Friday, May 24, 2019

Don Ellis - New Ideas

Styles: Trumpet, Piano Jazz
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:51
Size: 103,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:34)  1. Natural H.
(4:20)  2. Despair To Hope
(8:16)  3. Uh-huh
(5:05)  4. Four And Three
(7:57)  5. Imitation
(2:18)  6. Solo
(7:06)  7. Cock And Bull
(5:12)  8. Tragedy

On this 1961 quintet set for Prestige (with vibraphonist Al Francis, pianist Jaki Byard, bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Charlie Persip), Don Ellis experiments with time, new chord structures, and free improvisation; a highlight is his brief unaccompanied workout on the free-form "Solo." Ellis, who switches to piano during part of "Tragedy," already had a sound of his own, although he would change the direction of his music within a few years. Even over 40 years later, his thoughtful musical experiments of the early '60s are often quite fascinating to hear. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/new-ideas-mw0000203642

Personnel:  Don Ellis - trumpet, piano (8); Al Francis - vibraphone (tracks 1-5, 7 & 8); Jaki Byard - piano (tracks 1-5, 7 & 8); Ron Carter - bass (tracks 1-5, 7 & 8); Charlie Persip - drums (tracks 1-5, 7 & 8)

New Ideas

Lisa Ono - Bossa Carioca

Styles: Vocal, Bossa Nova, Latin Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:42
Size: 101,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:35)  1. So Danço Samba
(2:51)  2. Samba Do Soho
(3:42)  3. Chega De Saudade
(3:07)  4. Samba Do Carioca
(4:10)  5. Corcovado
(3:50)  6. Maria E Dia
(2:51)  7. Os Dois
(2:15)  8. Samba De Verão
(3:14)  9. Ela é Carioca
(3:48) 10. Diz A Ela
(3:31) 11. O Barquinho
(3:24) 12. Saudade
(4:23) 13. Palpite Infeliz

Lisa Ono is one of the best Japanese interpreters of contemporary bossa nova. A singer, violonista (acoustic guitar player), and songwriter, she has had her albums released internationally. To date, she has recorded 12 albums (Catupiry, 1989; Nanã, 1990; Menina, 1991; Serenata Carioca, 1992; Namorada, 1993; Esperança, 1994; Minha Saudade, 1995; Rio Bossa, 1996; Essência, 1997; Bossa Carioca, 1998; Dream, 1999; and Pretty World, 2000) with special appearances by top artists like Tom Jobim, Sivuca, Paulo Moura, Danilo Caymmi, and Toots Thielemans. Having lived in Brazil until she was ten, she took advantage of her father's connections he was a nightclub owner in the city of São Paulo and was Baden Powell's manager. Moving back to Japan, he opened the Saci Pererê nightclub, where Lisa Ono began to perform the Brazilian repertory, especially samba and bossa nova. She also founded the label Nanã, which promotes Brazilian music in Japan. ~ Alvaro Neder https://www.allmusic.com/artist/lisa-ono-mn0000413875/biography

Bossa Carioca

Gene Harris & The Three Sounds - Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow

Styles: Piano Jazz 
Year: 1973
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 83:20
Size: 191,4 MB
Art: Front

( 5:04)  1. On Green Dolphin Street
( 5:38)  2. Hymn To Freedom
( 9:04)  3. Trieste
( 9:09)  4. Love For Sale
( 8:46)  5. Something
(16:30)  6. How Insensitive
( 4:55)  7. Judy, Judy, Judy
( 5:31)  8. After Hours
( 6:08)  9. Sawin' Wood
( 6:22) 10. Lil' Darling
( 6:07) 11. Monk's Tune

Gene Harris in three different periods the past, present, and future served up here in a record issued under Gene's name as a leader, but which still continues the vibe of the later records by the Three Sounds! Most of the work is trio material with just Gene on acoustic piano, John Halton on acoustic and electric bass, and Carl Burnett on drums and percussion but there's a fluid, reaching sort of feel that definitely echoes some of the larger productions that Harris was recording at the time not full strings or heavy electrics, but a really complex approach to the material nonetheless! 

Tracks include "Judy Judy Judy", "Trieste", "How Insensitive", "Love For Sale", "Sawin Wood", "Something", and "Monk's Tune".  © 1996-2019, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/4647/Gene-Harris:Yesterday-Today-Tomorrow

Personnel:  Gene Harris - piano, arranger; Johnny Hatton - bass, electric bass; Carl Burnett - drums, percussion

Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow

George Duke - Jazz Moods: Round Midnight

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:35
Size: 112,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:47)  1. Sweet Baby
(2:58)  2. Stay Awhile
(4:26)  3. Love Reborn
(4:26)  4. Just for You
(6:00)  5. Corine
(4:15)  6. You (Are the Light)
(4:50)  7. Summer Breezin'
(4:34)  8. Touch And Go
(4:43)  9. I Need You Now
(4:09) 10. Thinking of You
(4:21) 11. Lady

Keyboardist/composer George Duke has been through a myriad of stylistic changes over his long career, from straight-ahead jazz to fusion to funk and R&B, not to mention being a key member of Frank Zappa's band for a while. The George Duke presented on this compilation is the slicker, more accessible one who enjoyed pop success as an R&B tunesmith and lite-jazz merchant. 

The smooth soul sound of the hit "Sweet Baby," recorded during Duke's partnership with Stanley Clarke, wouldn't sound out of place on a Maze album, while synth-flavored cuts "Corine" and "Love Reborn" are closer to Bob James/Dave Grusin territory. Duke took yet another detour in 1979 with his BRAZILIAN LOVE AFFAIR album, from which two cuts are included here, but the emphasis is on vocal-oriented mainstream R&B ballads delivered with a soft touch and a veteran craftsman's skill. https://www.allmusic.com/album/jazz-moods-round-midnight-mw0000745724

Jazz Moods: Round Midnight

Jimmy Smith - Talkin' Verve: Roots Of Acid Jazz

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:06
Size: 169,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:49)  1. Blues 3+1
(6:24)  2. Ode To Billie Joe
(2:16)  3. The Organ Grinder's Swing
(3:21)  4. The Ape Woman
(4:26)  5. Satisfaction
(6:42)  6. Funky Broadway
(8:42)  7. Mellow Mood
(3:57)  8. Burning Spear
(5:31)  9. One Mint Julep
(4:46) 10. Hobo Flats
(4:15) 11. Groove Drops
(5:27) 12. TNT
(4:46) 13. Blues In The Night
(7:40) 14. The Sermon

Designed to appeal to hip-hop and acid jazz fans, not jazz purists, Talkin' Verve: Roots of Acid Jazz collects 14 tracks Jimmy Smith cut for Verve during the late '60s. Comprised of pop covers and funky workouts, the music is "jazzy," not jazz there's little improvisation on the record, but there is a lot of hot vamping, with Smith creating dense, funky chord clusters and bluesy leads. 

It's music that is devoted to the groove, and while a few of these cuts fall flat "Ode to Billie Joe" has no funk in it, no matter how hard you try but for the most part Talkin' Verve is soulful fun. Not much of this sounds like acid jazz, especially since the rhythms are a little stiff, but it's enjoyable lite funk, and it's more palatable in the compilation than it is on their original albums. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine https://www.allmusic.com/album/talkin-verve-roots-of-acid-jazz-mw0000646824

Personnel:  James Oscar "Jimmy" Smith - vocals, organ; Johnny Pate, Oliver Nelson, Lalo Schifrin - arranger, conductor; Jerry Dodgion - alto saxophone, reeds; George Dorsey - alto saxophone; Budd Johnson, Zoot Sims - tenor saxophone; Marvin Halladay - baritone saxophone; Snooky Young - trumpet, flugelhorn; Jimmy Maxwell, Joe Newman, Clark Terry – trumpet; Bill Berry – flugelhorn; Wayne Andre, Bernie Powell, Billy Byers, Ernie Tack, Quentin Jackson, Urbie Green – trombone; Paul Faulise - bass trombone; Donald Corrado, Earl Chapin, Bill Correa - French horn; Don Butterfield – tuba;  Jerome Richardson, Plas Johnson – reeds; Billy Butler, Kenny Burrell, Thornell Schwartz, Wes Montgomery, Bill Suyker – guitar; Bob Bushnell, Ben Tucker, Carol Kaye – bass; Donald Dean, Grady Tate, Herbie Lovelle, Bernard "Pretty" Purdie, Larry Bunker, Mel Lewis, Bill Rodriguez – drums; Victor Pantoja, Ray Barretto – congas; George Devens, Bobby Rosengarden, Phil Kraus - percussion

Talkin' Verve: Roots Of Acid Jazz

Thursday, May 23, 2019

Ann-Margret - Let Me Entertain You

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:57
Size: 133,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:11)  1. Bye Bye Birdie - From the Columbia Pictures Production "Bye Bye Birdie"
(2:26)  2. Let Me Entertain You - From the Warner Brothers Movie "Gypsy"
(2:56)  3. Lovin' Spree
(2:09)  4. There'll Be Some Changes Made
(2:53)  5. Something to Think About - From the 20th Century Fox Movie "The Pleasure Seekers"
(2:41)  6. Thirteen Men
(2:36)  7. Romance in the Dark
(2:40)  8. The Good Life (From the Paramount Movie "The Swinger")
(2:05)  9. Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone
(2:48) 10. What Am I Supposed to Do
(2:45) 11. That's What I Like
(2:08) 12. Slowly
(2:26) 13. Heartbreak Hotel
(3:45) 14. The Lady Loves Me (from the MGM movie soundtrack "Viva Las Vegas")
(3:08) 15. C'est si bon
(2:59) 16. I Wanna Be Loved - Sung in the Paramount Picture "The Swinger"
(2:39) 17. I Just Don't Understand
(3:28) 18. More Than You Know
(3:12) 19. Personality
(2:17) 20. It Do Me So Good
(2:36) 21. As Long as He Needs Me (From "Oliver!")

No one would argue that Ann-Marget's principal entertainment skill was as a vocalist. So it may seem a bit finicky to point out that this well-packaged, 21-track retrospective of recordings from the early and mid-'60s actually is not the best anthology of her music. That honor belongs to The Many Moods of Ann-Margret (on the Australian Raven label), whose selection is considerably more pop/rock-oriented (which is not to say that it rocks very hard). Let Me Entertain You focuses more on her sultry sex-kitten pieces, which lean more toward pop-jazz and standards. Only half a dozen of the selections overlap with The Many Moods of Ann-Margret, though, so fans have the option of picking up two compilations which share the wealth fairly equitably. This (like the Australian import comp) has her two most famous numbers, "Bye Bye Birdie" and her lone Top 20 hit, "I Just Don't Understand." Much of the rest cranks up the floor-show ambience considerably, the saucy version of "C'est Si Bon" being a special highlight. ~ Richie Unterberger https://www.allmusic.com/album/let-me-entertain-you-mw0000185724

Let Me Entertain You

Stephen Riley - Hold 'Em Joe

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:35
Size: 153,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:58)  1. I Never Knew
(5:21)  2. Where or When
(5:17)  3. Hold 'Em Joe
(7:37)  4. Darn That Dream
(4:00)  5. Three Little Words
(7:18)  6. Woody 'N' You
(6:59)  7. Almost Like Being in Love
(7:31)  8. You've Changed
(3:59)  9. I'm an Old Cowhand
(7:02) 10. Ghost of a Chance
(6:28) 11. The Song Is You

No need to hold 'em here as tenorist Stephen Riley is warmly fluid, right out of the gate working in a loose trio formation that gives him a huge amount of space to express himself! Riley's got this crispy tone, but one that's also down to earth able to hit modern moments, yet never too in love with itself to forget to swing which Stephen does nicely in the company of Jay Anderson on bass and Adam Nussbaum on drums! There's a depth of tenor feeling that goes back to the early modern innovators but the setting is also hipper than a straighter swing date, too and without the piano, Riley really opens up tunes that include "Woody N You", "Hold Em Joe", "I Never Knew", "The Song Is You", "You've Changed", and "Three Little Words".  © 1996-2019, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/897027/Stephen-Riley:Hold-Em-Joe

Personnel:Tenor Saxophone – Stephen Riley; Bass – Jay Anderson; Drums – Adam Nussbaum

Hold 'Em Joe

McCoy Tyner - Plays John Coltrane At The Village Vanguard

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:22
Size: 152,4 MB
Art: Front

(12:17)  1. Naima
( 7:07)  2. Moment's Notice
(12:27)  3. Crescent
( 3:43)  4. After The Rain
(12:18)  5. Afro Blue
(11:08)  6. I Want To Talk About You
( 7:20)  7. Mr. Day

First off, for those who might assume this record was some never-before released Tyner Impulse record from the 60s please calm down...it's actually a Tyner record of the recent era when he recorded for Impulse, evidently residue from the contract he was under before having moved onto Telarc. So-not the Tyner of such memorable records as Today and Tommorrow or Inception, not that classic 60s Impulse recorded sound, but...a good record nonetheless and one that has its own certain value both in the Tyner discography and in the realm of Trane tribute records. This live set from the Village Vanguard was recorded in 1997 on John Coltrane's 71st birthday (the fact we are now in the annum of his 75th birthday makes it all the more timely). Tyner is accompanied here by the excellent bassist, George Mraz, and the spunky rhthymic force of Al Foster on drums. Both players have been part of the McCoy Tyner trio in recent years as Tyner has branched out from having only longtime associates Avery Sharpe and Aaron Scott in his trio. Foster, in fact, was featured on a recent Telarc trio record along with the bassist Stanley Clarke. These trio mates serve McCoy Tyner well, indeed, better than Sharpe and Scott do but that's no major revelation; people have observed for years that Tyner's trio didn't exactly feature musicians on his same footing. In any event, what the gains are made are obvious in terms of musicianship. Mraz is inobtrusive and respectful of McCoy's own volume level, providing uncomplicated but solid basslines, while Al Foster is simply exemplary in the way that he will constantly stir up bluster but never overwhelm. 

Generally speaking then-these musicians stay out of Tyner's way and only do what is needed to accentuate his playing. There's a certain conservatism here, but Tyner's former trio, in contrast, often had the feeling of a rock act because the three musicians tended to move less as a unit, more as one soloist after another. The trio's program of tunes and compositions made famous by Trane is well-rounded but there's nothing faintly offbeat in terms of tune selection. "Mr Day," also know as "Ug 'Gainst the Wall" is the closest thing, as a rather southern-sounding blues penned by Trane. Nevertheless, the classic Trane repertoire is well-represented here with thoughtful, stately renditions of "Naima," "I Want to Talk About You," and "After the Rain." A case could be made that the set is too ballad-heavy, but then you realize one isn't in real position to argue with how Tyner wants to honor Trane, his old boss. "Crescent" and "Afro Blue" are the two cuts which feature the McCoy Tyner many think of-driving, banging fifths in the left hand, and sideways right-hand work that sounds at somewhere around Mach 5. That said, "Afro Blue" is probably the choice cut on the record; great Mraz solo, and dramatic build-ups here. "Mr Day" aka "Up Against the Wall"-is fine for its chordal dynamism-we see here clearly why McCoy's left hand is the envy of so many jazz pianists. Finally-"Moment's Notice" stands as the only track that seems somewhat insubstantial. Overall, this set is a good representative of late-period Tyner some feel that is a qualification in itself; however to longtime Tyner fans who still appreciate his work, or to those new to this dramatic style of jazz piano, this record should provide some decent listening. It's not essential as a Trane tribute record (as Impulse(Verve) has tried to market it)-though. There are much more important Trane tribute records out there, including several that McCoy has been involved with himself. ~ AAJ Staff https://www.allaboutjazz.com/plays-john-coltrane-at-the-village-vanguard-mccoy-tyner-universal-music-group-review-by-aaj-staff.php?width=1920

Personnel: McCoy Tyner-Piano. George Mraz-Bass. Al Foster-drums.

Plays John Coltrane At The Village Vanguard

Billy Cobham - Drum'n'voice - All that groove

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:04
Size: 125,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:32)  1. Africa's Sounds
(4:46)  2. Shadow
(7:44)  3. Red Baron
(4:41)  4. Okky Dokky
(5:02)  5. Jah Spirit
(4:58)  6. I Want You Back
(5:32)  7. Sensations
(6:26)  8. Leaving Now
(5:11)  9. Hands Up!
(5:07) 10. Now That You've Gone

Generally acclaimed as fusion's greatest drummer, Billy Cobham's explosive technique powered some of the genre's most important early recordings including groundbreaking efforts by Miles Davis and the Mahavishnu Orchestra before he became an accomplished bandleader in his own right. At his best, Cobham harnessed his amazing dexterity into thundering, high-octane hybrids of jazz complexity and rock & roll aggression. He was capable of subtler, funkier grooves on the one hand, and awe-inspiring solo improvisations on the other; in fact, his technical virtuosity was such that his flash could sometimes overwhelm his music. After debuting as a leader with the classic Spectrum in 1973, Cobham spent most of fusion's glory days recording for Atlantic; briefer stints on CBS, Elektra, and GRP followed, and by the mid-'80s, Cobham was de-emphasizing his own bands in favor of session and sideman work. Even so, he continued to record for various small labels with some regularity. William C. Cobham was born May 16, 1944, in Panama, where as a very young child he became fascinated with the percussion instruments his cousins played. When Cobham was three, his family moved to New York City, and at age eight he made his performance debut with his father. He honed his percussion skills in a drum-and-bugle corps outfit called the St. Catherine's Queensmen, and attended New York's prestigious High School of Music and Art, graduating in 1962. From 1965 to 1968, he served as a percussionist in the U.S. Army Band, and after his release, he was hired as the new drummer in hard bop pianist Horace Silver's band. 

Cobham toured the U.S. and Europe with Silver in 1968, and also moonlighted with Stanley Turrentine, Shirley Scott, and George Benson. After eight months with Silver, Cobham departed to join the early jazz-rock combo Dreams in 1969, which also featured the Brecker brothers and guitarist John Abercrombie. From there, he landed a job in Miles Davis' new fusion ensemble, and played a small part in the seminal Bitches Brew sessions; he also appeared more prominently on several other Davis albums of the time, including more aggressive classics like Live-Evil and A Tribute to Jack Johnson. Cobham and guitarist John McLaughlin split off from Davis' group to pursue a harder rocking brand of fusion in the Mahavishnu Orchestra, which debuted in 1971 with the seminal The Inner Mounting Flame. With Mahavishnu, Cobham's fiery intensity was given its fullest airing yet, and his extraordinary technique influenced not only countless fusioneers in his wake, but also quite a few prog rock drummers who were aiming for similarly challenging musical territory. The 1972 follow-up Birds of Fire cemented his reputation, and by this time he had also become something of an unofficial in-house drummer for Creed Taylor's CTI label, known for a smoother, more polished style of fusion; here Cobham backed musicians like George Benson, Stanley Turrentine, Freddie Hubbard, Hubert Laws, and Grover Washington, Jr. Unfortunately, the volatile group chemistry that made Mahavishnu's recordings so exciting also carried over into real life and the original lineup disbanded in 1973. Deciding to make a go of it on his own, Cobham formed his own band, Spectrum (which initially featured ex-Mahavishnu cohort Jan Hammer on keyboards), and signed with Atlantic. 

His debut as a leader, also called Spectrum, was released in 1973, showcasing an exciting blend of jazz, funk, and rock that benefited from the presence of guitarists John Scofield and Tommy Bolin (the latter better known for his rock recordings); it also found Cobham experimenting a bit with electronic percussion. Spectrum is still generally acknowledged as the high point of Cobham's solo career, and holds up quite well today. Cobham followed Spectrum with a series of LPs on Atlantic that, like fusion itself, grew increasingly smoother and more commercial as the '70s wore on. For his second album, 1974's Crosswinds, ex-Dreams mate John Abercrombie joined the band, as did keyboardist George Duke, who would become a frequent Cobham collaborator over the years; that same year's performance at Montreux produced the live Shabazz.  After Total Eclipse, Cobham moved more explicitly into commercial jazz-funk with 1975's A Funky Thide of Sings, which featured an expanded horn section. He pared the group back down for the improved Life and Times in 1976, and also played Montreux again, in tandem with Duke. In 1977, Cobham switched to the CBS label, which set him firmly on the path of commercial accessibility. In addition to his records as a leader, he'd remained highly active as a session drummer, and began to focus on that side of his career even more in the late '70s. By 1980, he was done with CBS and began pursuing side opportunities, playing live with the Grateful Dead and Jack Bruce, as well as the Saturday Night Live band. He drummed for the Grateful Dead side project Bobby & the Midnites in 1982, and recorded three albums for Elektra in the early '80s with his new quartet the Glass Menagerie. 

During the mid-'80s, he cut three commercially oriented LPs for GRP, and spent the next few years stepping up his international touring and absorbing a healthy dose of world music. He played Peter Gabriel's 1992 WOMAD Festival, and the following year recorded The Traveler, inspired by a sojourn in Brazil. In 1996, he formed a more acoustic-oriented quartet called Nordic with three Norwegian musicians; the following year, he also started a German-based fusion outfit called Paradox. In 1998, Cobham began playing with a group called Jazz Is Dead, which devoted itself to jazz reinterpretations of Grateful Dead material; their album Blue Light Rain proved fairly popular among Deadheads. As Cobham maintained his touring, session, and bandleading activities, Rhino released the excellent two-CD retrospective Rudiments: The Billy Cobham Anthology in 2001. ~ Steve Huey https://www.allmusic.com/artist/billy-cobham-mn0000767741/biography


Personnel: Drums – Billy Cobham; Backing Vocals – Dora Nicolosi (tracks: 2, 10), Giuseppe Neri (tracks: 10), Gregg Brown (2) (tracks: 2), Troy Parrish (tracks: 10); Bass – Rossana Nicolosi (tracks: 2 to 4, 6, 7, 9, 10); Cello – Luca De Muro (tracks: 7, 9); Double Bass – Eddie Gomez (tracks: 8), Riccardo Fioravanti (tracks: 1, 5); Electric Piano – Pino Nicolosi (tracks: 1, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9, 10); Flugelhorn – Fabrizio Bosso (tracks: 4); Guitar – Lino Nicolosi (tracks: 2 to 6, 9, 10); Guitar [Wha Wha Guitar] – Frank Malanga; Keyboards – Pino Nicolosi (tracks: 1 to 5, 7 to 10); Organ [Hammond B3] – Pino Nicolosi (tracks: 2, 4, 9, 10); Organ [Hammond L100] – Pino Nicolosi (tracks: 3, 6); Percussion – Marco Fadda; Piano – Pino Nicolosi (tracks: 4, 8); Soprano Saxophone – Emanuele Cisi (tracks: 4, 8); Tenor Saxophone – Emanuele Cisi (tracks: 1, 2, 9); Trombone – Leonardo Govin (tracks: 4, 7, 9); Trumpet – Amik Guerra (tracks: 4, 7), Fabrizio Bosso (tracks: 2, 5, 7, 9); Viola – Lorenzo Ravazzani (tracks: 7, 9); Violin – Giorgio Molteni (tracks: 7, 9); Vocals – Dora Nicolosi (tracks: 8, 10), Gregg Brown (2) (tracks: 2, 5); Vocals, Backing Vocals – Ricky Bailey (tracks: 6); Voice – Troy Parrish (tracks: 3, 7).

Drum'n'voice - All that groove

Wednesday, May 22, 2019

Thelonious Monk - Thelonious Alone in San Francisco

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1959
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:10
Size: 104,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:47)  1. Blue Monk
(4:00)  2. Ruby, My Dear
(3:40)  3. Round Lights
(5:40)  4. Everything Happens to Me
(4:05)  5. You Took the Words Right Out of My Heart
(3:40)  6. Bluehawk
(3:54)  7. Pannonica
(2:45)  8. Remember
(4:22)  9. There's Danger in Your Eyes, Cherie (take 2)
(5:09) 10. Reflections
(4:03) 11. There's Danger in Your Eyes, Cherie (take 1)

Thelonious Monk's solo recordings offer fascinating insight into the compositional and improvisational talents of one of music's true oddballs, and Alone In San Francisco is widely considered to be his best in this format.Unencumbered by bass and drums, Monk is at his most introspective, taking advantage of the liquid tempo to patiently work though a series of originals and a few pop songs from his childhood, all of which, of course, are rendered in his inimitable style. 

Monk's method of creation is like a sculptor working with a hammer and chisel: very methodical and precise, yet leaving a lot of dust on the floor. It's a wonder that Monk can create such beauty out of disjointed rhythms and seemingly errant notes, but there's no denying that songs like "Pannonica and "Ruby My Dear are elegant gems in their own right. There are also two new tunes, "Bluehawk and "Round Lights. While classics like Brilliant Corners will always be the first albums that come to mind with Monk, solo recordings like Alone In San Francisco display a different side of the pianist and are worth exploring. ~ David Rickert https://www.allaboutjazz.com/thelonious-alone-in-san-francisco-thelonious-monk-fantasy-jazz-review-by-david-rickert.php

Personnel: Thelonious Monk: solo piano.

Thelonious Alone in San Francisco

Catherine Russell - Cat

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:59
Size: 102,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:51)  1. Sad Lover Blues
(2:43)  2. Can't We Be Friends
(2:17)  3. The Late, Late Show
(3:46)  4. Where Can I Go Without You
(2:35)  5. Put Me Down Easy
(2:48)  6. My Man's An Undertaker
(2:42)  7. Blue Memories
(2:26)  8. Juneteenth Jamboree - Royal Garden Blues
(3:00)  9. Back O Town Blues
(3:13) 10. Someday You'll Want Me To Want You
(2:46) 11. The Poker
(2:23) 12. You Were Made For Me
(2:37) 13. Darn That Dream
(2:56) 14. Deep In a Dream
(3:49) 15. New Speedway Boogie

The world is never short of new jazz/blues singers, but with Cat, Catherine Russell stands out from the crowd. The child of very musical parents, she's inherited their genes, but added her individuality, which can move from the pop-blues of Sam Cooke's "You Were Made for Me" (one of two Cooke songs here, both with real identity) to the New Orleans style of "Juneteenth Jamboree." Interesting touches in the arrangements help the album, too, such as the mandolin on "Sad Lover Blues" (it features elsewhere, too) or the pedal steel that colors "The Late, Late Show." Russell isn't a belter. She prefers to shade her material and does it well. There are a few surprising choices, the most obvious being "New Speedway Boogie," the cover of a Grateful Dead song that more or less works (they were so idiosyncratic that anything written specifically for them seems a little misplaced done by anyone else), but it's a joy to hear someone singing outside the usual box of standards. Whether she'll become a major star remains in the lap of the gods. But she's definitely one of the more adventurous and friendly singers mining the seam of jazz-blues. ~ Chris Nickson https://www.allmusic.com/album/cat-mw0000408202

Cat

Curtis Fuller - Images of Curtis Fuller

Styles: Trombone Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:58
Size: 71,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:14)  1. Accident
(5:36)  2. Darryl's Minor
(7:08)  3. Be Back Ta-Reckla
(9:01)  4. Judyful
(4:58)  5. New Date

Curtis Fuller was born in Detroit, Michigan in 1934. He came to music late, playing the baritone horn in high school and switching to the trombone at age 16. Detroit, at the time, was the breeding ground for an astonishing pool of fresh, highly individual talent. Milt Jackson and Hank Jones had already gone to New York and made their names. But coming of age in Detroit in the early fifties were Fuller, Donald Byrd, Elvin and Thad Jones, Paul Chambers, Louis Hayes, Kenny Burrell, Barry Harris, Pepper Adams, Yusef Lateef, Sonny Red, Hugh Lawson, Doug Watkins, Tommy Flanagan and many others who would make the mid- decade migration to New York and eventually international recognition. In 1953, Curtis left the local scene to serve his two-year stint in the army, where he met and played with Cannonball Adderley and Junior Mance among others. When he returned home, he began working with Yusef Lateef's quintet. The Lateef quintet came to New York in April 1957 to record two albums for Savoy and a third produced by Dizzy Gillespie for Verve. Word of Curtis's talent spread rapidly around New York. Although he initially came under the spell of J.J. Johnson and listed Jimmy Cleveland, Bob Brookmeyer and Urbie Green among his favorites, Fuller came to New York at the age of 22 with a unique style and sound. In May, after being in town for about a month, he recorded with Paul Quinchette and made his first albums as a leader: two quintet albums for Prestige with Sonny Red featured on alto. Like the Blue Note debuts by Kenny Burrell and Thad Jones the prior year, he used mostly transplanted Detroit players. Blue Note's Alfred Lion had also heard about Fuller and went to see him at the Cafe bohemia with Miles Davis's sextet. Curtis joined the Blue Note family, appearing on a Clifford Jordan date on June 2 and making his own, The Opener, with Hank Mobley, on June 16. That summer Curtis was everywhere. “Alfred brought me into dates with Jimmy Smith and Bud Powell. And then we did Blue Train with John Coltrane. And I became the only trombone soloist to record with those three artists.” 

So after eight months in New York, Curtis Fuller had made six albums as a leader and appeared on 15 others. Even in those prolific times, that's pretty impressive for a newly-arrived trombonist. At the end of '58, Benny Golson asked Curtis to share the front line for a Riverside blowing date entitled “The Other Side Of Benny Golson,” which put the emphasis on Benny's tenor playing rather than his composing and arranging. The chemistry between these two hornmen clicked, and they would record an album under Curtis's name for Savoy [Blues-ette] and three under Benny's name for Prestige in 1959 with various rhythm sections. They also made two Fuller albums for Savoy with trumpet added to the front line, which laid the groundwork for the creation of the Jazztet. In February 1960, the Jazztet, a sextet under the leadership of Benny Golson and Art Farmer, made their first album. Curtis Fuller was the trombonist and McCoy Tyner made his recording debut as the pianist. The Jazztet became a very successful unit from the start, but Fuller and Tyner left a few months into the life of the band. They were headed in other directions. In the summer of '61, Curtis made Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers a sextet for the first time. The combined writing and playing talents of Fuller, Freddie Hubbard, Wayne Shorter and Cedar Walton, driven by Blakey and Jymie Meritt (later Reggie Workman), created one of the most exciting and distinctive bands in the history of hard bop. Curtis stayed with the Jazz Messengers until February 1965. He spent the rest of that decade freelancing around New York, adding his beautiful sound to a number of Blue Note dates such as Lee Morgan's Tom Cat, Hank Mobley's A Caddy For Daddy, Joe Henderson's Mode For Joe and Wayne Shorter's Schizophrenia. After some health problems, Curtis is active again. What is as remarkable about Curtis Fuller as his lyrical improvising and ingenious writing, is his personality. On the road, on stage, or in the studio, Curtis is a relaxed professional who lifts every situation with his inredible sense of humor and his natural sparkle. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/curtisfuller

Personnel:  Trombone – Curtis Fuller; Bass – Jimmy Garrison (tracks: 1, 5), Milt Hinton (tracks: 2 to 4;  Drums – Bobby Donaldson (tracks: 2 to 4), Clifford Jarvis (tracks: 1, 5); Piano – McCoy Tyner; Tenor Saxophone, Flute – Yusef Lateef;  Trumpet – Lee Morgan (tracks: 2 to 4), Wilbur Harden (tracks: 1, 5)

Images of Curtis Fuller

V.A.- The Big Band Legends: Go Harlem Swing! Vol.1

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:55
Size: 127,6 MB
Art: Front

(2:43)  1. Comin' Home
(3:13)  2. Love Jumped Out
(3:06)  3. Playboy
(2:54)  4. Just You, Just Me
(3:03)  5. One O' Clock Jump
(3:11)  6. Flying Home
(2:47)  7. Main Stem
(3:06)  8. It's Sand Man
(2:38)  9. Forever Blue
(2:45) 10. Number 19
(3:01) 11. A-Tisket, a-Tasket
(2:44) 12. Slide, Hamp, Slide
(2:59) 13. Harlem Air Shaft
(2:36) 14. Daydreaming
(2:37) 15. Seventh Avenue Express
(3:04) 16. Father Steps In
(6:00) 17. Air Mail Special
(2:20) 18. Xyz

Go Harlem Swing, Vol. 1

Tuesday, May 21, 2019

Wallace Roney - If Only for One Night

Styles: Trumpet Jazz 
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:36
Size: 141,5 MB
Art: Front

(11:34)  1. Quadrant
( 5:48)  2. If Only for One Night
( 5:48)  3. Only with You
(10:31)  4. I Have a Dream
( 8:16)  5. Metropolis
( 7:49)  6. Let's Wait Awhile
( 6:40)  7. I Love What We Make Together
( 5:08)  8. FMS

Wallace Roney's six-year association with HighNote beginning with Prototype (2004), followed by Mystikal (2005), and culminating with Jazz (2007) has allowed the trumpeter to amass a body of work far more indicative of where he's always wanted to be than his largely mainstream run with Muse in the early 1990s. If Only for One Night culled from a four-night run at New York's Iridium continues to paint a broader picture of an artist for whom the lifelong arc of Miles Davis remains an influence, but one distanced from mere mimicry through greater technical facility and an all-encompassing approach to collating a broad set of interests that's in sharp contrast with Davis' more linear evolutionary approach. Most telling is Roney's statement in Francis Davis' liner notes. "I'm not sure Miles had to give up what he already had to get where he was going," says Roney, referencing Davis' well-documented and lifelong rejection of what came before. Unlike most for whom the spirit of Davis looms large, rather than focusing on a single period, Roney integrates aspects spanning Davis' four-decade run, as well as touchstones from the work of John Coltrane and Herbie Hancock. With longtime musical partner/brother/saxophonist Antoine Roney and bassist Rashaan Carter back from Jazz, what's most striking is how seamlessly Roney's quintet navigates the broad stylistic markers demanded by both the original material and covers ranging from Hancock's still modernistic-sounding "I Have a Dream," from The Prisoner (Blue Note, 1969) to a darker look at Brenda Russell's lyrical title track (made famous by Luther Vandross), and Tony Williams' "Only With You," which rivals the rhythmic intensity and effervescent swing of the original on Angel Street (Blue Note, 1988), when Roney was a member of the late drummer's quintet. 

Roney's quintet is as comfortable with an even fierier take of Prototype's fusion-esque "Quadrant" as it is the intensely swinging "Metropolis," from No Room For Argument (Stretch, 2000) two originals that demonstrate the trumpeter's acute ability to fashion an eclectic nexus one clearly hidden to his mentor where all his innovations meet. Roney's chops have never been more exhilarating or tastefully focused, whether waxing prolific on "Metrolopis" or more intently thematic on his closing, a capella "FMS." The group's youngest members demonstrate Roney's ever-astute skill in locating unknown but remarkable talent. Cuban keyboardist Aruán Ortiz organically combines synth washes, choppy organ and Hancock-like clavinet to accompany Wallace and Antoine Roney's fiercely funkified solos on "Quadrant," but turns to acoustic piano for his own impressive solo, while drummer Kush Abadey merges contemporary rhythms and post-bop elasticity throughout, his fluid, less-direct approach turning Davis' "I Love What We Do Together" (previously only recorded as a demo by Davis in the mid-'80s) from what might have been slicker fare into something that relentlessly grows from a simmer to a boil. With even greater emphasis on high powered blowing and group chemistry than recent studio efforts, If Only for One Night is the live album Roney's been harboring for the past several years and further consolidation of where he's been...and where he's going. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/if-only-for-one-night-wallace-roney-highnote-records-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Wallace Roney: trumpet; Antoine Roney: soprano and tenor saxophones, bass clarinet; Aruán Ortiz: keyboards; Rashaan Carter: bass; Kush Abadey: drums.

If Only for One Night

Sathima Bea Benjamin - Southern Touch

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:34
Size: 100,9 MB
Art: Front

(8:57)  1. Loveless Love / Careless Love
(4:55)  2. Street of Dreams
(4:01)  3. I've Heard That Song Before
(5:04)  4. I'm Glad There Is You
(5:23)  5. One Alone
(5:10)  6. Together
(3:32)  7. I Let a Song Go Out of My Heart
(6:31)  8. Lush Life

Evocative, expressive ballads and love songs done by wonderful vocalist Satima Bea Benjamin, wife of Abdullah Ibrahim. She sings without a trace of self-indulgence and has the right touch to make even the most sentimental lyric seem convincing and genuine. 
~ Ron Wynn https://www.allmusic.com/album/southern-touch-mw0000078655

Southern Touch

Yusef Lateef - Psychicemotus

Styles: Flute, Saxophone And Tambourine Jazz 
Year: 1966
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:26
Size: 90,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:04)  1. Psychicemotus
(4:00)  2. Bamboo Flute Blues
(4:29)  3. Semiocto
(6:29)  4. Why Do I Love You?
(3:26)  5. First Gymnopedie
(6:32)  6. Medula Sonata
(4:39)  7. I'll Always Be In Love With You
(4:45)  8. Ain't Misbehavin'

This is a welcome reissue of one of a series of fine Impulse! albums by multi-instrumentalist Yusef Lateef that have never taken their deserved place among the major recordings of the '60s. I suspect part of the reason for their neglect has to do with the image, helped by both the Impulse!, and later Atlantic labels, in portraying Lateef as a purveyor of hopelessly arcane musical exotica. The weird title of this album doesn't help any more than the 2005 front cover copy crowing about how this music is "mysterious and uncategorizable." I find it nothing of the sort. Psychicemotus is quite available to any jazz fan with open ears, and unmysterious to anyone who can understand that African and Asian instruments and musical concepts have long been embraced and integrated into jazz by Lateef, who also has a long history in integrating R&B into jazz. Lateef's album is simply wildly eclectic and often driven by a variety of flutes. He handles Erik Satie's "First Gymnopedie" with a devout classical tone that's faithful to the graceful meditative structure of the original. On the other hand, "Bamboo Flute Blues" has some unusual tones vocalized on a F pentatonic scale called "primitive" in the original liner notes! but the shape of the piece is derived from traditional New Orleans jazz and gospel. 

Workouts on tenor sax like "I'll Always Be In Love With You" have a gruff sweetness to them that makes Lateef fit nicely in the same musical universe as Sonny Rollins. Much of the pleasure of this 1965 album is also derived from the superlative support given Lateef by bassist Reggie Workman, the obscure pianist George Arvanitas, and the amazingly underrated drummer James Black. The lightness and playfulness of the musical experimentation here is a massive contrast to much of what the Impulse! label was recording in the '60s, which serves as a reminder that new jazz then, as now, need not be darkly moody in order to make a mind and heart-expanding statement. ~ Norman Weinstein https://www.allaboutjazz.com/psychicemotus-yusef-lateef-impulse-review-by-norman-weinstein.php

Personnel: Yusef Lateef: flutes, tenor sax, tambourine; George Arvanitas: piano; Reggie Workman: bass; James Black: drums, percussion.

Psychicemotus

Roy Haynes - Keeping Up

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 114:45
Size: 266,4 MB
Art: Front

( 3:46)  1. As Long as There's Music
( 5:59)  2. Gone Again
( 1:58)  3. Well Now
( 7:00)  4. Sweet and Lovely
( 4:24)  5. Reflection
( 6:41)  6. Moon Ray
( 5:31)  7. Hagnes
( 7:29)  8. Down Home
( 8:53)  9. Solitaire
( 4:24) 10. Sneaking Around
( 3:31) 11. Some Other Spring
( 7:06) 12. Speak Low
( 6:34) 13. Con Alma
(11:21) 14. After Hours
( 5:50) 15. If I Should Lose You
( 6:25) 16. Sugar Ray
( 4:02) 17. Our Delight
( 7:02) 18. Cymbalism
( 6:40) 19. Fly Me to the Moon

A veteran drummer long overshadowed by others, but finally gaining recognition for his talents and versatility, Roy Haynes has been a major player since the 1940s. He worked early on with the Sabby Lewis big band, Frankie Newton, Luis Russell (1945-1947), and Lester Young (1947-1949). After some engagements with Kai Winding, Haynes was a member of the Charlie Parker Quintet (1949-1952); he also recorded during this era with Bud Powell, Wardell Gray, and Stan Getz. Haynes toured the world with Sarah Vaughan (1953-1958); played with Thelonious Monk in 1958; led his own group; and gigged with George Shearing, Lennie Tristano, Eric Dolphy, and Getz (1961). He was Elvin Jones' occasional substitute with John Coltrane's classic quartet during 1961-1965, toured with Getz (1965-1967), and was with Gary Burton (1967-1968). In addition to touring with Chick Corea (1981 and 1984) and Pat Metheny (1989-1990), Haynes has led his own Hip Ensemble on and off during the past several decades. When one considers that he has also gigged with Miles Davis, Art Pepper, Horace Tapscott, and Dizzy Gillespie, it is fair to say that Haynes has played with about everyone. He led dates for EmArcy and Swing (both in 1954), New Jazz (1958 and 1960), Impulse (a 1962 quartet album with Roland Kirk), Pacific Jazz, Mainstream, Galaxy, Dreyfus, Evidence, and Storyville. In 1994, Haynes was awarded the Danish Jazzpar prize, and two years later, he received the prestigious French Chevalier des l'Ordres Artes et des Lettres. In the late '90s, Haynes formed a trio with pianist Danilo Perez and bassist John Pattitucci, and they released their debut album, The Roy Haynes Trio Featuring Danilo Perez & John Pattitucci, in early 2000 on Verve. Haynes' son Graham is an excellent cornetist. Haynes paid tribute to Charlie Parker in 2001 with Birds of a Feather, his fourth release for the Dreyfus Jazz label, which was subsequently nominated for a Grammy in 2002; Fountain of Youth followed two years later. Also released in 2004, Quiet Fire compiled two of his prior releases for Galaxy (1977's Thank You Thank You and 1978's Vistalite) into one back-to-back record. Whereas appeared in mid-2006, and it earned Haynes a Grammy nomination for Best Jazz Instrumental Solo. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/roy-haynes-mn0000290464/biography

Keeping Up

Monday, May 20, 2019

Sol Yaged - On Bleecker Street

Styles: Clarinet Jazz 
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 163:19
Size: 376,5 MB
Art: Front

(7:03)  1. Ain't Misbehavin'
(4:04)  2. Body and Soul
(5:42)  3. Candy
(3:09)  4. Cocktails for Two
(3:51)  5. Darn That Dream
(4:27)  6. Dearly Beloved
(3:51)  7. Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans
(4:27)  8. A Foggy Day
(3:35)  9. Frenesi
(5:25) 10. Georgia on My Mind
(6:50) 11. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
(5:03) 12. I Don't Want to Walk Without You
(6:05) 13. I Hadn't Anyone Till You
(5:34) 14. If I Had You
(5:46) 15. I'm Confessin'
(6:22) 16. Isn't It Romantic
(3:01) 17. I've Got a Crush on You
(5:07) 18. June Night
(6:02) 19. Let's Do It
(5:10) 20. Mean to Me
(4:44) 21. More Than You Know
(4:24) 22. My Old Flame
(5:37) 23. Oh Lady Be Good
(5:01) 24. Perfidia
(2:51) 25. Polka Dots and Moonbeams
(4:22) 26. Sugar
(6:53) 27. On the Sunny Side of the Street
(4:00) 28. Its the Talk of the Town
(3:49) 29. The Very Thought of You
(3:20) 30. They Can't Take That Away from Me
(7:54) 31. Willow Weep for Me
(3:35) 32. Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams
(5:57) 33. You'd Be so Nice to Come Home To

Sol Yaged (born December 8, 1922) is an American jazz clarinetist who was strongly influenced by Benny Goodman. Yaged was born in Coney Island, Brooklyn, and began playing clarinet at the age of 12 after hearing Goodman's broadcasts for Nabisco in 1935. He studied under a clarinetist from the New York Philharmonic; but turned down a classical career to play jazz in New York City nightclubs, such as Jimmy Ryan's and the Swing Club. Yaged became a Goodman disciple. Early in his career he imitated Goodman's runs and phrasing and even mimicked his mannerisms and speaking style. He showed up so faithfully at Goodman's engagements and recording dates that Goodman called him ''my shadow'' and would jokingly reprimand him if he showed up late. ''If it hadn't been for Benny Goodman I'd have been a juvenile delinquent,'' Mr. Yaged said. Since serving in the Army for three years during World War II, Yaged has played clarinet continuously, with such musicians as Phil Napoleon, Coleman Hawkins, Red Allen, and Jack Teagarden. Beginning in the 1960s, he began working primarily as an ensemble leader in New York City. Yaged served as a consultant on Benny Goodman's musical style for the 1956 film, The Benny Goodman Story. Has Clarinet, Will Swing Till Wee Hours; Sol Yaged, a Benny Goodman Disciple, Still Plays the Good Old Songs the Good Old Way The swing era is not over. It is stashed away in Sol Yaged's clarinet case, which he still opens nightly in a dark corner of a quiet Upper East Side restaurant.

''I bought this baby in 1938 for $125'' at a store on West 48th Street, Mr. Yaged said recently as he flipped open his worn case and took out his Conn clarinet at the restaurant, Il Valentino, on East 56th Street. The purchase turned out to be a long-term investment. He began playing professionally while still a teenager and has had few nights off since. Back then he had plenty of work on 52nd Street at clubs like the Onyx, the Three Deuces and Jimmy Ryan's. And there was the night on Grove Street, at Arthur's Tavern, when Charlie Parker showed up at the gig without his sax, and had to borrow Sol's clarinet! Sol knew everyone. Those days are long gone, but Mr. Yaged is as busy as ever. From 1999 till 2004 he played five nights a week on Bleecker Street with Bob Arkin (bass) and Albert Garzon (piano). It is from those gigs that "On Bleecker Street" evolved. Since 2004 he has been playing at Il Valentino, which is in the Hotel Sutton and was once a club run by the bandleader Eddie Condon. Each night Mr. Yaged turns back time, playing the same ol' songs the same way he did a half-century ago. This is the Sol Yaged who hired the saxophonist Coleman Hawkins and the drummer Cozy Cole as sidemen and who wrote music for the film ''The Benny Goodman Story,'' teaching Steve Allen to play the clarinet for the title role. Even now Mr. Yaged routinely plays into the wee hours; his business card includes his home phone number and the directive ''Call after 1 p.m.'' The jazz historian and radio-show host Phil Schaap said, ''Sol Yaged has always been a solid musician,'' and noted that Mr. Yaged had played in Max Kaminsky's band on the opening night of the original Birdland. Schaap continued: ''That his fame has evaporated says more about the state of jazz than it does about him. He's still an employed musician in New York, a city with 600 hard-bop bands that can't find work!" The owner of Il Valentino, Mirso Lekic, said, ''The man's a living legend and nobody knows he's still around.'' Mr. Lekic hired him to play quiet, classy music to dine by, and during the dinner hour he does just that, taking a back seat to chatting diners and to waiters reciting nightly specials. But as the evening progresses he seems to grow younger, swinging his group harder, until patrons put down their dessert forks and the dignified northern Italian restaurant turns into a festive jazz club. 

The musicians in his group sit in a corner in chairs backed against the wall, Dixieland style. They play their share of stompers, but their sets generally begin by invoking Goodman's spirit. Like Goodman's small-group ensembles, Yaged's band plays straight-ahead standards with a series of riffing choruses; though things tend to get a bit wild when the crowd grows later in the evening.  Sol is built like a linebacker, and with his shaved head he looks like a cross between Yul Brynner and Knute Rockne. He wore a wide tie with a fat knot and had a threadbare fake rose in his lapel. The gold ring on his beefy pinkie shimmered as his fingers fluttered over the clarinet keys while the group began to play ''Smoke Gets in Your Eyes.'' He plays with a creamy, elegant tone that evokes Goodman's lyricism. On ''Embraceable You'' he treated the melody like a fat balloon that he nonchalantly thwacked into the air. ''I first heard him play this song 50 years ago,'' said a man gripping a glass of Scotch. Sol's tight, swinging ensemble playing is infectious. They did tidy, catchy arrangements of songs like ''I Can't Give You Anything but Love'' and ''Love Is Here to Stay'' with tailgating trombone obbligato and brassy offbeat trumpet punches. Mr. Yaged's best improvising is as a showman. He is an unabashed ham, whether delivering borscht belt one-liners while fixing his reed or fake-clobbering a diner with his clarinet. He often plays with one hand and pours wine for patrons with the other. At one point he joined a discussion at a side table, but leapt up in time to play an ornamental run on the final chorus of ''How Deep Is the Ocean?'' He finished the song leaning against a dessert cart. ''So easy when you know how,'' he chuckled as the diners applauded. At around midnight the place seems like a speak-easy and Mr. Yaged swings the band like a lariat, spurring the musicians on with shouts and comments. When backing up soloists he comes up with simple, floating riffs. He applauds his sidemen's solos, clarinet tucked like an umbrella under his arm. Sometimes, when he particularly likes the way his bandmates end a tune, he will start them up again and have them play it several more times, guffawing gleefully each time. Late on that recent Saturday night a man from the bar wobbled over and stuffed a $5 bill into the tip jar. Mr. Yaged started the band off on a stomping ''St. Louis Blues'' and then ''Flying Home'' and ''King Porter Stomp.'' During ''Alexander's Ragtime Band'' a man leaned over and said, ''When you write your article, say the food's terrible and the waiters are nasty so us old-timers can come and not be swamped with people.'' https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/solyaged

On Bleecker Street

Roseanna Vitro - The Music of Randy Newman

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:43
Size: 124,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:55)  1. Last Night I Had A Dream
(5:48)  2. Sail Away
(6:16)  3. If I Din't Have You
(4:05)  4. Everytime It Rains
(5:59)  5. Baltimore
(4:35)  6. In Germany Before The War
(4:36)  7. Mama Told Me Not To Come
(6:06)  8. I Will Go Sailing No More
(6:02)  9. Feels Like Home
(5:17) 10. Losing You

With Randy Newman's long-awaited Songbook Vol. 2 (Nonesuch, 2011) and vocalist Roseanna Vitro's album-length salute to his music hitting stores a week apart, it would seem that it's time for revived interest in all things Newman. While the singer/songwriter's release is a solo journey through his own catalog, Vitro's album presents ten of his pieces dressed in newly tailored arrangements from pianist Mark Soskin. Vitro touches on material from throughout Newman's storied career, but she tends to avoid the music that highlights his wry sense of humor and intentionally smarmy delivery in favor of narratives of all shapes and sizes. Some pieces receive radical facelifts ("Last Night I Had A Dream") that brighten up the music and change the overall impression of the work, while others retain their original essence and are simply tweaked to fit this ensemble and genre of music ("Sail Away"). While loyal fans of Newman's music will likely know every tune on the program, from early-career landmarks ("Sail Away") to latter-day songs of love and loss ("Losing You"), those uninitiated in the cult of his compositions will probably favor the two pieces from Pixar films. 

Vitro does a fine job on both, with "If I Didn't Have You," Newman's Academy Award-winning number from Monsters, Inc. (2001) re-imagined as bossa-to-samba journey, and "I Will Go Sailing No More," from Toy Story (1995), performed in an appropriately understated manner. Violinist Sara Caswell is, with the exception of Soskin and Vitro herself, the most important part of this package. She crafts elegant lines ("Sail Away"), sizzles over some Brazilian beats ("If I Didn't Have You"), marries sweeping gestures of sound with sadness and sunshine ("Losing You"), provides understated counterpoint, and helps to define the overall ensemble sound on this record. Vitro is a storyteller nonpareil and a fine vocalist, with a voice that can comfortably go from tender ("Losing You") to sassy ("Mama Told Me Not To Come Home), and her skills help to elevate the large majority of these pieces to great artistic heights. While the album does contain a misstep or two, like a take on "Baltimore" that lacks the necessary despair and seems to be draped in the wrong aural fabric, this has little do with Vitro's vocals. The Music Of Randy Newman deserves to be heard, not only for its unique arrangements and finely crafted performances, but for the beauty and wonder that Vitro injects into the works of an American icon. ~ Dan Bilawsky https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-music-of-randy-newman-roseanna-vitro-motema-music-review-by-dan-bilawsky.php

Personnel: Roseanna Vitro: vocals; Mark Soskin: piano; Sara Caswell: violin; Dean Johnson: bass; Tim Horner: drums (1-5, 7-10); Jamey Haddad: drums, percussion (1, 2, 5, 6); Steve Cardenas: guitar (1, 2, 5, 6).

The Music of Randy Newman

Andy LaVerne Quartet - Four Miles

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 70:13
Size: 112,9 MB
Art: Front

(8:28)  1. When you wish upon a star
(4:52)  2. Summertime
(8:22)  3. Maiden voyage
(7:32)  4. Some say my prince will come
(6:41)  5. Song for my father
(7:41)  6. All blues
(7:58)  7. Mr Syms
(7:26)  8. Cantaloupe island
(4:29)  9. Round midnight
(6:40) 10. On green dolphin street

Despite the CD's title, most of the music on this date does not have any close connection to Miles Davis; in fact five of the ten songs were not even recorded by Davis. In addition, trumpeter Randy Brecker, who joins the Andy Laverne Trio (which is comprised of pianist Laverne, bassist George Mraz and drummer Al Foster) sounds closer to Freddie Hubbard and Lee Morgan than to Davis. However, if one does not think about the tribute aspect (or lack of), the music is quite enjoyable. Laverne and Brecker have many fine solos within the hard-bop tradition on such numbers as "When You Wish Upon a Star," "Maiden Voyage," "All Blues" and "Cantaloupe Island." An excellent modern straight-ahead date that falls just a little short of being essential. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/four-miles-mw0000025762

Personnel:  Piano – Andy Laverne; Bass – George Mraz; Drums – Al Foster; Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Randy Brecker

Four Miles