Sunday, October 20, 2019

Courtney Pine - Modern Day Jazz Stories

Styles: Saxophone And Flute Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:00
Size: 136,1 MB
Art: Front

( 1:24)  1. Prelude - The Water Of Life
( 4:21)  2. The 37th Chamber
( 4:56)  3. Don't 'Xplain
( 8:48)  4. Dah Blessing
( 5:58)  5. In The Garden Of Eden - Thinking Inside Of You
(10:36)  6. Creation Stepper
( 7:33)  7. Absolution
( 3:50)  8. Each One - Must) Teach One
( 6:39)  9. The Unknown Warrior - Song For My Forefathers
( 3:41) 10. I've Known Rivers
( 1:09) 11. Outro - Guiding Light

On his return to Antilles and his debut with the Verve Group, Courtney Pine reaches out to unchartered musical zones, reflecting the sound of the street in a modern mix of pop, hip hop and jazz music. Described as Courtney's most focused album to date, Modern Day Jazz Stories combines the worlds of jazz and hip hop, utilizing the traditional sounds of jazz instruments simultaneously with turntables, but without overdubs. Full album to ship to jazz and college radio. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Modern-Jazz-Stories-Courtney-Pine/dp/B000004703

Personnel: Saxophone [Tenor], Saxophone [Soprano], Flute – Courtney Pine; Double Bass – Charnett Moffett; Drums, Percussion – Ronnie Burrage; Guitar – Mark Whitfield; Piano [Acoustic], Organ [Hammond B3] – Geri Allen; Trumpet – Eddie Henderson; Voice – Cassandra Wilson

Modern Day Jazz Stories

Kellylee Evans - Come On

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:45
Size: 79,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:05)  1. Come On
(3:17)  2. Tell Me What You Like
(3:47)  3. Right To Love
(3:29)  4. Hands Up
(3:52)  5. These Arms
(2:59)  6. Know His Worth
(3:22)  7. Alright Maybe
(3:31)  8. Find Your Heart
(3:41)  9. I Do
(3:36) 10. Unbreakable

Six albums deep and Juno Award winner Kellylee Evans is still shaking it up on Come On, her latest Decca album. The stylistic connoisseur has tackled everything from jazz to R&B and pop in such previous tasty classics fight or flight?, Nina, her Juno-winning tribute to the legendary Nina Simone and I Remember When. Praised by the Latin Jazz Network for a "gorgeous voice (that) rises to the heavens in rapturous wonder as if in consanguinity with a chorus of angels" and by the Yukon Arts Centre for "a stunning crystalline voice, both powerful and emotive," Evans now pushes her muse firmly into the soulful pop territory with Come On: a wonderfully refreshing album about love and life that comes on the heels of two nearly career-ending accidents: a freak lightning strike in her Ottawa kitchen and further effects of a concussion suffered during a fall at her home. However, Evans is nothing if not resilient: the runner-up of the 2004 Thelonious Monk Competition offers views on love and loss in an alluringly rhythmic approach that has touches of psychedelic pop, resonating soul groove and that je ne sais quoi that is strictly Kellylee and forged by her jazz discipline. From the stirring soul-stomper "Come On" which combines an effervescent Motown feel with traces of psychedelia and the funky groove-a-liciousness of "Hands Up" to the string-and-horn-spiced magnetism of "Know His Worth," the 10 songs of Come On find Kellylee at her most magically potent. Produced and co-written by Eric Legnini (Stefano Di Battista), this is post-romantic soul at its finest; a project of strong vision and great execution that signals the return of Kellylee Evans as a bold explorer and interpreter. It only gets better when you experience her live, in her element. Kellylee Evans' time is nigh, and Come On is just the catalyst to get her there. http://www.kellyleeevans.com/bio/

Come On

Wolfgang Haffner - Zooming

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:41
Size: 128,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:20)  1. Zooming
(5:24)  2. The Day Before Yesterday
(5:54)  3. Trip
(3:57)  4. Somewhere Else
(4:54)  5. Facing West
(6:47)  6. Metropolis
(5:19)  7. Shape of Peace
(4:59)  8. Momo's Dance
(5:43)  9. Seventy Five
(6:19) 10. Corazon

"Besides his virtuosity as an instrumentalist, Wolfgang Haffner is an excellent songwriter, arranger and producer.His current release literally "takes the cake" .He successfully manages to create a convincing blend of innovative sounds, catchy melodies and brilliant group tightness, for the first time, bears purely European traits. Much like the proverbial chef de cuisine, he has taken the creme de la creme of European jazz musicians and formed a dish that has all the makings of a classic recipe: shimmering guitar riffs from Martin Koller, electronic effects by the ultra-manipulated sounds of saxofonist / bass clarinetist as a reminiscent of the best up-to-date Scandinavian productions, a taste of uncompromising rock here and there and naturally well-laced jazz solos at their finest. Till Brönner, Rebekka Bakken and Nils Landgren are among the colourful gang of characters." 

Personnel: Wolfgang Haffner (drums), Johannes Enders (tenor saxophone), Rebekka Bakken (vocals), Till Bronner (trumpet), Nils Landgren (trombone), Vladyslav Sendetzki (keyboards)

Zooming

Kevin Hays - 7th Sense

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:55
Size: 147,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:50)  1. Take The D Flat Train
(6:57)  2. Seventh Sense
(7:13)  3. Three Pillars
(8:24)  4. My Man's Gone Now
(5:47)  5. Interlude
(7:08)  6. Space Acres
(5:06)  7. Little B's Poem
(7:57)  8. East Of The Sun
(4:33)  9. Makyo
(4:57) 10. Black Narcissus

Pianist Kevin Hays' style mixes together the influences of Bill Evans and McCoy Tyner and he helps define the modern mainstream on this Blue Note disc. The quintet set also features plenty of solo space from vibraphonist Steve Nelson and the excellent tenorman Seamus Blake. 

Opening with three Hays originals and also including Hindermith's "Interlude" (which finds the group sounding a little like the Modern Jazz Quartet) and such standards as "My Man's Gone Now" and "East of the Sun," the music pays tribute to the past without becoming predictable or overly derivative. It's a fine release. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/seventh-sense-mw0000114092

Personnel: Kevin Hays - piano;  Seamus Blake - tenor saxophone; Steve Nelson - vibraphone; Doug Weiss - bass; Brian Blade -drums

7th Sense

Bill Evans - Smile With Your Heart: The Best of Bill Evans on Resonance

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:27
Size: 159,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:13)  1. Someday My Prince Will Come
(5:07)  2. Yesterdays
(4:21)  3. Mother of Earl
(3:32)  4. You're Gonna Hear from Me
(4:51)  5. Baubles, Bangles and Beads
(6:58)  6. My Funny Valentine
(8:34)  7. Nardis
(5:14)  8. Very Early
(4:53)  9. Turn out the Stars
(3:53) 10. Polka Dots and Moonbeams
(8:49) 11. RE: Person I Know
(7:57) 12. Waltz for Debby

In celebration of its 10-year anniversary, Resonance is launching a series of compilations culled from its vast catalog highlighting both living artists as well as jazz greats of the past. The artwork for the first 4 titles in the series is by the acclaimed Japanese artist, Takao Fujioka, who is also the chief editor of Way Out West magazine in Japan. His artwork has graced countless album covers, and he has had exhibitions all over the world. Smile With Your Heart focuses on the jazz icon Bill Evans and includes material from his four album releases on Resonance Records. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Smile-Your-Heart-Evans-Resonance/dp/B07QXTFT7Q

Personnel: Bill Evans: piano; Eddie Gomez: bass; Marty Morell: drums (1-3, 10-12); Jack DeJohnette: drums (4-9).

Smile With Your Heart: The Best of Bill Evans on Resonance

Saturday, October 19, 2019

Fapy Lafertin, Tim Kliphouse - Fine & Dandy

Styles: Guitar And Violin Jazz 
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:11
Size: 116,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:00)  1. Eveline
(3:16)  2. Blue Lou
(3:59)  3. Tango For Django
(4:29)  4. Lover Man
(3:02)  5. Coquette
(2:41)  6. Fine & Dandy
(4:06)  7. Aurore
(4:26)  8. I Love You
(2:32)  9. Caravane Rabouine
(3:26) 10. Exactly Like You
(3:08) 11. Charleston
(5:29) 12. I Can't Get Started
(2:49) 13. How High The Moon
(3:42) 14. Fleur De Lavande

Fapy Lafertin may not be as well known Stochelo Rosenberg or Bireli Lagrene, but aficionados of Gypsy jazz guitar have regarded him as one the true masters of the style since he first arrived on the scene in the late 1960s. On Fine & Dandy he showcases his relaxed, melodic manner of playing on a well-chosen selection of tunes including David Grisman's composition "Tango for Django," the charming waltz "Caravene Rabouine," and Lafertin's own homage to Django Reinhardt, "Aurore." Lafertin is joined by Tim Kliphouse, an excellent fiddler who plays with considerable panache. The flurry of impeccably executed notes on lively tunes like "How High the Moon" and "Charleston" show that Lafertin and Kliphouse have technique to burn, but they reveal their true command of the music on the slower selections such as "I Can't Get Started." Fine & Dandy is state-of-the-art Gypsy jazz from one of the finest musicians to ever pick up a Selmer guitar. ~ Michael Simmons - Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Fine-Dandy-Lafertin-Quintet-Kliphouse/dp/B00008US1H

Personnel: Fapy Lafertin - guitar; Tim Kliphouse - violin; Simon Planting - double bass; Jan Brouwer - rhythm guitar; Reinier Voet - rhythm guitar

Fine & Dandy

Heather Masse - Many Moons

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 23:57
Size: 55,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:25)  1. Moon River
(5:12)  2. Moon Medley
(3:51)  3. Our World
(4:57)  4. Secret Love
(4:31)  5. Stars

New York-based singer song-maker Heather Masse grew up in rural Maine and began singing at an early age. Having taken a degree in Jazz Voice from the New England Conservatory of Music, Heather is steeped in the jazz tradition, which informs her distinct approach to singing music of all sorts. She is a member of the acclaimed Juno-award winning Canadian band “The Wailin' Jennys”, and has performed at 100s of venues across the country including appearances on Garrison Keillor’s A Prairie Home Companion. She has performed with the renowned contemporary bluegrass band "The Wayfaring Strangers," and has appeared at venues including NPR's World Cafe, and Boston's Symphony Hall, sharing the stage with the Boston Pops Orchestra. In 2006, she recorded an eponymous album with the Boston-based group "Joy Kills Sorrow" a modern string band that finds it home in the cracks between bluegrass, jazz, old-time, and pop styles as well as a self-released EP Tell Me Tonight, a collection of original songs performed with her own Brooklyn-based outfit “Heather and the Barbarians.” Heather’s rich, soulful, voice elegantly moves through numerous styles organically and with sincerity- A quality learned from some of her early influences disparate as Ray Charles, Bonnie Raitt, Joni Mitchell, and Chet Baker. Heather’s newest project, The Heather Anne Band plans to record a full-length album of Heather’s original songs and music this coming winter. https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/heathermasse

Many Moons

Matt Dennis - Dennis, Anyone?

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:29
Size: 96,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:41)  1. Where Do We Go From Here?
(2:56)  2. The Land Of Danger
(3:18)  3. Old Uncle Fud
(2:55)  4. Relax
(3:32)  5. I'm The Boy Who Takes Her Home
(3:27)  6. Devil Talk
(3:22)  7. That's How Close I Want To Be To You
(3:32)  8. Too Late For Love
(3:08)  9. Enchanted Memory
(3:15) 10. A Thousand Years Ago
(3:02) 11. Bless You, Little Sleepyhead
(5:15) 12. Show Me The Way To Get Out Of This World (Cause That's Where Everything Is)

Matt Dennis' first live LP, recorded in Hollywood in 1955 and also including a dozen Dennis compositions, doesn't have quite the songwriting firepower of Sings and Plays Matt Dennis. Instead of "Violets for Your Furs" and "Angel Eyes," listeners get "Old Uncle Fud" and "Bless You, Little Sleepyhead." Still, Dennis is just as suave and sentimental (though not as humorous), singing clever ballads like "I'm the Boy Who Takes Her Home" and the unexpectedly optimistic "Where Do We Go From Here?." A few do fall flat, including one ("That's How Close I Want to Be to You") whose references to then-current events and obscure personalities barely made it out of the '50s. Also, it's difficult to escape the fact that many of Dennis' performances are nearly identical. Undoubtedly an entertaining performance for a night out during the mid-'50s, Dennis, Anyone? exists for digital-age listeners as an interesting curio of lounge-act finesse. ~ John Bush https://www.allmusic.com/album/dennis-anyone-mw0000215634

Personnel:  Piano, Vocals – Matt Dennis; Bass – Ray Leatherwood; Drums – Alvin Stoller; Guitar – Bill Pitman

Dennis, Anyone?

Billy Eckstine - Broadway Bongos and Mr. B

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:26
Size: 75,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:22)  1. From This Moment On
(2:06)  2. I Could Write a Book
(2:49)  3. If Ever I Would Leave You
(2:57)  4. I've Got You Under My Skin
(3:06)  5. Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin'
(2:45)  6. Tonight
(2:24)  7. Stranger in Paradise
(2:17)  8. Get Out of Town
(2:56)  9. Old Devil Moon
(2:45) 10. On the Street Where You Live
(2:44) 11. There's a Small Hotel
(3:09) 12. Something I Dreamed Last Night

Broadway, Bongos and Mr. B is a 1961 studio album by the American singer Billy Eckstine. It was arranged by Hal Mooney, and marked Eckstine's return to Roulette Records. The album features Latin tinged arrangements of popular Broadway show tunes, with a percussion section of xylophones, marimbas and bongos. In their July 1961 review of Broadway, Bongos and Mr. B, Billboard magazine wrote that "This is one of the best albums made by Billy Eckstine in many years", and that he was "singing with confidence again in his own style". The review concluded that it was "A strong new album that could help win back many of Mr. B's fans". This was the third of Eckstine's Mercury Records albums to use the same photograph of him. It had previously graced the covers of Billy's Best! (1958) and Billy Eckstine's Imagination (1958). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broadway,_Bongos_and_Mr._B

Personnel:  Billy Eckstine - vocals; Hal Mooney - arranger, conductor

Broadway Bongos and Mr. B

Mike LeDonne - Partners in Time

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:31
Size: 123,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:04)  1. Lined with a Groove
(6:34)  2. My Funny Valentine
(8:33)  3. Saud
(6:46)  4. Lament
(7:30)  5. Recovery Blues
(4:36)  6. Here's That Rainy Day
(7:39)  7. N.P.S.
(5:46)  8. Bopsolete

Mike LeDonne is on piano this time around not his more-familiar Hammond organ and he's working in a really fantastic trio with Christian McBride on bass and Lewis Nash on drums! Both players have made lots of wonderful records over the years, but there's something really special about this one as if LeDonne's bold approach to the piano seems to unlock even more energy in their rhythms maybe in part because Mike's always partially tuned to the needs of a bassist, which he sometimes handles with his feet on the pedals of the Hammond. Obviously, that's not the case this time around but he does often play in these bold, blocky ways that are perfect for Nash and McBride to augment on titles that include "Saud", "Lined With A Groove", "Recovery Blues", "Here's That Rainy Day", "NPS", and "Bopsolete".  © 1996-2019, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/921006/Mike-LeDonne:Partners-In-Time

Personnel: Piano – Mike LeDonne;  Acoustic Bass – Christian McBride; Drums – Lewis Nash

Partners in Time

Friday, October 18, 2019

Hank Jones - Piano Solo (a.k.a. Have You Met Hank Jones)

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:10
Size: 92,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:16)  1. It Had to Be You
(3:15)  2. Heart and Soul
(2:26)  3. Let's Fall in Love
(2:54)  4. But Not for Me
(3:14)  5. Kankee Shout
(3:41)  6. Body and Soul
(2:32)  7. How About You
(3:19)  8. Gone with the Wind
(3:08)  9. Teddy's Dream
(3:16) 10. Have You Met Miss Jones
(4:12) 11. You Don't Know What Love Is
(4:52) 12. Solo Blues

Savoy jazz director, Ozzie Cadena, was the first a&r man to give Hank Jones the amount of record time he deserved. In addition to Joness steadying presence as a sideman on many sessions, Cadena saw to it that he was finally brought before a wider audience than at any previous point in his career. 

This time Cadena chose to present him as a solo performer, an inspired choice, since Jones is a complete jazz pianist in that he can be his own rhythm section if he has to. Underneath the flowing gentleness of his lines is a firm, two-handed beat that sometimes distils stride traces of his early influencesWaller, Tatum, Wilson, and Nat Cole. And because of the intelligence and emotional acumen of his musicianship, he can make even the venerable standards included here sound freshly minted and personal again. https://www.freshsoundrecords.com/hank-jones-albums/4923-hank-jones-piano-solo.html

Personnel: Hank Jones - Piano.

Piano Solo  (a.k.a. Have You Met Hank Jones)

Jane Morgan - The American Girl from Paris

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:16
Size: 91,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:23)  1. It Might as Well Be Spring
(3:16)  2. I'll Be Seeing You
(3:35)  3. Better Luck Next Time
(2:51)  4. J'attendrai
(2:57)  5. It's Easy to Remember
(4:18)  6. Thanks for the Memory
(3:23)  7. If I Loved You
(3:34)  8. When the World Was Young
(2:55)  9. A Woman Needs to Be Told
(3:03) 10. I Can Dream Can't I
(3:04) 11. Insensiblement
(2:52) 12. I Didn't Know What Time It Was

Vocalist Jane Morgan is known best for her lone Top Ten hit, "Fascination," drawn from the 1957 Billy Wilder film Love in the Afternoon. Born in Boston (as Jane Currier) but raised in Florida, Morgan was an early success as a singer in France. She made the transition back to America as a nightclub act, and signed to Kapp in the mid '50s.  Jane Morgan made her chart debut late in 1956, appearing alongside Roger Williams on "Two Different Worlds." One year later she hit number seven with her theme "Fascination," based on the old French composition "Valse Tzigane." Both "The Day the Rains Came" and "With Open Arms" followed "Fascination" into the Top 40 during the late '50s, but Morgan had disappeared from the charts by the turn of the decade. (Her last hit was also a movie theme, for 1959's Happy Anniversary, directed by David Miller and featuring David Niven.) She continued recording for Kapp until 1962, and resurfaced four years later on Epic for Fresh Flavor, a rock-crossover LP that was only slightly embarrassing (her cover of "Good Lovin'" is a minor moment of kitsch). ~ John Bush https://www.allmusic.com/artist/jane-morgan-mn0000181618/biography

The American Girl from Paris

Sérgio Mendes - Encanto

Styles: Brazilian Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:01
Size: 135,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:59)  1. The Look Of Love
(4:00)  2. Funky Bahia
(3:58)  3. Waters Of March
(3:50)  4. Odo-Ya
(4:00)  5. Somewhere in the Hills (O Morro Nao Tem Vez)
(4:16)  6. Lugar Comum
(4:43)  7. Dreamer
(4:19)  8. Morning in Rio
(4:18)  9. Y Vamos Ya (...Let's Go)
(3:50) 10. Catavento (Catavento e Girassol)
(4:27) 11. Acode
(4:02) 12. Agua De Beber
(3:53) 13. Waters of March (Les Eaux de Mars) - French Version
(4:19) 14. E Vamos La (...Let's Go)

Though he's always been at the front of the show, Sergio Mendes has often gotten by with the help of his friends. As in 1965, so in 2008. The newest update of Sergio Mendes & Brasil '66 feel free to call it Brasil '08 has a varied cast, led by co-producer will.i.am, who adapts his style well to urban and Brazilian forms. It also includes will.i.am's Black Eyed Peas bandmate Fergie, doing "The Look of Love" in a version that may never reach the heights of the original, but never becomes as embarrassing as "My Humps." Surprisingly, it's a good performance from Fergie; although she never approaches the sultriness of Dusty Springfield's original, her quick-paced singing on the verses is some kind of career highlight. Elsewhere, Mendes deserves most of the credit, especially since will.i.am only bookends the album (he produces the first two tracks and the last two). Encanto makes room for a parade of excellent musicians, including Carlinhos Brown, Ledisi, Natalie Cole, and Herb Alpert. (Not to be left out is the rhythm section, anchored by bass veterans Alphonso Johnson or Liminha.) The material breezes over quite a few Brazilian classics of the bossa nova era, and gives them just enough freshness to sound new. "Waters of March," with Johnson's nimble bass, makes room for a fine Ledisi vocal (granted, it's difficult to fail on that song). Mendes takes several solos on acoustic piano or Rhodes, best on the Herb Alpert feature "Dreamer." Overall, Encanto is a difficult record to judge; from the cover and the first two tracks, it appears to be urban all the way. The bulk of the album, however, is modern Brazilian jazz-fusion with an array of excellent musicians. Hopefully, its two potential audiences dance or hip-hop fans and Latin jazz listeners aren't steered away from it by thinking it's only concerned with one or the other. ~ John Bush https://www.allmusic.com/album/encanto-mw0000788394

Encanto

Brian Blade & The Fellowship Band - Body And Shadow

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop 
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:44
Size: 73,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:03)  1. Within Everything
(3:09)  2. Body and Shadow - Noon
(4:32)  3. Traveling Mercies
(1:20)  4. Have Thine Own Way, Lord - Solo
(1:14)  5. Have Thine Own Way, Lord - Band
(1:43)  6. Body and Shadow - Morning
(8:21)  7. Duality
(2:57)  8. Body and Shadow - Night
(5:20)  9. Broken Leg Days

Brian Blade & The Fellowship Band celebrates its 20th anniversary in 2017. Body and Shadow is only their fifth album: they have not recorded prolifically, but each one has been worth the wait. The group occupies a unique space: the sound of Americana (chiefly folk music) is dominant, but played with a jazz sensibility. Despite the considerable technical firepower in the band, it has always kept the focus on the ensemble sound rather than on soloists. For this outing drummer Brian Blade and keyboardist Jon Cowherd have nearly equal compositional input, and the group welcomes a new member in Denver-based guitarist Dave Devine. Blade gets the first word with "Within Everything," an elegiac slow tune with a haunting melody. The first of the "Body and Shadow" entries is next Noon, later followed by Morning and Night. These are gentle explorations of similar material, rather minimal until a theme finally appears in the last one. Cowherd's first contribution is "Traveling Mercies," another folksong-like tune which nonetheless includes a dramatic, contrasting bridge. The feeling of contrast is even stronger in the aptly-titled "Duality," which is made up of two contrasting sections. The longest selection by far, it also has the most pronounced jazz feel. The first half features a long, joyful piano solo by the composer; the second half spotlights alto saxophonist Myron Walden in an electrifying solo turn.  The group's previous album Landmarks (Blue Note, 2014) featured a rare cover, a hymn-like treatment of the traditional song "Shenandoah." This time they up the ante with an actual hymn: "Have Thine Own Way, Lord." Cowherd plays it solo on harmonium first, then the entire band continues the feeling with Blade's arrangement. That it fits in with the original music so well is a testament to the deep traditional roots of the Fellowship Band's music. They have never been a long-winded bunch, but this is an especially succinct collection: the nine tracks run only a little over half an hour. Not a minute is wasted. ~ Mark Sullivan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/body-and-shadow-brian-blade-blue-note-records-review-by-mark-sullivan.php

Personnel: Brian Blade: drums; Jon Cowherd: piano, harmonium, mellotron; Chris Thomas: bass; Melvin Butler: tenor saxophone; Myron Walden: alto saxophone, bass clarinet; Dave Devine: guitar.

Body And Shadow

Thursday, October 17, 2019

Rick Braun - Beat Street

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:32
Size: 124,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:36)  1. Groovis
(5:14)  2. Papa Dee
(5:06)  3. Club Harlem
(5:25)  4. I'll Be There For You
(5:51)  5. Philadelphia
(4:26)  6. Cadillac Slim
(4:49)  7. The Promises
(4:09)  8. Natalie
(4:28)  9. Ian's Blues
(4:57) 10. Walk The Walk
(4:26) 11. Marty's Party

This good-natured release is a very enjoyable compilation of funk-inflected light jazz that fits Rick Braun's trumpet and flugelhorn around some excellent guitar playing (with lots of wah-wahs on show), steady bass and drums, and supportive keyboards (Braun also contributes the keyboard beds, but this aspect of his production tends not to be showy). Braun and his assorted players (who include Boney James, Jeff Golub and Peter White) have crafted some entertaining melodies that are often built on swaying, sneaky rhythms "Cadillac Slim" for one, and the devious "Papa Dee" for another. Braun's liner notes mention War (the band) more than once, and you can certainly pick up that influence this time around. In terms of approach, Braun kept things loose and improvisational for the recording no charts, no formalities, just a few ideas and a collaborative impulse that's paid off in the way the album flows together. Nice warm work that sneaks in under the guards. ~ Steven McDonald https://www.allmusic.com/album/beat-street-mw0000173372

Personnel: Rick Braun - Flugelhorn, Keyboards; G. Chang (track: 3) - Organ [B3];  Matt Harris (track: 7,10), Curtis Brengle (track: 9,11) - Piano; Boney James (track: 1) - Featuring, Tenor Saxophone; Jimmy Roberts (track: 7) - Tenor Saxophone; David Woodford (track: 11) - Tenor Saxophone, Baritone Saxophone; Lee Thornburg (track: 11) - Trumpet;  Nick Lane (tracks: 4,11) - Trombone; Carl Verheyen (tracks: 1,4), Jeff Golub (tracks: 5,6,11) - Guitar; Peter White (track: 3) - Acoustic Guitar; Carl Verheyen (track: 3,6,9) - Guitar [Wah Wah]; Stan Sargeant (track: 1) - Bass [On End]; Dave Morotta (tracks: 1,4,9), Cliff Hugo (tracks: 2,5-7,10,11), Jack Daro (track: 3) - Bass; Brad Dutz - Percussion (tracks: 1,7,8), Bongos (track: 3); Dave Palmer (tracks: 1,4-7,9,10), Dave Karasony (tracks: 2,11) - Drums. Fred White (tracks: 4,7) - Vocals.

Beat Street

Marlene VerPlanck - A Breath of Fresh Air

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:41
Size: 137,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:07)  1. Mr. Lucky
(2:47)  2. Growing Old Gracefully
(2:22)  3. Brasiliero
(2:19)  4. Where Is Love?
(2:44)  5. There Won't Be Trumpets
(2:28)  6. I Concentrate on You
(2:15)  7. Rainbow Hill
(3:15)  8. Baby Elephant Walk
(2:21)  9. Sunday
(3:41) 10. Show Me
(3:02) 11. This Happy Feeling
(3:35) 12. How Can I Be Sure?
(2:16) 13. Down Here on the Ground
(4:33) 14. I Have Dreamed
(2:26) 15. I'm All Smiles
(2:42) 16. The More I See You
(2:40) 17. Go Fly a Kite
(2:58) 18. Wave
(2:43) 19. Mission Impossible
(2:05) 20. A Little Love Should Rub off on Us
(2:11) 21. I Chase a Rainbow Dream

The jazz content of this CD reissue is pretty light as singer Marlene Ver Planck (who as usual displays a beautiful voice with a wide range) is backed by rather commercial arrangements on a repertoire dominated by then-current show and movie tunes that often sound quite dated today. She certainly does her best (as can be heard on wordless versions of "Baby Elephant Walk" and "Mission Impossible") but Ver Planck's later recordings are much more valuable from the jazz standpoint. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/a-breath-of-fresh-air-mw0000097157

A Breath of Fresh Air

Courtney Pine - Devotion

Styles: Saxophone, Clarinet And Flute Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:29
Size: 102,4 MB
Art: Front

(0:49)  1. Into: Release
(4:18)  2. Sister Soul
(6:18)  3. Devotion
(4:43)  4. Bless the Weather
(0:51)  5. Interlude: The Saxophone Song
(4:31)  6. Osibisa
(5:00)  7. Translusance
(4:36)  8. U.K.
(1:19)  9. Interlude: Karma
(4:58) 10. When the World Turns Blue
(4:36) 11. Everyday is Everyday
(2:26) 12. Outro: With All My Love

The management typically frowns on an initial discourse regarding the issuing record label when writing a review, but in the case of Courtney Pine's debut on Telarc Jazz, I feel it is warranted.  Compared with the majority of Telarc's releases (dead middle mainstream) Mr. Pine's new release can only be approached by those of Monty Alexander's with respect to pushing the genre envelope, and honestly, Mr. Alexander has nothing on Courtney Pine. Born March 18, 1964 in London, England, Courtney Pine was to emerge in the mid-1980s as the next John Coltrane at the same time Wynton Marsalis sounded like the heir to Miles Davis.  He grew up playing funk and reggae before migrating to the edge of jazz standards.  He is a master of several instruments, including the soprano and tenor saxophones and that most difficult mistress, the bass clarinet.  He released several fine recordings on Antilles/Island ( Journey to the Urge Within ) but lost direction in the mid-1990s. Devotion is Courtney Pine's first release since 1998's Another Story.  It is a loud, jazzy, funky, reggae, rocking affair bursting at the seams with cross influences and counter rhythms.  The recording is as highly produced as most contemporary and smooth jazz offerings...but contemporary or smooth jazz this is not.  In fact, if I were to have to describe this disc with one line it would be "Devotion is the reincarnation of Julian and Nate Adderley's Band in the 22nd Century."  After an electric introduction the disc blasts off with Pine's "Soul Sister," a transmogrified "Work Song" as a Phil Spector "Wall of Sound" taken to infinity.  The title cut has a reggae vibe with Pine weaving in and out like the ghost of Eddie Harris calling out the name of Les McCann. Pine extends his jazz-funk jones into his compositions "Osibisa," a big band Latin groove, and "Translusance," which contains some nifty off-beat drumming, a killer hook and a sitar (I hear early Rolling Stones and late Beatles here).  "UK" might be the best piece on the record, a cross between the Stax House and 1980s Saturday Night Live Bands.  The instrumental pieces are better than the vocal pieces and there is plenty of Pine for everyone.  Had Mr. Pine been wandering in the desert before, he has emerged into the oasis of his own making. ~ C.Michael Bailey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/devotion-courtney-pine-telarc-records-review-by-c-michael-bailey.php

Personnel:  Courtney Pine--Soprano, Tenor Saxophones, Bass Clarinet, Alto Flute, Pro Tools; Cameron Pierre--Guitars; Chris Jerome--Keyboards; Robert Fordjour--Drums; Thomas Dyani--Percussion; David Mcalmont, Carleen Anderson--Vocals; Robert Mitchell--Piano; Dennis Rollins--Trombone; Byron Wallin--Trumpet; Yousuf Ali Khan--Tabla; Sheema Mukherjee--Sitar.

Devotion

Robert Farnon And His Orchestra - Pictures In The Fire

Styles: Jazz, Easy Listening 
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:58
Size: 88,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:36)  1. Pictures In The Fire
(2:50)  2. Love Is A Many Splendored Thing
(3:17)  3. To A Young Lady
(3:37)  4. Hey There
(2:48)  5. Secret Love
(3:14)  6. Lazy Day
(2:57)  7. Friendly Persuasion
(2:39)  8. Sophistication Waltz
(3:07)  9. When I Fall In Love
(3:33) 10. A Summer Love
(2:38) 11. The Story Of Tina
(3:36) 12. The Nearness Of You

'Pictures in the Fire' includes three original Farnon tracks apart from the title single, these are: 'Lazy Day and 'Sophistication Waltz' together with the sentimental 'Summer Love'. These contain the touch of the master but his interpretations of Young's, 'When I Fall in Love', Adler's 'Hey There' and the ubiquitous 'Story of Tina' are also as good as it gets. Dutton's remastering brings out the original colour and sweet string sound and David Ades' contribution is an entertaining read altogether. I cannot recommend this album too highly, especially if you enjoy the vintage 50's period which was such a success for light music re-incarnation. http://www.classical.net/music/recs/reviews/d/dut04112a.php

Pictures In The Fire

George Cables - I'm All Smiles

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year:  2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:24
Size: 134,7 MB
Art: Front

(6:27)  1. Young at Heart
(6:15)  2. I'm All Smiles - From "The Yearling"
(5:46)  3. Speak No Evil
(7:49)  4. Bésame Mucho
(5:59)  5. Ugly Beauty
(7:18)  6. Love Is a Many Splendored Thing
(5:41)  7. Celebration
(4:16)  8. Three Views of a Secret
(5:09)  9. Thermo
(3:40) 10. Monk's Mood

At a time when jazz is being pulled in every direction at once in search of a future some fear may not exist, musicians such as George Cables, Essiet Essiet and Victor Lewis are proving that, for those who listen, there is no place quite like the present. Essiet became the trio's bassist for its 2012 Highnote release My Muse, and has remained since. Cables has been fortunate with drummers throughout his career as a band leader. During the 1970s and 1980s he played with both Billy Higgins and Carl Burnette. In the 1990s future Cookers band-mate Billy Hart would join him for multiple albums, including the excellent Night And Day (DIW, 1991). Since 2001, Victor Lewis has been his drummer of choice; in fact both Lewis and Essiet have been the pianist's most frequent cohorts when taking the live stage as a trio in the 2010s. Though he was hardly gone for long, I'm All Smiles is something of a comeback album. Early in 2018, George Cables lost much of his left leg by way of amputation. It took a year of recovery, physical therapy and crutches to be well enough again to take the stage, both as a member of the Cookers and with this very trio. Cables dedicates I'm All Smiles to "all those people that sent gifts and messages of support and encouragement during the time [he] was dealing with serious medical issues and unable to play the piano or make gigs." Judging by the album's cover art, which features a dapper Cables leaning on a piano and smiling jauntily, he intends to convey that he is back in good spirits. Contrasting sharply with his previous effort, The George Cables Songbook (Highnote, 2016), all of the songs present on I'm All Smiles are covers of other artists' compositions, save for the newly penned "Celebration," which hurdles forward with an unbound energy befitting its self-explanatory title. 

The trio kicks things off with the widely covered "Young At Heart," which became known in the early 1950s as a Frank Sinatra ballad vehicle, before shifting into the title track. It's here that Cables really lets loose his trademark wit and passion. Written by Michael Leonard and Herbert Martin for the 1965 Broadway musical The Yearling, and subsequently covered by Hampton Hawes, Bill Evans and Barbra Streisand, "I'm All Smiles" is the most playful recording this trio has released yet. It's hard to be sure where the song is going until Cables decides to let his left hand draw out the four note lead-in to the chorus. In some ways this is his method of winking at his audience, knowing that at this point in his career they are wary enough to follow along with his amusements. The trio shifts into the album's second act with "Besame Mucho," a standard Cables hasn't recorded since he was part of Art Pepper's most consistent and comfortable group on the 1979 Galaxy album of the same name. Rather than the frantic, "by the seat of your pants" delivery of Pepper's version, Cables now sets his own pace, calmer and more sure-handed. While it's easy to wistfully recall the more wild, impassioned interpretations of that era now four decades past, the trio present here offers a more measured approach which works well within the context of this album. Cables once said "every time I play with somebody different I have to put on a different hat." To his avid listeners, the pianist doubtlessly wears his own cap, and his inimitable playing style now honed over a half-century, is immediately recognizable. That style permeates Thelonious Monk's "Ugly Beauty" and "Monk's Mood." The latter is a solo piano piece which provides a quiet, self-searching end to the album, allowing it to ebb away rather than suddenly break. One of the finer points of discovery during I'm All Smiles is the way the pianist cohabits other musician's works. He shrewdly keeps the soul of a composition such as Wayne Shorter's "Speak No Evil" and Freddie Hubbard's "Thermo" alive while subtly sprinkling his own ingredients into the pot. The result of his efforts are albums like this, wherein a keen-eared listener will find an exercise of intuitive musical expertise which has endured personal strife and tragedy and climbed ever closer to perfection. I'm All Smiles is a triumph the sort of jazz piano album which comes along just once in a while to remind genre fans why they started listening in the first place. ~ Peter Hoetjes https://www.allaboutjazz.com/im-all-smiles-george-cables-highnote-records-review-by-peter-hoetjes.php

Personnel: George Cables: piano; Essiet Essiet: bass (1-9); Victor Lewis: drums (1-9).

I'm All Smiles

Wednesday, October 16, 2019

Marcus Printup - Song For The Beautiful Woman

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:38
Size: 137,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:41)  1. The Inquiry
(7:14)  2. I Remember April
(6:37)  3. Song For The Beautiful Woman
(6:23)  4. Trauma
(6:17)  5. Presentation
(6:12)  6. Lonely Heart
(6:50)  7. Minor Ordeal
(6:47)  8. Speak Low
(6:34)  9. Dahomey Dance

Trumpeter Marcus Printup's debut as a leader in 1994 followed recordings as a part of the University of North Florida Jazz Ensemble and the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra. Accompanied by four other promising musicians in the early days of their careers, including pianist Eric Reed, alto saxophonist Walter Blanding, bassist Reuben Rogers and drummer Brian Blade, Printup puts together a tantalizing mix of originals and standards on this hard bop session, Song for the Beautiful Woman. His compositions include a driving blues "The Inquiry," a sauntering ballad inspired by a brief encounter with a stranger on a plane "Song for the Beautiful Woman," and the infectious "Presentation," which best showcases his already well-developed chops. So many jazz artists tackle "I'll Remember April" at breakneck tempos that they overlook the beauty of the piece; Printup chooses the less-traveled path with great success. His muted solo in "Speak Low" is fueled by Rogers' tasty lines. Marcus Printup's initial recording on his own will appeal greatly to fans of hard bop. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/song-for-the-beautiful-woman-mw0000644448

Personnel: Trumpet – Marcus Printup; Bass – Reuben Rogers; Drums – Brian Blade; Piano – Eric Reed; Tenor Saxophone – Walter Blanding

Song For The Beautiful Woman