiful piano trio of “Drop Me Off In Harlem” to Spanky Davis’ warm trumpet solo on “Do Nothin’ Till You Hear From Me.” These are musicians who know where they’ve been and know where they are going. Irvin Stokes’ slowly unfolding trumpet solo on “Lover Man” is one of the highlights of this recording; it’s a heartfelt performance worthy of continual listening. The ease of exchange between these two excellent trumpet players is vigorously displayed on “My Buddy” in which the solos flash back and forth at an exhilarating rate. Throughout Jackie Williams’ and Frank Tate’s good sense and thoughtful touch keeps everyone on course. In short, this spirited tribute to Doc Cheatham is a CD full of delights from an era when the pianist could play sweet and then the whole band could play hot. ~Mike Neely

Remember Doc Cheatham mc
Remember Doc Cheatham zippy

Bill Perkins - Just Friends

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:59
Size: 92,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:12)  1. Just Friends
(3:57)  2. A Foggy Day
(4:34)  3. All Of Me
(3:09)  4. Diane-A-Flow
(3:19)  5. Limehouse Blues
(5:22)  6. What Is This Thing Called Love
(4:32)  7. Solid Desylva
(5:06)  8. Sweet And Lovely
(3:43)  9. Zenobia

Tremendous work from tenor saxophonist Bill Perkins  easily one of our favorite talents of the LA scene of the 50s, heard here on material from 2 rare albums! On these 50s recordings, Bill's got a great tone that really deserves to be heard  as lean and cool as fellow LA scenester Bud Shank, but also with a soulful quality that recalls some of the alto work coming out of Boston at the same time. Half the CD features titles from the Pacific Jazz album Just Friends  and Perkins plays tenor on most of the album, plus a bit of flute and bass clarinet  in the company of Art Pepper, Richie Kamuca, Jimmy Rowles, and Hampton Hawes. Tracks include "Solid De Sylva", "Zenobia", "Diane A Flow", and "Just Friends". The remaining tracks are from the even more obscure Liberty album Tenors Head On  a tight small group session that matches the horns of Perkins and Richie Kamuca, alongside rhythm from Pete Jolly on piano, Red Mitchell on bass, and Stan Levey on drums. https://www.freshsoundrecords.com/bill-perkins-albums/4380-just-friends-tenors-head-on.html

Personnel:  Art Pepper (as) Bill Perkins (ts,bclar,f) Richie Kamuca (ts) Jimmy Rowles/ Hampton Hawes (p) Ben Tucker/ Red Mitchell (b) Mel Lewis (d)

Just Friends

Joe Pass - Summer Nights

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:28
Size: 111,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:23)  1. Summer Night
(4:44)  2. Anouman
(4:55)  3. Douce Ambiance
(3:08)  4. For Django
(3:11)  5. D-Joe
(4:45)  6. I Got Rhythm
(5:43)  7. E-Blue Eyes
(4:00)  8. Belleville
(3:27)  9. In My Solitude
(4:48) 10. Tears
(2:50) 11. In A Sentimental Mood
(2:29) 12. Them There Eyes

During the last few years of his life, guitarist Joe Pass enjoyed having reunions with the same musicians who played with him 25 years earlier for the classic For Django recording: rhythm guitarist John Pisano, bassist Jim Hughart and drummer Colin Bailey. This 1989 recording could almost be called For Django 2, for it is the same vein as the original. Pass takes his remake of "For Django" unaccompanied and performs four of Django's tunes, along with five standards from the 1930s and three originals. Pisano, who was instrumental in organizing the session and the repertoire, sticks to acoustic guitar, while Pass alternates between acoustic and electric. 

Although Joe Pass' main influence was Charlie Christian and he really does not sound like Reinhardt, he manages to evoke the spirit of Django while swinging in his own fashion. It is particularly nice hearing such tunes as "Belleville," the haunting "Tears" and "For Django" in newer versions. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/summer-nights-mw0000309426

Personnel:  Joe Pass – guitar;  John Pisano – guitar;  Jim Hughart – bass;  Colin Bailey – drums

Summer Nights

Chihiro Yamanaka - Utopia

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:45
Size: 128,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:51)  1. Utopia
(4:16)  2. La Priere D'une Vierge
(4:40)  3. Mambo
(3:25)  4. Rhapsody In Blue / Strike Up The Band
(6:44)  5. Le Cygne
(5:34)  6. Piano Sonata No. 4
(5:35)  7. Orchestral Suite No. 2 - Badinerie / Ricochet
(5:57)  8. Arpeggione Sonata
(3:13)  9. I Loves You, Porgy
(4:00) 10. Shinda Otokono Nokoshita Monowa / Hope For Tomorrow
(2:39) 11. Hungarian Dance No. 5
(5:45) 12. Songs My Mother Taught Me

Chihiro Yamanaka is an internationally renowned, hard-swinging jazz pianist, composer, and bandleader, whose fluid, athletic technique has drawn rave reviews and very favorable comparisons to legends such as Oscar Peterson and Art Tatum. She is based in New York.Yamanaka was born in Kiryu, in Japan's Gunma Prefecture, in 1976. At age four she began formal piano studies. While she began with classical music and still practices it, she shifted her focus to jazz studies in high school. After graduation she attended the Berklee College of Music in Boston as part of the Betty Carter Jazz Ahead residency program. She played with a wide range of musicians in Boston and in New York before heading back home to Japan after she graduated from Berklee in 2000 with honors  and took first place in Down Beat's Outstanding Performance Award competition. Temporarily returning to Japan, she began her recording career there in 2001 with Living Without Friday, the first of four annually released titles issued by the Japanese label Atelier Sawano. Nonetheless, Yamanaka's long-player gained notice immediately from critics and radio stations. Her 2002 follow-up, When October Goes, hit the top rungs of the Japanese jazz charts, and word began to spread among fans and critics across the Pacific back to America. Yamanaka had reached the level where she could tour not only in her home country but also Europe and select U.S. dates. During this time she was also a member of DIVA, the all-female big band led by drummer Sherrie Maricle. Yamanaka also performed with the DIVA spin-off quintet Five Play, who backed Marlene VerPlanck on her 2003 album It's How You Play the Game, all while continuing to tour and release her own recordings. In 2005 she signed a worldwide deal with Universal's Classics and Jazz division and issued her North American debut with the trio effort Outside by the Swing, recorded in New York City with drummer Jeff "Tain" Watts and bassist Robert Hurst. Yamanaka immigrated to the States and issued the audio-video package Lach Doch Mal in 2006 with Larry Grenadier and Jeff Ballard. 

While neither record made the jazz charts in the States, they reached the Top Five in Japan and upped the pianist's reputation to the degree that she became a global nomad, touring in the U.S., Europe, and Japan. Arriving in 2007, Abyss was her first recording to feature drummer Kendrick Scott and bassist Vicente Archer, who became her working trio. She broke the trio mold with 2009's Runnin' Wild, where her piano fronted a sextet. On 2010's Forever Begins, bassist Ben Williams replaced Archer in her trio. The following year saw the release of Reminiscence, which placed a live performance at the Iridium in New York with a studio album that featured Yamanaka in three different trio settings. In 2012 Yamanaka released the first of two tribute albums, Because, a loving nod to the Beatles on which she backed by a quartet played not only piano but synthesizer, organ, guitar, ukulele, and harmonica. Because was followed by the standards releases After Hours and After Hours 2. In 2013, she offered her tribute to classical music with Molto Cantabile. In 2014, Yamanaka moved from Verve to the Universal-owned Blue Note label just in time for its 75th anniversary. Her debut, Somethin' Blue, was a sextet offering, and in addition to originals offered striking renditions of Bud Powell's "Un Poco Loco" and Herbie Hancock's "I Have a Dream." It reached into the Top Five on the jazz charts. She followed it the same year with Syncopation Hazard, her tribute to Scott Joplin. Yamanaka returned to the trio format for 2016's Blue Note-issued Guilty, which placed her original compositions alongside select pieces by Hoagy Carmichael. Near the end of 2017, Yamanaka produced and arranged Monk Studies. She played acoustic and electric piano, synth, and Hammond B-3 organ in an almost exclusively Monk program backed by drummer Deantoni Parks and bassist Mark Kelly. ~ Thom Jurek https://itunes.apple.com/ca/album/utopia/1384328786

Utopia

Saturday, June 30, 2018

The Paul Horn Quintet - Here's That Rainy Day

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:19
Size: 71.7 MB
Styles: Easy Listening
Year: 1966/1990
Art: Front

[2:35] 1. Who Can I Turn To (When Nobody Needs Me)
[2:20] 2. Here's That Rainy Day
[2:46] 3. How Insensitive
[3:16] 4. The Shadow Of Your Smile
[3:54] 5. In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning
[3:13] 6. Girl Talk
[1:53] 7. Moment To Moment
[4:39] 8. Ecstasy
[3:17] 9. Laura
[3:22] 10. On A Clear Day (You Can See Forever)

Bass – Bill Plummer; Chorus [With The] – Ralph Carmichael Singers; Clarinet – Paul Horn; Drums – Bill Goodwin; Flute [Alto], Flute [Bass] – Paul Horn; Piano – Mike Lang; Vibraphone – Lynn Blessing.

This a fabulous Paul Horn album, but you must accept that it is something of a "period piece" which was designed to have broad, mass, commercial appeal at that time (1966)…and, for whatever reason, simply did NOT (...and I like to think that that was because it was simply too good!... :-) Paul's tone on the flute, alto flute and bass flute (often without any vibrato) is gorgeous and his musical concept is unique. The tunes are very short, so Paul doesn't get a chance to stretch out much, but it does't really matter, because the stark simplicity in his lines (both on the heads and the improvising) is every bit as bold as it is striking. And (...you may be surprised to hear me say this...but I mean it!...) his musical style has the same stark clarity, simplicity and honesty that I have only heard from John Coltrane on the classic "Ballads" album (Impulse). That is an all too rare thing for ANY musician to achieve, on ANY instrument! So, please, ignore the meagre AMG rating and, if you can listen closely to this and get beyond the quite lush production - all of the "ooo's" and "ahh's" of the voices and the plucks of the harp (though, actually, Ralph Carmichael did an OUTSTANDING job with the arrangements, as well as in leading the choir, as did Paul Horn's quintet consisting of Mike Lang on piano, Lynn Blessing on vibes, Bill Plummer on bass and Bill Goodwin on drums) - then you will see what a truly remarkable work this is. It is actually my favourite Paul Horn album, and the one I return to most often. Finally, one of my favourite cuts on the album is missing here ("In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning") and, even with all of the 10 original tracks (rather like Trane's classic "Ballads" album), this one clocks in at not much more than 30 minutes...but it is heavy!...And I have no hesitation or compunction in mentioning BOTH of these Horn/Coltrane albums in the same breath!... ~Bill McBirnie

Here's That Rainy Day mc
Here's That Rainy Day zippy

Jerry Vivino - Coast To Coast

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:01
Size: 121.4 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz, Cool jazz
Year: 2018
Art: Front

[6:08] 1. Coast To Coast
[5:12] 2. Spud Time
[4:03] 3. Body And Soul
[4:36] 4. Sam I Am
[5:34] 5. Paterson
[7:11] 6. Category 5
[4:38] 7. Here's That Rainy Day
[4:57] 8. Lew's Blues
[5:06] 9. Honeysuckle Rose
[5:34] 10. Miracles

If you don't know Jerry personally, you certainly have heard him play. Featured on countless recordings, TV commercials and movie soundtracks, his resume reads like a Who's Who In Entertainment. Jerry has played with Bruce Springsteen, James Taylor, Son Seals, Paul Shaffer, Frankie Valli, Al Kooper, Dion, James Brown, Phoebe Snow, Donald Fagen, Dr. John, Branford Marsalis, Wynton Marsalis and the legendary Keely Smith, to name just a few.

Jerry's true passion in music is Jazz and R&B. In addition to being a member of the Max Weinberg 7, he can be heard playing with his brother Jimmy in the Vivino Brothers Band. He also is the leader of a really fun group with bass player Mike Merritt, drummer James Wormworth, keyboard player Brian Charretteand frequent guests, trumpet player Lew Soloff and guitarist Melvin Sparks.

Jerry's saxophone influences include Ben Webster, John Coltrane, King Curtis, Johnny Hodges, Cannonball Adderly, Michael Brecker, Sonny Rollins and Dexter Gordon. Clarinet influences include Benny Goodman, Buddy deFranco, Aker Bilk, Pete Fountain, Sidney Bechet and Eddie Daniels. Flute influences include Jean Pierre Rampal, Hubert Laws, James Galway and Ian Anderson. However, Jerry's favorite musician is his wife, flutist Laura (Renino) Vivino.

Coast To Coast mc
Coast To Coast zippy

Van Morrison - Moondance

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:45
Size: 88.7 MB
Styles: Album rock, Blue eyed soul
Year: 1970/2018
Art: Front

[4:29] 1. And It Stoned Me
[4:31] 2. Moondance
[2:34] 3. Crazy Love
[5:01] 4. Caravan
[3:26] 5. Into The Mystic
[2:29] 6. Come Running
[3:52] 7. These Dreams Of You
[5:09] 8. Brand New Day
[3:30] 9. Everyone
[3:40] 10. Glad Tidings

The yang to Astral Weeks' yin, the brilliant Moondance is every bit as much a classic as its predecessor; Van Morrison's first commercially successful solo effort, it retains the previous album's deeply spiritual thrust but transcends its bleak, cathartic intensity to instead explore themes of renewal and redemption. Light, soulful, and jazzy, Moondance opens with the sweetly nostalgic "And It Stoned Me," the song's pastoral imagery establishing the dominant lyrical motif recurring throughout the album -- virtually every track exults in natural wonder, whether it's the nocturnal magic celebrated by the title cut or the unlimited promise offered in "Brand New Day." At the heart of the record is "Caravan," an incantatory ode to the power of radio; equally stirring is the majestic "Into the Mystic," a song of such elemental beauty and grace as to stand as arguably the quintessential Morrison moment. ~Jason Ankeny

Moondance mc
Moondance zippy

Catherine Howe - Because...

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:43
Size: 123.0 MB
Styles: Folk
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[ 3:19] 1. Because It Would Be Beautiful
[ 3:20] 2. Shine Like A Star
[ 4:31] 3. Hot Night
[ 2:36] 4. Who Would Know
[ 4:08] 5. What A Beautiful Place
[ 3:22] 6. This Old Peg
[ 4:34] 7. Charlie Bender
[ 2:58] 8. Mayfair Cot
[ 1:45] 9. Mr G.T
[ 3:28] 10. It's Good
[ 4:37] 11. I'd Make Him Happy
[ 1:24] 12. Mr M.G
[ 2:50] 13. Welcome To My Garden
[10:46] 14. Don't Look Away

A great new album of songs recorded as a collaboration with Ric Sanders (the violin of Fairport Convention). Vo Fletcher and Michael Gregory. This album is a wonderful mixture of Howe's distinctively pure voice and Fletcher's fine guitar playing, along with Ric Sander's violin and Michael Gregory's drums and percussion.

Catherine is an Ivor Novello Award winner who has earned critical acclaim in dozens of music magazines both in the UK and the US, including Folk Album of the Year from The Sunday Times. Catherine began an acting career in the late 1960s, and has since gained a following in folk music: Record Collector in 2007 called her "one of the great unrecognised voices". Observer Music in 2007 said "Catherine Howe was a Kate Bush before her time".

Because... mc
Because... zippy

Andrew Hill - Black Fire

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:36
Size: 118.1 MB
Styles: Bop, Piano jazz
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[5:21] 1. Pumpkin
[8:01] 2. Subterfuge
[6:56] 3. Black Fire
[5:39] 4. Cantarnostion
[5:48] 5. Tired Trade
[2:58] 6. Mcneil Island
[5:48] 7. Land Of Nod
[5:18] 8. Pumpkin
[5:43] 9. Black Fire

Black Fire, Andrew Hill's debut record for Blue Note, was an impressive statement of purpose that retains much of its power decades after its initial release. Hill's music is quite original, building from a hard bop foundation and moving into uncharted harmonic and rhythmic territory. His compositions and technique take chances; he often sounds restless, searching relentlessly for provocative voicings, rhythms, and phrases. Black Fire borrows from the avant-garde, but it's not part of it -- the structures remain quite similar to bop, and there are distinct melodies. Nevertheless, Hill and his band -- comprised of tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson, bassist Richard Davis, and drummer Roy Haynes -- are not content with the limitations of hard bop. Much of the music is informed by implied Afro-Cuban rhythms and modal harmonics, resulting in continually challenging and very rewarding music. Hill's complex chording is thoroughly impressive, and Henderson's bold solos are more adventurous than his previous bop outings would have suggested. Their expertise, along with the nimble, unpredictable rhythm section, help make Black Fire a modern jazz classic. ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Black Fire mc
Black Fire zippy

Charles Lloyd & The Marvels, Lucinda Williams - Vanished Gardens

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:21
Size: 167.9 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz, Roots
Year: 2018
Art: Front

[ 8:41] 1. Defiant
[ 7:58] 2. Dust
[ 9:03] 3. Vanished Gardens
[ 6:22] 4. Ventura
[ 6:17] 5. Ballad Of The Sad Young Men
[ 6:30] 6. We've Come Too Far To Turn Around
[ 5:38] 7. Blues For Langston And Larue
[11:40] 8. Unsuffer Me
[ 5:15] 9. Monk's Mood
[ 5:53] 10. Angel

Renowned saxophonist Charles Lloyd and singer-songwriter Lucinda Williams bring the best of their musical worlds to "Vanished Gardens," a dazzling blend of jazz tunes glowing like embers and Williams' intricately poetic songs. Lloyd establishes a reflective mood right from the start on opening ballad "Defiant," with Bill Frisell's guitar and Greg Leisz's pedal steel laying foundations for his tenor saxophone, along with the other two Marvels, drummer Eric Harland and bassist Reuben Rogers. Frisell and Leisz each take solo turns, but their playing, each from one channel of the stereo spectrum, often feels more like a duet. Near its conclusion, Lloyd returns front and center to add some more delicate melodies. The track's nearly nine minutes coast by so brilliantly, in just another five, ideas to solve half your problems surely would have sprung from it.

Williams makes her entrance on track two, "Dust," and while the reflections remain inspired, Lloyd's sax is anguished and darkness is hovering: "You couldn't cry if you wanted to/Even your thoughts are dust." Williams appears on five tracks, including three reinterpretations of tunes from her solo albums, one new song, and a cover of Jimi Hendrix's "Angel."

"We've Come Too Far to Turn Around," the new tune, has a gospel mood of people demonstrating resilience while facing a long series of mini apocalypses. On "Unsuffer Me," Williams' aching call of "My joy is dead/I long for bliss" is answered by the band in a hypnotic, bluesy jam.

Among the instrumentals, Lloyd plays the alto flute on the groovy "Blues for Langston and LaRue," while Thelonious Monk's meditative "Monk's Mood" is a captivating duet by Lloyd and Frisell. In its entirety, "Vanished Gardens" is a dynamic ensemble's testament to creativity, musicianship and independence. ~Pablo Gorondi

Vanished Gardens mc
Vanished Gardens zippy

Donald Byrd - Donald Byrd With Strings + Byrd Blows On Beacon Hill

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:14
Size: 162,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:28)  1. Stardust
(2:46)  2. Indian Summer
(3:30)  3. I'm A Fool To Want You
(2:50)  4. Someday My Prince Will Come
(3:03)  5. Moon Mist
(3:47)  6. I Get Along Without You Very Well
(2:54)  7. The Touch Of Your Lips
(4:00)  8. Lazy Afternoon
(2:44)  9. Dear Old Stockholm
(2:51) 10. Love Is The Sweetest Thing
(2:59) 11. September Afternoon
(3:49) 12. Dearly Beloved
(7:03) 13. Little Rock Getaway
(7:19) 14. Polka Dots And Moonbeams
(4:39) 15. If I Love Again
(3:44) 16. Stella By Starlight
(3:38) 17. People Will Say We're In Love
(5:04) 18. What's New?

Donald Byrd and Clare Fischers 1957 New York studio collaboration is important for several reasons. For one, it marks Fischers first recording since January 1953, as well as his debut as the sole arranger for an album. It is equally important for Donald Byrd, as it remains the only album that the trumpeter ever made with string accompaniment.  Also included on this outstanding release is a New York, May 7, 1956 quartet session featuring the trumpeter backed by pianist Ray Santisi, bassist Doug Watkins and drummer Jimmy Zitano. Although this date varies greatly from Donald Byrd & Clare Fischers session with strings, we have decided to include it here in its entirety as bonus tracks, due to the dates equally unusual format. While Byrd recorded countless CDs in a quintet or sextet setting, the May 7, 1956 date is one of only two sessions that Byrd recorded as a leader in a quartet setting. https://www.freshsoundrecords.com/donald-byrd-albums/4340-with-strings.html

Personnel:  Donald Byrd (tp), Julius Baker (fl), Romeo Penque (cl), Clare Fischer (p, arr, cond), Milt Hinton (b), Osie Johnson (d), Harry Lookofsky, Gene Orloff (strings), Ray Santisi (p), Doug Watkins (b), Jimmy Zitano (d)

Donald Byrd With Strings + Byrd Blows On Beacon Hill

Hilda Kazasian - Jazz & Samba

Styles: Vocal, Latin Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:24
Size: 122,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:21)  1. So Danco Samba
(3:39)  2. One Note Samba
(4:51)  3. Wave
(3:45)  4. Girl From Ipanema
(4:23)  5. Dindi
(3:52)  6. Triste
(2:21)  7. Desafinado
(4:02)  8. How Insensitive
(3:57)  9. Waters of March
(4:03) 10. Corcovado
(3:05) 11. Cadabadu

I was born with luck in a family of musicians. It happened in the 1970s on a sunny March day, which makes me an Aries sign. At first I lived on Denkooglu Street, on the navel of Sofia, in a house full of music, guests, and the smell of all the delicious things. My childhood continued on the most romantic street of Sofia - Elin Pelin, in my grandmother's house. The mornings began with a bundle of sun rays, a scent of flowering linden, the sound of guavas and the smell of warm milk with a spoonful of marmalade. Then I sang. The first song I sang in front of a microphone (about 5 years old) was for the " the thorn in the fifth " I still feel sorry for him! My singing was much more fun and enjoyable than the tedious endless hours before the piano. My parents were very listening to music Frank Sinatra, Louis Armstrong, Ela Fitzgerald ... (I learned these names a lot later, of course). And with such music I was put to sleep. And when they did not listen to the music of others they created theirs. 

I started playing the 5-year-old piano. A few years later I continued to study percussion instruments at the Sofia Music School. Then I met Professor Dobri Paliev, from whom I learned a lot about music and life at all. He has become one of the most important people in my life. While studying at the music school, I played in several symphony orchestras. I was a soloist of a youth big band, with whom I had the chance to tour half the world. During my studies at the Music Academy, I specialized in chamber music in Italy. Soon afterwards, I started working with my cousin Hristo Yotsov, who is one of the most talented musicians I know. With him we recorded 6 albums and we continue to work together. http://hildakazasyan.bg/??-???/

Jazz & Samba

Keely Smith/Louis Prima - Breaking It Up!

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1951
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:57
Size: 85,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:04)  1. Eleanor
(2:27)  2. Shake Hands with Santa Claus
(2:21)  3. Oooh-Dahdily-Dah
(2:28)  4. Basta
(2:40)  5. The Bigger the Figure
(2:44)  6. Boney Bones
(2:45)  7. One Mint Julep
(1:54)  8. Chili Sauce
(2:19)  9. Oh, Marie
(2:44) 10. Luigi
(2:32) 11. Paul Revere
(2:14) 12. It's Good as New (I Painted It Blue)
(2:25) 13. Barnacle Bill the Sailor
(2:33) 14. Shepherd Boy
(2:40) 15. Chop Suey, Chow Mein

In late 1951, Louis Prima was hot on the heels of a comeback success the year before with "Oh Babe!," and a record so big that it spawned numerous cover versions by everyone from Wynonie Harris and Lionel Hampton to Kay Starr and even a Spanish language version by Lalo Guerrero ("Chitas Patas Boogie" on Imperial and used in the movie Zoot Suit with Edward James Olmos). After three follow-ups went nowhere (one of which was the immortal "Zooma Zooma"), Prima came to Columbia Records and was handed over to A&R chief Mitch Miller. And here was part of the problem. Prima's audience liked a cruder Louis and were used to records cut on shoestring budgets with production values that were as raw as the music they framed, while Miller's production was state-of-the-art squeaky-clean. Miller had Prima covering R&B hits of the day ("One Mint Julep") jump blues ("Oooh-Dahdilly-Dah" and one of the few tracks to feature Keely Smith on here), Latin-flavored tunes ("Chili Sauce"), novelty tunes like "Barnacle Bill the Sailor," "Boney Bones," and "It's Good as New (I Painted It Blue)," as well as his patented Italian shuffles like "Eleanor," "Basta," "Luigi," "The Bigger the Figure" and a bombastic version of "Oh Marie" (perhaps the only dud in this entire package), framed in the corniest "Sing Along with Mitch" arrangement imaginable and a million light-years away from his famous Capitol recording of the same tune. This entire set combines all 14 sides of the seven singles issued, plus the addition of "Chop Suey, Chow Mein" along with the original 1958 cover art to Columbia's original issue of this material. Not his best, but an interesting one to add to the collection after you have most of everything else. ~ Cub Koda https://www.allmusic.com/album/breaking-it-up%21-mw0000045185

Breaking It Up!

Greg Chambers - After Hours

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 25:27
Size: 58,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:36)  1. In The Pocket Feat. Paul Brown
(4:38)  2. After Hours (Feat. Jonathan Fritzen)
(3:31)  3. On The Move
(3:59)  4. Your Place Or Mine?
(2:33)  5. Groovin' High
(3:47)  6. Chelsea's Song (Feat. Paul Brown)
(3:19)  7. Human Nature

With the 2007 CD ‘City Lights’, and his 2011self-titled follow-up, sax-man Greg Chambers has been carving out his own niche in the annals of contemporary jazz.  Of course Chambers is far from being your regulation smooth jazz musician.  With a resume that includes a parallel project with his own jazz quartet plus work with the Aspen Festival Orchestra he remains well equipped to ring the changes.  However, his latest release, the seven-track EP ‘After Hours’ (that will hit the streets on March 26) puts him unequivocally back into smooth jazz territory.  Not only that, with stellar input from Jonathan Fritzen, Paul Brown Darren Rahn, Roberto Vally and Ross Bolton, ‘After Hours’ proves to be something of a musical tour de force. Take for example Chambers’ own composition ‘In The Pocket’ that features both Brown on guitar plus Brown’s old sparring partner Roberto Vally on bass.  It is very much smooth jazz on the mellow side and when Brown stays around to mix the jazz classic ‘Groovin’ High’ it affords Chambers the opportunity to indulge his penchant for a straight ahead groove.  Elsewhere Darren Rahn’s work at the mixing desk makes the most of Greg’s edgy interpretation of the Michael Jackson blockbuster ‘Human Nature’ and he does much the same with one of Chambers’ own tunes, the romantically inclined ‘Your Place Or Mine’, that is right up there with the best that ‘After Hours’ has to offer. Later Brown returns on guitar for another of my personal favorites, the seductively smoky ‘Chelsea’s Song’, and although the splendid ‘On The Move’ glides along with a tasty streetwise swagger, it’s the wonderfully easy grooving title cut that steals the show.  With Fritzen on keys at his hugely immaculate best this one is a gem. http://smoothjazztherapy.typepad.com/my_weblog/2013/02/greg-chambers-after-hours.html

After Hours

Stefon Harris - African Tarantella

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:43
Size: 125,6 MB
Art: Front

( 6:03)  1. Thanks for the Beautiful Land on the Delta
( 6:00)  2. Portrait of Wellman Braud
( 3:55)  3. Bourbon Street Jingling Jollies
( 5:46)  4. Sunset and the Mocking Bird
( 4:57)  5. The Single Petal of a Rose
( 6:56)  6. Memoirs of a Frozen Summer
( 9:00)  7. African Tarantella
(10:19)  8. Dancing Enigma
( 1:43)  9. Untitled

Given the number of tribute albums coming out these days, it's refreshing to see an artist reference lesser-known works and take a road less-travelled in terms of approach. Vibraphonist Stefon Harris' African Tarantella enlists a streamlined instrumental configuration to rework excerpts from Duke Ellington's 1970 "The New Orleans Suite" and 1958 "The Queen's Suite," along with parts of his own commissioned "The Garner Meditations." The result is less cerebral than The Grand Unification Theory (Blue Note, 2003), but no less ambitious. The Grand Unification Theory was a sweeping work stylistically an impressive disc that left some listeners in the cold after his more approachable Blue Note releases A Cloud of Red Dust (1998) and BlackActionFigure (1999). For the past couple of years he's toured significantly on the heels of Evolution (2004) with his fusion-centric group Blackout, which has found him just as capable of a visceral groove as headier pursuits. African Tarantella, while unequivocally a mainstream record, is the happy marriage of both, making it his strongest effort to date. 

When you've got the right people, you can do anything. Drummer Terreon Gully and bassist Derrick Hodge Harris' Blackout bandmates have emerged, seemingly out of nowhere, in the past couple of years, to be a highly flexible rhythm team. They're capable of more traditional swing on "Portrait of Wellman Braud," but on "Thanks for the Beautiful Land on the Delta," Gully's light but modernistic backbeat updates Ellington for the new millennium. That's not, however, the only piece that illustrates Ellington's timeless potential. With a nonet featuring piano, trombone, flute, clarinet, viola and cello, Harris contemporizes Ellington harmonically, creating a distinctive textural alternative to Ellington's horn-heavy arrangements. There are enough instruments here to respect the crux of Ellington's work, but it feels lighter and more open-ended. On "The Single Petal of a Rose" Harris is accompanied only by Hodge, and this simultaneous mix of vibes and marimba makes for one of the disc's high points respecting the original, but displaying an even greater sense of calm. Harris' voice is the most dominant on the recording, but there are opportunities for others to shine as well. Greg Tardy's solo on "Thanks for the Beautiful Land on the Delta" positions him as one of the most important clarinettists to emerge since Don Byron. While mostly arranged, Anne Drummond's lush flute dominates Harris' own balladic "Memoirs of a Frozen Summer," while pianist Xavier Davis' solo on the up-tempo but never hurried title track suggests that he is like many of the players in the ensemble a relatively young talent worth watching. The trick to successful homage is reverence that remains personal. Between new arrangements of existing work and his own compositional contributions, Harris has created an album that pays tribute to a clear source of inspiration but also goes to places that Ellington might never have imagined. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/african-tarantella-dances-with-duke-stefon-harris-blue-note-records-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Stefon Harris: vibraphone, marimba; Xavier Davis: piano; Derrick Hodge: bass; Terreon Gully: drums; Anne Drummond: flute; Greg Tardy: clarinet; Steve Turre: trombone; Jonah Chung: viola; Louise Dublin: cello.

African Tarantella