Thursday, September 26, 2019

Erik Truffaz - Mantis

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:43
Size: 135,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:35)  1. The Point
(7:49)  2. La Mémoire du silence
(6:32)  3. Saisir
(2:14)  4. No Fear
(4:48)  5. Nina Valeria
(3:57)  6. Parlophone
(3:50)  7. Magrouni
(7:45)  8. Mantis
(4:09)  9. Yasmina
(2:42) 10. Mare Mosso
(4:49) 11. Tahun bahu
(4:27) 12. Snachy Baby

The innate concord between representation and abstraction, the crucial breakthrough of 20th Century art, palpable in the work of Picasso, Matisse and Klee, has a musical counterpoint in jazz recordings such as Mantis. The quartet is Truffaz’s medium and with the support of three noteworthy musicians, of which guitarist Manu Codjia receives the most attention soloing, he manages to parlay his low to mid register brand of trumpet playing into a captivating acoustic proposal. At times, Truffaz’s blowing technique is so understated that he resembles a flautist playing a trumpet facing down. When listening to Truffaz, one must relearn the art of hearing somewhat unexplored trumpet possibilities; although such relearning can be done with ease. Perhaps, “ease” and precision when expressing oneself, even when most abstract and muted, is what such a lesson is all about. His modus operandi works well within the swerving edges provided by the fellow members of the group, whose mutual dialogue is constantly punctuated by a felicitous brand of jumpy coarseness that adds unique textures to the offerings in this date. When need be so, however, Truffaz taunts his listeners with commanding puffs worthy of anyone’s respect.

“The Point” opens up as the drummer edges a thick substratum from the cool and relaxed bass lines, with electronic guitar punctilios that take off into challenging decompositions, after Truffaz’s initial solo. García and Benita are matchless in their percussive ideas and touches, closing it up as they give way to a punchy and edging give and take between guitar and trumpet. 

“La Mémoire du Silence,” or “The Remembrance of Silence,” is a model for the use of space in jazz. It is not so much romantic as it is thoughtful with plenty of atmosphere and an edge of its own. It is ready made for Truffaz. 

In “Saisir”, the drum backbeat and the guitar lines lend an air of familiarity to friendly floating riffs from Truffaz and Benita in the bass until they all join in a pulsating exploratory venture. Bravo to García for his use of the rim!
“No Fear” briefness features Truffaz with a clear line of sight and minimal pointillist support. His embracing tone is evident here. 

“Nina Valeria” offers a rare composition in the history of jazz whereupon Truffaz is simply paired with one of the two special guests in this album, Anour Brahem. He plays the oud and the result is enthralling as the deep and ancient sweetness of the oud adds just the right zing to the elongated breathy harmonies from Truffaz. 

“Parlophone” is an experimental tune relying mostly on vocalizations and sound effects that could serve as musical background for a scene for a science fiction film featuring a futuristic public transportation station. 

Mounir Troudi is the other special guest in Mantis. He provides Arab vocalizations in “Magrouni” that interplay effectively with its odd metering and the layered response from the group. This lashing tune gets to the point in a hurry. Truffaz makes the most out of the title cut highlighting his low sizzling heat as a précis for an equally warm statement from Codjia’s electric guitar, as well as a welcomed, albeit all too brief, bass account. It should be noted that all musicians in this tune, as well as the rest of the CD, have spanking new thoughts well worth repeated listening. An acoustic guitar and trumpet duo in “Yasmina” provides yet another opportune pairing in Mantis and a momentary respite from the engaging nature of the previous tune. Truffaz dwells on a higher register here. Right before the concluding “Tahun Bahu,” with a characteristic sense of engaged relaxation, the short composition “Mare Mosso” whets one’s appetite quite well as Truffaz engages in guitar like riffs that work well within a Middle Eastern percussive feel, with a concluding animal horn-like effect on the trumpet. Stay for a few silent seconds after the conclusion for a surprise instrumental bonus...~ Javier Aq Ortiz https://www.allaboutjazz.com/mantis-erik-truffaz-blue-note-records-review-by-javier-aq-ortiz.php

Personnel: Erik Truffaz- trumpet; Manu Codjia- guitar; Michel Benita- acoustic bass; Phillippe Garcia- drums; Anour Brahem- oud on "Nina Valeria;" Mounir Troudi- vocal on "Magrouni."

Mantis

Enrico Rava, Barbara Casini - Vento

Styles: Vocal, Guitar And Trumpet
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:07
Size: 115,6 MB
Art: Front

(0:46)  1. Aspettando un Sogno
(3:50)  2. L'Angelo
(4:50)  3. Cidade do Amor Demais
(7:10)  4. La Maschera
(4:31)  5. Vento
(4:56)  6. Bolero do Parecer
(1:34)  7. Ballo
(5:10)  8. Malinconica Abitudine
(6:03)  9. Un'Alba Limpida
(4:59) 10. Une petite folie
(4:49) 11. Fin de l'ennui
(1:24) 12. Early Autumn

She was born in Florence, on July 30, 1954, to Florentine parents, who rarely set their sights on Italy. In the house we listened to the songs in vogue, jazz and classical music. Barbara played the piano, the guitar, but above all sang, of everything: the Beatles, Rita Pavone, Mina. Then one day "new" records arrived, a new sound coming from overseas: the Bossa Nova . Barbara was fifteen years old. Thus began his love for Brazilian music , an extraordinary love that never ended, and which, once grown, pushed her to a turning point in life: despite her degree in psychology, she abandoned the project to become a psychoanalyst and decide to be a singer. He throws himself into the frantic search for everything concerning Brazil, music, literature and the Portuguese language itself. Finally in 1982 he made his first trip to that dreamed land. Elis Regina has been dead for a year and Barbara has already internalized her way of singing, she knows every breath, every smile and every tear that comes out of Elis's song. On that first trip he fills a suitcase with records , and the soul of sounds and names! He realizes that there is an unknown and wonderful world of composers, musicians, and performers who open new horizons to explore. When Barbara returns to Brazil, she goes a long way, from Rio to S Luis do Maranhão, "discovers" the Nordeste, re-falls in love, meets Luiz Gonzaga while she is recording her latest album just before she dies, learns her songs and those of Geraldo Azevedo, Xangai, Jatobá. His repertoire changes radically: Barbara in Italy spreads the popular music of that different Brazil, plays the triangle and the zabumba, canta côco e baião, maracatu and bumba meu boi, once again he enjoys and is moved. In the meantime he forms the Trio OUTRO LADO with Beppe Fornaroli and Naco , with whom he records an LP, "Outro Lado", (reprinted on CD by Philology in 1999). Many years pass, many journeys, many meetings. In 1994 he formed a quartet with Stefano Bollani on the piano, Raffaello Pareti on the double bass and Francesco Petreni on drums, a group that remained active until the early 2000s. He collaborates with great Italian and foreign musicians of the jazz scene (Enrico Rava, Stefano Bollani, Fabrizio Bosso, Phil Woods, Lee Konitz) and Brazilian Popular Music, such as Toninho Horta and Guinga, and participates with various formations in the most important Italian festivals. Along his more than thirty-year career he also engages with jazz and with Italian and French songs. Translate By Google http://www.barbaracasini.it/barbara-casini-biografia/

This hugely popular trumpet player (born in Trieste, Italy in 1939) almost single-handedly brought Italian jazz to international attention. He began playing Dixieland trombone in Turin, but after hearing Miles Davis, switched instruments and embraced the modern style. Other key meetings were with Gato Barbieri, with whom he recorded movie soundtracks in 1962, and Chet Baker. He began to play with Steve Lacy and also teamed up with South African expatriates Louis Moholo and John Dyani and recorded The Forest and the Zoo (ESP) live in Argentina. In 1967, he moved to New York, playing with Roswell Rudd, Marion Brown, Rashied Ali, Cecil Taylor, and Charlie Haden. In a brief return to Europe, Rava recorded with Lee Konitz (Stereokonitz, RCA) and Manfred Schoof (European Echoes, FMP). From 1969 to 1976, he was back in New York, recording Escalator Over the Hill with Carla Bley's Jazz Composers' Orchestra. After his first album as a leader, Il Giro del Giorno in 80 Mondi (Black Saint), he began to lead his own pianoless quartets and quintets. His recorded output numbers over 100 records, and over 30 as a leader. ECM has reissued some of his essential recordings of the '70s, like The Pilgrim and the Stars, The Plot, and Enrico Rava Quartet, while Soul Note and Label Bleu published CDs by his innovative Electric Five (in reality a sextet, as he always excludes himself from the count), which includes two electric guitars. With keyboard master Franco D'Andrea and trumpeter Paolo Fresu, Rava recorded Bix and Pop (Philology) and Shades of Chet, tributes to Bix Beiderbecke and Armstrong, and to Chet Baker, respectively. Also of note are Rava, L'opera Va and Carmen, gorgeous readings of opera arias. In 2001, he created a new quintet with young talents Gianluca Petrella, Stefano Bollani, Rosario Bonaccorso, and Roberto Gatto, and toured with old friends Roswell Rudd and Gato Barbieri, releasing Easy Living with them in 2004 on ECM. Three years later, after Bollani, who had struck out as a solo player, was replaced by Andrea Pozza, The Words and the Days came out. In 2007, Rava and pianist Stefano Bollani released The Third Man on ECM. Rava followed the release in 2009 with New York Days, a collection of moody originals with a film noir tinge, backed by a band that included Bollani, tenor saxophonist Mark Turner, bassist Larry Grenadier, and drummer Paul Motian. Rava broke in a new all-Italian quintet for Tribe, which was issued by ECM in the fall of 2011. Its members included trombonist Gianluca Petrella, pianist Giovanni Guidi, bassist Gabriele Evangelista, and drummer Fabrizio Sferra. Guitarist Giacomo Ancillotto also guested on the set, expanding the lineup on various selections. Rava made a wide left turn for 2012's On the Dance Floor. Amazingly, the trumpeter only became aware of pop singer Michael Jackson's music after his death, and he became obsessed with it. The album, his tribute to what he considers the late singer's contribution to 20th century music, was recorded with Parco della Musica Jazz Lab at the Rome Auditorium; it is entirely comprised of Jackson's material. In 2019, he appeared alongside saxophonist Joe Lovano on the live ECM date Roma. Translate By Google ~ Francesco Martinelli https://www.allmusic.com/artist/enrico-rava-mn0000182392/biography

Personnel:  Barbara Casini (vocals, guitar); Enrico Rava (trumpet, flugelhorn); Mauro Negri (clarinet); Stefano Bollani (piano); Giovanni Tommaso (bass); Roberto Gatto (drums)

Vento

Richie Kamuca - Drop Me Off In Harlem

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1977
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:08
Size: 75,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:55)  1. Drop Me Off In Harlem
(4:35)  2. I Didn't Know About You
(3:15)  3. All Alone
(4:45)  4. Dear Bix
(3:36)  5. Three Little Words
(5:05)  6. It Must Be True
(3:06)  7. With The Wind And The Rain In Your Hair
(3:50)  8. Harlem Butterfly

Richie Kamuca's three Concord albums, all recorded within a year of his death, are each highly recommended. This set has inspired instrumentation. Three songs feature the cool-toned tenor in a trio with Herb Ellis (playing acoustic guitar) and bassist Ray Brown, while the remaining five are duets with pianist Dave Frishberg. Kamuca takes a surprising and effective vocal on "Dear Bix" and alternates light romps with lyrical ballads. Highlights of the consistently memorable set include "Drop Me Off In Harlem," "Three Little Words" and "Harlem Butterfly."~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/drop-me-off-in-harlem-mw0000919853

Personnel: Richie Kamuca - tenor saxophone; Dave Frishberg - piano; Ray Brown - bass; - Herb Ellis - guitar

Drop Me Off In Harlem

Bobby McFerrin - Simple Pleasures

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1988
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:50
Size: 78,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:54)  1. Don't Worry Be Happy
(2:56)  2. All I Want
(2:44)  3. Drive My Car
(2:08)  4. Simple Pleasures
(2:58)  5. Good Lovin'
(3:38)  6. Come To Me
(2:51)  7. Susie Q
(3:58)  8. Drive
(3:55)  9. Them Changes
(3:44) 10. Sunshine Of Your Love

This CD will always be remembered for including Bobby McFerrin's surprise hit "Don't Worry, Be Happy." Actually, overall, this album is not quite up to the level of his previous two, for instead of taking unaccompanied vocals, the remarkable singer overdubbed his voice many times, which reduces the miraculous nature of his talents. 

However, McFerrin's renditions of "Drive My Car," "Drive," and "Sunshine of Your Love" (the program is quite diverse), plus the catchy "Don't Worry," are generally unique and worth hearing. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/simple-pleasures-mw0000199391

Personnel: Bobby McFerrin - vocals

Simple Pleasures

Wednesday, September 25, 2019

Eddie 'Lockjaw' Davis, Harry 'Sweets' Edison - Jawbreakers

Styles: Saxophone And Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:29
Size: 96,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:13)  1. OO-EE!
(5:18)  2. Broadway
(6:34)  3. Jawbreakers
(3:33)  4. Four
(4:38)  5. Moolah
(4:42)  6. A Gal In Calico
(5:54)  7. I've Got A Crush On You
(5:34)  8. Close Your Eyes

Harry "Sweets" Edison and Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis always made for a logical combination for both had immediately recognizable sounds and could say an awful lot with one note. This early collaboration (reissued on CD), their first joint recording, finds the pair joined by pianist Hugh Lawson, bassist Ike Isaacs and drummer Clarence Johnston. 

The repertoire (three basic Edison originals plus five jazz standards) serves as strong vehicles for swinging solos with highlights including "Broadway," "Four" and "A Gal in Calico." Easily recommended to straightahead jazz fans as are the later Sweets-Lockjaw recordings. 
~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/jawbreakers-mw0000312066

Personnel:  Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis - tenor saxophone; Harry "Sweets" Edison - trumpet; Hugh Lawson - piano; Ike Isaacs - bass; Clarence Johnston - drums

Jawbreakers

Zee Avi - Ghostbird

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:36
Size: 82,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:52)  1. Swell Window
(3:23)  2. Anchor
(3:53)  3. 31 Days
(3:40)  4. Milestone Moon
(2:20)  5. Siboh Kitak Nangis
(3:15)  6. The Book Of Morris Johnson
(2:28)  7. Madness
(2:39)  8. Bag Of Gold
(3:35)  9. Concrete Wall
(2:55) 10. Roll Your Head In The Sun
(3:32) 11. Stay In The Clouds

Frequently, debut albums are interesting but simply do not fulfill their artistic potential. This is the case with Zee Avi’s self-titled 2009 debut. While interesting and flush with Avi’s lovely voice the songs ventured at times into a cloying cuteness. The listener was tempted to wish for a more mature, jazzier version of Avi. Luckily, 2011 gives us Ghostbird, an 11-song meditation that only gets better upon replay. One part island breeze and one part classic jazz, Ghostbird sounds like a record you would find in your grandmother’s attic, the work of some jazz age ingénue. But, no, you’re listening to Avi, a twentysomething native of Malaysia in possession of an old-soul voice. It would be easy to dismiss this music as easy listening, one more Jack Johnson-style veg-out disc, but the sheer beauty of her floaty alto voice and shimmering arrangements help it stand out and stand up to repeat listens.Opener “Swell Window” captures attention from the start, with its chime-like lyrical repetition. “31 Days” pops up a few tracks later, a meditation on growing up: “At the ripe age of 17/I moved into that big, bad city,” she croons. Later she learns “I’m half crazy/you’re too sane.” This has been done before, of course, but the earnestness in Avi’s delivery sells it.“Siboh Kitak Nangis” best exemplifies Avi’s smoky jazz skills. All the while, its foreign lyrics hypnotize in the way that Sigur Rós’s Icelandic wanderings do. A few tracks are, yes, cute (particularly “The Book of Morris Johnson”), but “Concrete Wall” pays back your patience in spades, Avi giving one side of a lovers’ quarrel with a darkness that has eluded her before. Its smoldering passive aggression has a mature tone that suits her. Jaw-dropping closer “Stay in the Clouds” features strong, clear strings and a throaty rasp of a jazz-throwback vocal. Singing softer in her higher register, Avi intones, “Can I please stay in the clouds forever/‘cause I really like it here,” an almost cruel irony when the song must, inevitably,end. Fortunately, you can hit repeat, and you will. ~ Megan Ritt https://consequenceofsound.net/2011/09/album-review-zee-avi-ghostbird/

Ghostbird

Harold Mabern - The Leading Man

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:01
Size: 126,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:24)  1. Yes or No
(4:40)  2. Save the Best for Last
(6:48)  3. Full House
(6:27)  4. She/Mr.Lucky
(7:36)  5. Alone Together
(6:11)  6. The Man from Hyde Park
(6:17)  7. B & B
(7:17)  8. T-Bone Steak
(4:17)  9. Mercury Retro

Since his emergence onto the New York scene in 1959, pianist Harold Mabern has become one of the few true living jazz stylists on the piano. Having played with everyone from Lionel Hampton to Miles Davis, Sonny Rollins, Wes Montgomery, and Lee Morgan, Mabern has the experience and the depth of knowledge sufficient to be called a master. There is no one on the scene who sounds like him, and his sense of lyricism, rhythm, time, and the entire range of dynamics in his playing attract other players as well as listeners. The Leading Man, issued in 1993, is considered a classic, both for its selection of material and the performances of the various ensembles Mabern assembled for the date. But there is something else, too nowhere in Mabern's recorded catalog is there a performance like this from him. His playing, while always inspired, is revelatory in its sense of full orchestration and the shifting timbres of his solos against the bassline (played by Ron Carter). Also on this set are drummer Jack DeJohnette, alto man Bill Easley, fellow Memphian and trumpeter Bill Mobley, guitarist Kevin Eubanks, and vocalist Pamela Baskin-Watson. With the exception of DeJohnette and Carter, all the other players rotate on this stunning collection. The standout track is Montgomery's "Full House," which features Eubanks and Mabern trading eights, then fours, then slipping into solo breaks at the same time, in close harmony and gliding through the arpeggios like a skater on ice. The medley of "She" and "Mr. Lucky," by George Shearing and Henry Mancini, respectively, is a chance for Mabern to show both his lyrical and dynamic abilities by tracing the melodies of each tune through the other, then harmonically combining them in rhythmic patterns of graceful elegance. Easley gets the chance to reveal the depth of his modal style on Wayne Shorter's "Yes or No." Mabern slips phrases from McCoy Tyner's comp book into the body of the tune, but the harmonic architecture and the interval changes in and out of mode are all his. Easley sets the bar high and delivers by blowing through those harmonies, not inside them. There is a bit of everything here, from the aforementioned exercises to the greasy funk of Jimmy Smith's "T-Bone Steak" to Mabern's compositions such as "B&B," where Mobley plays with the emotion of Chet Baker and the melodic chops of Fats Navarro. The last tune, "Mercury Retro," is one of Mabern's too. A piano solo, it begins as an exercise in dissonant counterpoint, transforming itself inside of five minutes into a jazz ballad that becomes a boogie-woogie blues to a classical rondo and even a prelude and fugue; it's just amazing. You never get the feeling the guy is showing off, either. The Leading Man proves beyond the shadow of a doubt that Mabern is just that. ~ Thom Jurek https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-leading-man-mw0000121742

Personnel: Harold Mabern – piano; Ron Carter – bass; Jack DeJohnette – drums;  Bill Mobley – trumpet, flugelhorn; Bill Easley – alto sax; Kevin Eubanks – guitar; Pamela Baskin-Watson – vocals

R.I.P.
Born: March 20, 1936, Memphis,Tennessee,United States
Died: September 19, 2019

The Leading Man

Sam Harris - Interludes

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:27
Size: 110,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:28)  1. Prelude: Drone
(3:50)  2. Incantation
(3:20)  3. Ataraxia
(2:47)  4. Calls
(3:28)  5. Louis Wain
(1:21)  6. Interlude: Incidental Music
(2:25)  7. Manul at Rest
(3:47)  8. Spells
(1:51)  9. Manul at Sea
(4:12) 10. Chthonos
(5:15) 11. The Hermit Darger
(2:24) 12. No Hay Banda
(1:39) 13. Manul in Space
(6:33) 14. Postlude

2014 is shaping up to be a big year for pianist Sam Harris: first off, he has already played on two of the year’s most critically-acclaimed new releases, Rudy Royston’s 303 (Greenleaf) and Ambrose Akinmusire’s the imagined savior is far easier to paint (Blue Note). Harris is more than just a sideman on these records; his harmonies give each one their distinctive color and feel, and he has been duly recognized for these contributions. In his review of 303, Nate Chinen of The New York Times singled out Harris as a “… strong voice in ascendence.” Meanwhile, while listening to Akinmusire’s new album, Steve Smith of the Times and Time Out New York tweeted this: Mmm. Becca Stevens, Ambrose Akinmusire, Sam Harris and strings. Yes, yes, yes. Steve Smith (@nightafternight) March 6, 2014. Secondly, Harris has just released his debut album as a leader, Interludes (Fresh Sound). The style and personality that shines through on 303 and imagined savior comes out in full force here. All of the tracks on this album are Harris originals, and he demonstrates a sense of form that is unique among his peer group. Rather than constructing tunes that stretch into vehicles for instrumental solos, Harris creates concise and intimate vignettes: tone poems for a chamber ensemble of jazz instruments. He expands typical post-bop piano harmony into new territory, with curious dissonances and asymmetrical spacings one part Herbie Hancock, one part Paul Bley. He plays with texture in interesting ways, using vintage keyboards like the mellotron and Fender Rhodes to create a near-symphonic palette. He builds up intricate rhythmic grids and breaks them down again with equal aplomb. Interludes is thus a perfect descriptor of Harris’s music: a connector between the mainstream and the avant-garde, between the formal and the fanciful. As fans of The Jazz Gallery know, Harris has been honing this unique sound on the Gallery’s stage for several years now as both a leader and sideman. On Thursday, Harris will perform two sets as a belated celebration for the release of Interludes. While the album features contributions from saxophonists Roman Filiu and Ben van Gelder, Harris will present the music on Thursday with his trio featuring Martin Nevin on bass and Craig Weinrib on drums. Come out to hear Harris’s memorable and atmospheric themes stripped down to an elemental form. http://www.jazzspeaks.org/sam-harris-interludes/

Personnel: Sam Harris (piano, synthesizer), Ben Van Gelder (alto sax, bass clarinet), Roman Filiu (alto sax, flute), Martin Nevin (bass in all tracks except #8,7,12), Ross Gallagher (bass on #2,4,6,8,9,10,13), and Craig Weinrib (drums).

Interludes

Eric Alexander - Leap Of Faith

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:16
Size: 132,3 MB
Art: Front

( 8:06)  1. Luquitas
(11:08)  2. Mars
( 3:43)  3. Corazon Perdido
( 3:32)  4. Hard Blues
( 6:46)  5. Frenzy
( 8:14)  6. Big Richard
( 2:16)  7. Magyar
(13:28)  8. Second Impression

Renowned tenor saxophonist Eric Alexander's Leap of Faith stems in part from the decision (hesitantly made) to perform in a trio setting without piano hardly an uncommon arrangement these days but one that Alexander, a shining light on the New York music scene for more than two decades, has rarely explored, either in live gigs or on more than forty-plus albums as leader of his own groups. Also, Leap of Faith was recorded live (no safety net) at New York City's Jazz Gallery by Alexander, bassist Doug Weiss and drummer Johnathan Blake. As if that weren't enough to induce uncertainty, Alexander expanded the "leap" even further by performing only his own compositions and doing so in a free-wheeling mode that more or less moves him from his customary post-bop comfort zone into realms that are more closely associated with John Coltrane, Wayne Shorter or Pharoah Sanders, to name a few. Unlike many exponents of "free jazz," Alexander never loses touch with the harmonic framework that lends such music its aesthetic as well as cerebral appeal. Even when hanging on a discordant limb, he remains at heart an unapologetic straight-from-the-shoulder swinger, even on the cacophonous finale, "Second Impression," on which he sounds as unlike the "usual" Eric Alexander as on anything he has ever recorded. The same holds true on most other numbers, from the fleet and staccato opener, "Luquitas," to the equally propulsive "Second Impression." The tempo (but not the passion) slows to some degree on "Mars," whose harmonic progression, Alexander writes, is based on Bruno Mars' pop hit, "Finesse." A piano is used to good effect on "Corazon Perdido," as Alexander accompanies himself on the moody change-of-pace that leads to another wailer, the gritty "Hard Blues," followed by the mercurial and well-named "Frenzy." Alexander is bold and unrestrained on each of them, as he is on the more moderately paced "Big Richard" and "Magyar," the last based on themes from Bela Bartok's "Music for Strings, Percussion and Celeste." While Blake solos brightly on "Luquitas," and Weiss on "Big Richard," it is Alexander's robust and (unusually) strident voice that animates every number. Leap of Faith traverses new and unexplored territory, for Alexander and his fans, and it is they who must decide whether that leap has thrust him forward or backward. No definitive conclusion will be drawn here. The stars are for Alexander who even in this atypical framework is never less than very good. ~ Jack Bowers https://www.allaboutjazz.com/leap-of-faith-eric-alexander-giant-step-arts-review-by-jack-bowers.php

Personnel: Eric Alexander: tenor saxophone; Doug Weiss: bass; Johnathan Blake: drums.

Leap Of Faith

Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Roland Hanna - Colors from a Giant's Kit

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:54
Size: 151,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:10)  1. Colors from a Giant's Kit
(3:21)  2. Natalie Rosanne
(8:05)  3. A Story, Often Told but Seldom Heard
(4:29)  4. Robbin's Nest
(4:55)  5. My Romance
(4:23)  6. Blues
(3:34)  7. 'Cello
(2:24)  8. Moment's Notice
(7:22)  9. Lush Life
(5:21) 10. 20th Century Rag
(5:26) 11. Naima
(4:07) 12. Chelsea Bridge
(3:38) 13. In a Mellow Tone
(6:31) 14. Cherokee

When an artist passes on, the true fans mourn and the record companies often search through their vaults to try to capitalize on their passing. This often results in hastily compiled collections of music, or the surfacing of sub-par recordings that weren't released for obvious reasons when the artist was still around. That's not the case with this top-shelf solo recording from Sir Roland Hanna. Shortly before his death, the pianist had entered into a fruitful recording partnership with Bill Sorin a former student and longtime fan who founded IPO recordings and launched the label with Hanna's Everything I Love (IPO, 2002).  While this new chapter in Hanna's recording career was cut short when the piano giant was felled by a fatal heart attack in November of 2002, his other sessions for IPO are firm reminders of his sublime artistry and wide-ranging skills as a pianist, composer and interpreter of music of all kinds. Tributaries Reflections On Tommy Flanagan (IPO, 2002) and I've Got A Right To Sing The Blues Songs Of Harold Arlen immediately followed on the heels of Everything I Love, but it took eight years for Colors From A Giant's Kit to arrive. 

It was worth the wait. Hanna's relationship with the piano is a complex one but, unlike another former Charles Mingus-associated pianist, Jaki Byard who is also receiving a lot of attention for posthumously released solo piano outings it remains widely accessible at all times and rooted in the promise of melody. Hanna can engage the instrument with heavy handed chordal stomps ("Colors From A Giant's Kit") and flowery, flowing gestures of beauty ("My Romance"). He shows an obvious affection for Ellingtonia of all kinds, as he delivers a pair of Billy Strayhorn standards ("Lush Life" and "Chelsea Bridge") and an energetic take on Duke Ellington's own "In A Mellow Tone," which is anything but mellow. The music of John Coltrane also plays an important part here, as Hanna takes on two different sides of the late saxophonist's musical personality. "Moment's Notice" moves with precision and energy, while "Naima" gorgeously wafts through the air.  While the majority of the program is given up to standards of all shapes and sizes, Hanna touches on his own compositional legacy with five of his own pieces, ranging from sweeping, sad beauties ("Natalie Rosanne") to ragtime coated with an Eastern European sound. The fourteen-track program is capped off with a take on "Cherokee" that serves as a lesson in tempo revision. Hanna proves that Ray Noble's classic doesn't have to fly fast at all times.  The colors from this piano giant's kit cover the entire spectrum, from bold to bright, and this album continues to paint Hanna as the true genius that he was. ~ Dan Bilawsky https://www.allaboutjazz.com/colors-from-a-giants-kit-sir-roland-hanna-ipo-recordings-review-by-dan-bilawsky.php

Personnel: Sir Roland Hanna: piano.

Colors from a Giant's Kit

Sylvia Vrethammar - Trivialitet

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:47
Size: 73,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:03)  1. Trivialitet
(3:55)  2. Just Because of You
(2:36)  3. Floy Joy
(3:58)  4. Magdalena (Livet före döden)
(3:13)  5. Små lätta moln
(3:16)  6. Du sköna nya värld
(2:53)  7. Oh Boy
(2:38)  8. Kung för en dag
(2:58)  9. Hej Monika
(3:14) 10. Step Up

Sylvia Vrethammar is back in the competition after 11 years. “In 2002, I thought it would never be done again and now it has somehow been put in my lap. A surprise that feels like an adventure ”. Sylvia's career took off in 1970 when she hosted the popular Hyland TV show. In 1971 she participated in the Melodifestivalen for the first time and in 1973 she recorded the song Eviva España which became a thunderous success in both Sweden and the UK. The English version was on the English hit list for a total of 28 weeks and gave Sylvia a place in the Guinness Record Book. Most recently she has been seen in the television program So Much Better. I understand that you have thought of presenting different types of music and broadened the range, broadened ages of artists and it is something that feels very mature in some way and I hope I will not be disappointed, she says. Sylvia describes her song as a Brazilian-inspired tribute to finding value in what is considered obvious. The song is about what we may sometimes forget, in the small there is big in life. To value what is near and small and nice and may not be able to see a final result all the time and go ahead of events. Translate By Google https://www.svt.se/melodifestivalen/sylvia-vrethammar-trivialitet-1/

Trivialitet

Ike Quebec - Ballads

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:43
Size: 122,0 MB
Art: Front

(7:24)  1. Nancy (With The Laughing Face)
(4:54)  2. Born To Be Blue
(6:30)  3. The Man I Love - Digitally Remastered
(5:54)  4. Lover Man
(5:21)  5. Willow Weep For Me
(6:04)  6. If I Could Be With You (One Hour Tonight)
(6:39)  7. Everything Happens To Me - Long Version
(5:10)  8. Imagination
(4:43)  9. There Is No Greater Love

Tenor saxophonist Ike Quebec always had a big, warm sound, and he was particularly expert on ballads. This 1997 sampler CD surprisingly does not have any examples of his early work on Blue Note in the mid- to late 1940s, instead concentrating on selections from four of Quebec's seven late-period Blue Note albums, a few songs originally issued as 45s, and "Born to Be Blue," which is taken from an album by guitarist Grant Green. The eight ballads are all standards and put the focus very much on Quebec, making for a fine mood album even if acquiring the full sessions (all but "It Might As Well Be Spring" are currently available on CD) is preferable. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/ballads-mw0000024976

Personnel: Ike Quebec (tenor saxophone); Sonny Clark (piano); Freddie Roach, Sir Charles Thompson, Earl Vandyke (organ); Grant Green, Willie Jones (guitar); Milt Hinton, Sam Jones (bass); Art Blakey, Louis Hayes, Al Harewood, J.C. Heard, Wilbert Hogan (drums).

Ballads

Robert Walter - Super Heavy Organ

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:54
Size: 144,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:27)  1. Adelita
(3:14)  2. Kickin' Up Dust
(2:33)  3. Spell
(7:30)  4. El Cuervo
(5:12)  5. Criminals Have A Name For It
(7:15)  6. 34 Small
(3:38)  7. Don't Hate, Congratulate
(2:56)  8. Poor Tom
(6:05)  9. (smells like) Dad's Drunk Again
(4:57) 10. Big Dummy
(5:01) 11. Hardware
(9:02) 12. Cabrillo

Organist Robert Walter is best known as a founding member of the dance jazz funksters known as Greyboy Allstars. But since the mid-1990s he's also been involved in other projects, like the George Clinton tribute band The Clinton Administration featuring instrumental workups of classic Parliament and Funkadelic tunes and Robert Walter's 20th Congress, an update on 1970s jazz/funk. Super Heavy Organ is the first disc he's made since relocating to New Orleans, and by recruiting a group of notable Crescent City musicians he's created an album that not only fits comfortably in the jamband jazz/funk space he's made home all along, but also introduces some new elements as well. With bassist James Singleton and drummer Johnny Vidacovich the rhythm section for New Orleans supergroup Astral Project on seven of Walter's twelve original tunes, this "live in the studio session has a built-in chemistry. Stanton Moore previously intersecting with Walter in both The Clinton Administration and 20th Congress keeps the telepathy equally alive on the five tracks where he replaces Vidacovich. Saxophonist Tim Green may be better known in rock circles, having played with the Neville Brothers, Indigo Girls, and Peter Gabriel, but he's got some serious jazz chops. There's an immediacy about the whole record, right from the first notes of the greasy funk workout "Adelita. Walter's songs could be played by rhythm sections from anywhere and sound good, but there's a slap-happy looseness about the New Orleans approach that makes them sound great. It's less about virtuosity although there's no lack of that and more about a collective vibe.

Even singer Anthony Farrell, who appears on three tracks, isn't any kind of "lead singer. Instead, he contributes howls and moans to "Spell and some spoken word to "Don't Hate, Congratulate that are down in the mix, constituting integral parts rather than standing out. Walter's material may be groove-centric, but the group's energy and open ears keep things from becoming predictable. "El Cuerve may revolve around a two-chord vamp in 7/4, but Vidacovich and Singleton keep things fluid underneath powerful solos from both Green and Walter. "Cabrillo, the album closer and, at nine minutes, the longest piece, swings in 5/4 and evidences Walter's concerns beyond funk and soul, with a Latin vibe that's grist for one of his most purely adventurous solos on the record. Still, Walter can't forget his funk. "Hardware is down-and-dirty, with Vidacovich laying down a lazy behind-the-beat backbeat peppered by the occasional military roll, while Moore creates a huge sound behind Walter's combo of organ and clavinet on the up-tempo "Poor Tom. Walter differentiates himself from other contemporary Hammond players like Gary Versace and Larry Goldings with a purview that extends well beyond the jazz tradition. And while he shares some ties to the jamband aesthetic of MMW, Walters remains more direct. Still, with its combination of unassailable grooves filtered through a New Orleans sensibility and open-ended spontaneity, Super Heavy Organ is sure to find fans from a variety of stylistic vantages. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/super-heavy-organ-robert-walter-magnatude-records-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Robert Walter: Hammond organ, clavinet, piano, melodica, percussion; Stanton Moore: drums; Johnny Vidacovich: drums; Tim Green: tenor saxophone; James Singleton: bass. Special guest Anthony Farrell: vocals.

Super Heavy Organ

Harold Land - Just Imagine

Styles: Saxophone Jazz 
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 81:38
Size: 189,1 MB
Art: Front

( 4:18)  1. Take the "A" Train
( 5:40)  2. Beautiful Love
( 6:59)  3. Tom Dooley
( 5:16)  4. Hava Nagila
( 5:36)  5. George's Dilemma
( 3:00)  6. On Top of Old Smokey
( 4:22)  7. Foggy, Foggy Dew
( 4:56)  8. Sandu
(11:15)  9. I'm Gonna Go Fishin'
( 2:53) 10. Swingin'
( 4:09) 11. Scarlet Ribbons
( 5:10) 12. Jacqui
( 4:57) 13. Land's End
( 6:40) 14. Full Moon and Empty Arms
( 3:24) 15. If I Love Again
( 2:56) 16. Gerkin for Perkin

Harold Land was a member of the Max Roach-Clifford Brown quintet in the '50s, and co-led another quintet with Bobby Hutcherson in the late '60s and early '70s. Early in his career, he was noted for a dry tone and rather individualistic approach. During the '60s, Land's tone became harder and his phrasing and style more intense as he incorporated elements of John Coltrane's approach into his style. But Land was first and foremost a hard bop stylist. Land began playing sax at 16, after his interest in music increased during high school. He initially played in San Diego bands, then moved to Los Angeles. Land's earliest recording experience was for Savoy in 1949, when he cut four tracks with Leon Petties, Froebel Brigham, and others leading the Harold Land All Stars. He joined the Max Roach-Clifford Brown quintet in the early '50s, replacing Teddy Edwards. Land stayed in the group about 18 months, recording with them for EmArcy, then left to play with Curtis Counce. He played with Counce from 1956 to 1958, appearing on Counce dates for Contemporary and Dooto. (He also recorded with Frank Rosolino on a Specialty date that didn't surface until the late '80s, though it was originally done in 1959.) Land recorded as a leader on Contemporary in the late '50s, making one of his finest albums, The Fox, with Elmo Hope. He worked often with Gerald Wilson in both the '50s and '60s. Land also divided his time during these decades between heading groups and playing with Red Mitchell. He and Mitchell recorded an album for Atlantic in 1961. There were also dates with Wes Montgomery and Kenny Dorham for Jazzland, and sessions for Imperial and Pacific Jazz. Land played with Carmell Jones, Bud Shank, Leroy Vinnegar, Gary Peacock, Thelonius Monk, and Wilson, among others. He and Hutcherson co-formed a quintet in 1967, and continued until 1971. They recorded for Cadet, Mainstream and Blue Note. Land and Blue Mitchell co-led a quintet from 1975 to 1978, recording for Concord, Impulse and RCA. Land worked with his son Harold Land, Jr. in Wilson's orchestra, and reunited with Hutcherson for a Muse session in the '80s. He continued working and performing into the '90s. ~ Ron Wynn https://www.allmusic.com/artist/harold-land-mn0000665944/biography

Just Imagine

Monday, September 23, 2019

Don Byron - Do The Boomerang: The Music Of Junior Walker

Styles: Clarinet Jazz, Post Bop 
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:24
Size: 118,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:08)  1. Cleo's Mood
(4:39)  2. Ain't That The Truth
(3:09)  3. Do The Boomerang
(3:20)  4. Mark Anthony Speaks
(4:53)  5. Shotgun
(7:21)  6. There It Is
(5:21)  7. Satan's Blues
(2:48)  8. Hewbie Steps Out
(3:55)  9. Pucker Up, Buttercup
(3:59) 10. Tally-Ho
(3:51) 11. What Does It Take (To Win Your Love)
(2:55) 12. (I'm A) Roadrunner

Anybody interested in Don Byron gets his range, and his willingness to try almost anything that tickles his fancy, whether it be klezmer, swing, funk, out jazz, blues or funky soul. He explores and leaves his mark on something and moves on. From Music for Six Musicians and Tuskegee Experiments to Nu Blaxploitation and Bug Music, from Fine Line: Arias and Lieder and Plays the Music of Mickey Katz to Ivey-Divey, Byron has explored not usually reverently -- his inspirations and curiosities with mixed results, but it's the investigation that counts for him in the first place. Do the Boomerang: The Music of Junior Walker is a curious outing in that Walker didn't always write his own material, but he wrote enough of it (five cuts on this set) and, like Byron, put an indelible stamp on anything he took on, from singing to blowing the saxophone. Byron assembled a dream band for this offering that includes guitarist David Gilmore, B-3 organist George Colligan, drummer Rodney Jones and bassist Brad Jones as the core group. The guests who augment the proceedings are Curtis Fowlkes, Chris Thomas King and Dean Bowman. Is the music reverent? Nope; but it's totally recognizable as Walker's. Byron doesn't set out to re-create anything exactly. His concern is for that thing he can't put his finger on, and discovering the place where the magic happens. But this is no academic set of Walker tunes, it's funky, it swings, and the grooves are deep and wide. Walker was a killer vocalist and Byron enlisted bluesman King on four cuts (he plays guitar on a pair as well) and Bowman. 

The set begins on a late-night smoky groove with "Cleo's Mood," the B-3 carries it in with Gilmore's guitar playing in the gaps before the tune's melody slithers to the fore with Byron and Bowman, and from here it's the blues as read through post-bop, soul-jazz, and the ghost of Leon Thomas through Bowman's vocal solo that sounds right at home here. Byron is in the pocket with this band. They aren't reaching for margins, but exploring how much was in Walker's music to begin with, there are traces of many things in the tune, and Byron finds them all. Digging into the classic "Shotgun," King's vocal delivery on the title track struts and steps to Byron's clarinet floating in the boundaries as Colligan's B-3 and Gilmore's meaty guitar heighten the groove to the breaking point. On "Shotgun," Byron plays it close to home and King's vocal is brilliant. This, like the title cut, is a dance tune on par with James Brown's; the lyrics are particularly compelling for the times we live in. Walker acknowledged the influence James Brown had on him readily and on "There It Is," both Bowman and King pump themselves to front this band that is so greasy and nasty one would never know that this is Byron's group. This joint burns the house down, baby! While there isn't a dud in the set, other big standouts include "Satan's Blues," "Pucker Up, Buttercup," and the ballad "What Does It Take (To Win Your Love.)" 

Here the bass clarinet is distracting for a moment, but transposing the opening saxophone part and letting King and Gilmore play sweet and slow lays a fine ground for both the hypnotic B-3 chart and King's lonesome vocal. Byron uses clipped, right phrasing with the airiness of his horn, solos around the fringes of the tune, and brings it back inside and underscores the fact that this is a soul tune. King's vocal could have been a bit tougher and leaner, but that's a really small complaint. Ending the set on Holland-Dozier-Holland's "Roadrunner" takes it out on a honking high point. Byron's done justice not only to Walker here, but to his Muse and to the grand tradition of funky jazz records on Blue Note hopefully they'll get it in the A&R department and bring the groove back wholesale. This baby is a smoking slab of greasy soul with a jazzman's sense of adventure. ~ Thom Jurek https://www.allmusic.com/album/do-the-boomerang-the-music-of-junior-walker-mw0000729295

Personnel: Bass Clarinet – Don Byron; Clarinet – Don Byron;  Bass – Brad Jones; Drums, Tambourine – Rodney Holmes; Guitar – Chris Thomas King, David Gilmore; Organ [Hammond B-3] – George Colligan; Saxophone [Tenor] – Don Byron;  Trombone – Curtis Fowlkes; Vocals – Chris Thomas King , Dean Bowman

Do The Boomerang: The Music Of Junior Walker

Rebecca DuMaine, The Dave Miller Trio - Happy Madness

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:57
Size: 118,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:06)  1. Nobody Else but Me
(4:04)  2. Samba Saravah
(4:37)  3. Like Someone in Love
(3:45)  4. Take a Chance
(4:36)  5. So Nice
(4:22)  6. It's Alright with Me
(2:50)  7. I'm Old Fashioned
(6:07)  8. This Happy Madness
(2:40)  9. Here, There and Everywhere
(3:44) 10. The More I See You
(4:12) 11. Destination Moon
(3:06) 12. Haven't We Met
(3:44) 13. Spider Man

There's a natural appeal in Rebecca DuMaine's vocal work. Perhaps it's due to her straightforward approach, reflective of a theater background yet undeniably tethered to pure jazz. She puts a song across with a smile, capitalizing on her innate ebullience, and she gives the impression that she knows of what she sings. On this, DuMaine's fourth album on the Summit imprint, she continues her work with the Dave Miller Trio. She has a longstanding connection to this group the leader-pianist is her father, and the trio has accompanied her on all of her previous releases and that makes for a hand-in-glove fit. 

There may be slight changes in personnel from past albums a different bassist, the addition of one new guest (and the return of one familiar one) but it's basically business as usual for this crew. DuMaine's sunny side is tapped to the fullest extent over the course of these thirteen tracks. Everything is emotionally upbeat, regardless of tempo or style, and there's a glimmer in every musical action. Some numbers launch with swinging verve ("Nobody Else But Me") and others enter with lights-are-low intimacy before settling in ("Like Someone In Love"). DuMaine finds comfort in myriad settings along the way, gaily waltzing along ("Haven't We Met"), exploring a classic from The Beatles with only her father at her side ("Here, There And Everywhere"), delivering a "Sing, Sing, Sing"-esque spin on a famous thematic ode to the world's favorite web-slinger ("Spider Man"), and mining Brazilian music and rhythms to good effect on a number of occasions. Through it all, DuMaine is ably assisted by Miller, bassist Perry Thoorsell, drummer Bill Belasco, and, on occasion, guitarist Brad Buethe and saxophonist Pete Cornell. Everybody on that list helps to accentuate the mood(s) at hand by playing to the songs and adding concise solo statements at one time or another. If there's one potential drawback here, it's that things may be a bit too orderly and proper. This isn't risk-taking music. But should you really consider refinement and clarity of expression a flaw? Probably not. DuMaine, Miller, and the rest of the crew are a polished bunch, and these songs show it. 

If you're looking for a ray-of-sunshine statement capable of blocking out the negative energy in the world, this is it. ~ Dan Bilaswsky https://www.allaboutjazz.com/happy-madness-rebecca-dumaine-summit-records-review-by-dan-bilawsky.php

Personnel: Rebecca DuMaine: vocals; Dave Miller: piano; Perry Thoorsell: bass; Bill Belasco: drums; Brad Buethe: guitar; Pete Cornell: saxophone.

Happy Madness

Avery Sharpe Trio - Autumn Moonlight

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop 
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:09
Size: 136,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:25)  1. Boston Baked Blues
(7:26)  2. Fire and Rain
(4:37)  3. Autumn Moonlight
(4:16)  4. Take Your Time, But Hurry Up!
(8:55)  5. Palace of the Seven Jewels
(6:20)  6. Organ Grinder
(7:23)  7. Intrepid Warrior
(4:21)  8. Lost in a Dream
(5:23)  9. Visible Man
(4:57) 10. First Time We Met

Highly regarded bassist Avery Sharpe has been a first-call session musician due to his long affiliation with pianist McCoy Tyner and others of note. Moreover, he's a viable solo artist, evidenced here on this multicolored 2009 piano trio venture. Sharpe is the traffic director here, though it's a democratic engagement, comprised of covers and original compositions, all enamored by a lithe framework consisting of jazz-induced soul, funk, swing and other genre-fusing stylizations. The trio often projects a flotation-like soundscape. On "Autumn Moonlight" Sharpe's wordless vocals serve as an additional instrument in harmony with pianist Onaje Allan Gumbs' melodic inventions, all shaded with a Brazilian hue. Even when the band swings hard and navigates through complex unison phrasings, it makes it all sound effortless. Yet it can also lower the temperature, as on the quaint ballad, "Palace Of The Seven Jewels." Sharpe's rendition of trumpet great Woody Shaw's "Organ Grinder" is a strong vehicle for Gumbs, who re-engineers the primary theme via his fluent improvisational excursions. However, the bassist takes center stage on numerous pieces via his booming, earthen-toned lines, and lyrically charged solo spots. Gumbs' lower register block chords offer a fertile underpinning for drummer Winard Harper's explosive solo on "Intrepid Warrior," where the band generates high-heat and pulls out the proverbial stops. It's a congenial studio date, as Sharpe pitches an upbeat vibe that casts a divergent outlook without any hint of pretension. Expertly performed, the musicians also transmit a synergistic group-centric aura. It's easy to discern that a good time was had by all during the session and that notion alone conveys one of the many redeeming traits of this indubitably engaging album. ~ Glenn Astarita https://www.allaboutjazz.com/autumn-moonlight-avery-sharpe-jknm-records-review-by-glenn-astarita.php

Personnel: Avery Sharpe: Acoustic Bass; Onaje Allen Gumbs: piano; Winard Harper: drums.

Autumn Moonlight

Vassar Clements - Dead Grass

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:01
Size: 109,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:17)  1. Brown-eyed Women
(3:49)  2. Casey Jones
(4:22)  3. Attics Of My Life
(4:01)  4. Broke-down Palace
(3:40)  5. Alabama Getaway
(4:19)  6. Ripple
(4:38)  7. U.s. Blues
(2:53)  8. Dire Wolf
(5:07)  9. Friend Of The Devil
(4:50) 10. It Must Have Been The Roses
(5:00) 11. Mexicali Blues

Combining jazz with country, Vassar Clements became one of the most distinctive, inventive, and popular fiddlers in bluegrass music. Clements first came to prominence as a member of Bill Monroe's band in the early '50s, but he never limited himself to traditional bluegrass. Over the next four decades, he distinguished himself by incorporating a number of different genres into his style. In the process, he became not only one of the most respected fiddlers in bluegrass, he also became a sought-after session musician, playing with artists as diverse as the Monkees, Hank Williams, Paul McCartney, Michelle Shocked, Vince Gill, and Bonnie Raitt. Clements taught himself to play fiddle at the age of seven. Soon afterward, he formed a band with two of his cousins. By the time he was 21, Clements' skills were impressive enough to attract the attention of Bill Monroe. Monroe hired the young fiddler and Clements appeared on the Grand Ole Opry with the mandolinist in 1949. The following year, the fiddler recorded his first session with Monroe. For the next six years, Clements stayed with Monroe's band, occasionally leaving for brief periods of time. In 1957 he joined Jim & Jesse's Virginia Boys, and stayed with the band for the next four years. In the early '60s Clements was sidelined for a while as he suffered from alcoholism. By the end of the '60s he had rehabilitated, and he returned to playing in 1967. That year he moved to Nashville and began playing the tenor banjo at a residency at the Dixieland Landing Club. In 1969 he toured with Faron Young and joined John Hartford's Dobrolic Plectorial Society. The band only lasted ten months, and after its breakup Clements joined the Earl Scruggs Revue; he stayed with that band for a year. Clements began playing sessions in 1971, appearing on albums by Steve Goodman, Gordon Lightfoot, David Bromberg, J.J. Cale, and Mike Audridge over the next two years. In 1972 he was featured on the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band's hit album Will the Circle Be Unbroken, which helped establish him as a country and bluegrass star. Clements capitalized on the record's popularity in 1973, when he released his first solo album, Crossing the Catskills, on Rounder Records and began touring the festival and college circuits. That same year, he appeared on a number of albums, including the Grateful Dead's Wake of the Flood, Jimmy Buffett's A White Sport Coat and a Pink Crustacean, and Mickey Newbury's Heaven Help the Child. 

In 1974, Clements signed a record contract with Mercury Records, releasing two albums for the label Vassar Clements and Superbow the following year. That same year, he appeared in the bluegrass supergroup Old & in the Way, which also featured Jerry Garcia, David Grisman, Peter Rowan, and John Kahn. He also had a cameo role in Robert Altman's film Nashville in 1975. In 1977, Clements released two albums for two different labels The Vassar Clements Band on MCA Records and The Bluegrass Session on Flying Fish. It would be four years before he released another solo album. During that time, he toured constantly and appeared on numerous albums. Clements reappeared in 1981 with Hillbilly Rides Again and Vassar, which were both released on Flying Fish. During the '80s and '90s, Clements continued to record sporadically, but he cut numerous sessions for other artists and played numerous concerts every year. In 1995, Clements reunited with Old & in the Way, which released That High Lonesome Sound in 1996. The solo Back Porch Swing followed three years later; Full Circle appeared in spring 2001. In 2004 he released Livin' With the Blues, his first blues-based album. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine  https://www.allmusic.com/artist/vassar-clements-mn0000245039/biography

Personnel: Fiddle – Vassar Clements; Backing Vocals – Jeff White;  Bass, Vocals – Ryan Harris ; Guitar, Banjo – Reggie Harris; Mandolin – Butch Baldassari; Pedal Steel Guitar – Doug Jernigan; Vocals – Gwen Vaughn

Dead Grass

Sunday, September 22, 2019

Harry 'Sweets' Edison - Gee, Baby Ain't I Good to You

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:26
Size: 100,0 MB
Scans: Front

(7:38)  1. Blues For Piney Brown
(4:50)  2. Blues For The Blues
(9:31)  3. Blues For Bill Basie
(3:32)  4. Gee, Baby Ain't I Good To You
(6:52)  5. You're Getting To Be A Habit With Me
(7:03)  6. Taste On The Place
(3:57)  7. Moonlight In Vermont

Harry "Sweets" Edison got the most mileage out of a single note, like his former boss Count Basie. Edison, immediately recognizable within a note or two, long used repetition and simplicity to his advantage while always swinging. He played in local bands in Columbus and then in 1933 joined the Jeter-Pillars Orchestra. After a couple years in St. Louis, Edison moved to New York where he joined Lucky Millinder and then in June 1938, Count Basie, remaining with that classic orchestra until it broke up in 1950. During that period, he was featured on many records, appeared in the 1944 short Jammin' the Blues and gained his nickname "Sweets" (due to his tone) from Lester Young. In the 1950s, Edison toured with Jazz at the Philharmonic, settled in Los Angeles, and was well-featured both as a studio musician (most noticeably on Frank Sinatra records) and on jazz dates. He had several reunions with Count Basie in the 1960s and by the '70s was often teamed with Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis; Edison also recorded an excellent duet album for Pablo with Oscar Peterson. One of the few swing trumpeters to be influenced by Dizzy Gillespie, Sweets led sessions through the years for Pacific Jazz, Verve, Roulette, Riverside, Vee-Jay, Liberty, Sue, Black & Blue, Pablo, Storyville, and Candid among others. Although his playing faded during the 1980s and '90s, Edison could still say more with one note than nearly anyone; he died July 27, 1999, at age 83. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/harry-sweets-edison-mn0000670641/biography

Personnel: Trumpet – Harry'Sweets'Edison; Bass – Ray Brown; Drums – Alvin Stoller; Guitar – Barney Kessel; Piano – Oscar Peterson; Tenor Saxophone – Ben Webster

Gee, Baby Ain't I Good to You

Ike Quebec - Blue Harlem

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:35
Size: 181,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:40)  1. Tiny's Exercise
(4:28)  2. She's Funny That Way
(4:00)  3. Indiana
(4:37)  4. Blue Harlem
(3:05)  5. Hard Tack
(3:25)  6. If I Had You
(4:15)  7. Mad About You
(4:11)  8. Facin' The Face
(4:00)  9. Blue Turning Grey Over You
(3:17) 10. Dolores
(4:04) 11. The Day You Came Along
(2:56) 12. Sweethearts On Parade
(3:53) 13. I Found A New Baby
(4:30) 14. I Surrender Dear
(3:10) 15. Topsy
(2:55) 16. Cup-Mute Clayton
(3:16) 17. Girl Of My Dreams
(2:49) 18. Jim Dawgs
(2:53) 19. Scufflin'
(2:58) 20. I.Q. Blues
(2:58) 21. The Masquerade Is Over
(3:04) 22. Basically Blue

Influenced by Coleman Hawkins and Ben Webster but definitely his own person, Ike Quebec was one of the finest swing-oriented tenor saxman of the 1940s and '50s. Though he was never an innovator, Quebec had a big, breathy sound that was distinctive and easily recognizable, and he was quite consistent when it came to came to down-home blues, sexy ballads, and up-tempo aggression. Originally a pianist, Quebec switched to tenor in the early '40s and showed that he had made the right decision on excellent 78s for Blue Note and Savoy (including his hit "Blue Harlem"). As a sideman, he worked with Benny Carter, Kenny Clarke, Roy Eldridge, and Cab Calloway. In the late '40s, the saxman did a bit of freelancing behind the scenes as a Blue Note A&R man and brought Thelonious Monk and Bud Powell to the label. Drug problems kept Quebec from recording for most of the 1950s, but he made a triumphant comeback in the early '60s and was once again recording for Blue Note and doing freelance A&R for the company. Quebec was playing as authoritatively as ever well into 1962, giving no indication that he was suffering from lung cancer, which claimed his life at the age of 44 in 1963. ~ Alex Henderson https://www.allmusic.com/artist/ike-quebec-mn0000082037/biography

Blue Harlem