Wednesday, November 27, 2019

Steve Khan - The Green Field

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:21
Size: 178,2 MB
Art: Front

( 9:22)  1. El Vinon
( 8:09)  2. Congeniality
( 7:31)  3. Riot
( 7:46)  4. Fist in Glove
( 7:21)  5. Cosecha Lo Que Has Sembrado
( 7:58)  6. Sanctuary/Nefertiti
( 5:25)  7. Eronel
( 5:38)  8. You Stepped out of a Dream
(18:07)  9. The Green Field (El Prado Verde)

Nine years have passed since guitarist Steve Khan last released an album as a leader. But he hasn't been inactive, touring with artists like Terri Lyne Carrington and Greg Osby and co-leading the Caribbean Jazz Project. However, it's been far too long since he's released an album putting his immediately recognizable style front and centre. Khan may not have the cachet of peers like Pat Metheny and John Scofield, but from the first notes of the recording, it's clear that this is nobody but Steve Khan. His distinctive, at times almost pianistic approach makes his less prominent position mysterious. Hopefully The Green Field, his most fully realized record to date, will reach the greater audience he so richly deserves. Khan reunites with bassist John Patitucci and drummer Jack DeJohnette, who last played together on Got My Mental (Evidence, 1996). While the trio has only worked together during rehearsals and recording sessions for these two releases, these musicians share a remarkable chemistry. Nowhere is this more evident than on the free bop of the eighteen-minute title track. Also featuring percussionist/vocalist Manolo Badrena, a key collaborator who was instrumental in Khan's Eyewitness group, "The Green Field" may be the freest piece that Khan has ever recorded. Though clear motifs strategically emerge, it's as much about texture as thematic development, which is all the more remarkable during the moments when the quartet magically coalesces, before heading off into greater uncharted territories.  

The title track's liberated free play may feel new to Khan's fans, but rest assured, his strong sense of groove is also in full force. The modal "El Viñón opens with a vamp featuring Khan's unique voicings and DeJohnette playing all around the time, but ultimately resolves into a middle section where Patitucci and DeJohnette swing amiably behind Khan's relaxed, behind- the-beat linearity. The guitarist leans to carefully constructed lines that selflessly serve the music, but every now and then he lets loose with lightening speed, just to let you know the chops are there when needed. His ability to seamlessly intersperse strong melodies and vivid chordal phrases has become a defining characteristic, and he's never done it better. The same can be said for Khan's writing. "Fist in Glove is a blues so radically altered harmonically as to be nearly unrecognizable, while "Cosecha lo que Has Sembrado, with guest percussionists Ralph Irizarry and Robert Quintero, viscerally mines the Afro-Cuban territory that's been part of Khan's musical continuum for years. Equally remarkable is Khan's reinvention of material by Thelonious Monk, Herbie Hancock, Ornette Coleman and Wayne Shorter. Cleverly integrating Shorter's "Sanctuary and "Nefertiti into a seamless whole, Khan demonstrates an uncanny ability to distinctly interpret well-known material. If it wasn't so familiar, you'd think he'd written it himself. Maybe Khan's avoidance of musical grandstanding explains why he's never achieved the popularity of his peers. But The Green Field is mature and imaginative, showcasing him at the top of his game. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-green-field-steve-khan-tone-center-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Steve Khan: guitar; John Patitucci: acoustic bass; Jack DeJohnette: drums; Manolo Badrena; percussion, voice; Ralph Irizarry: timbales (3,5,6,8); Roberto Quintero: congas, percussion (3,5,6,8).

The Green Field

Avishai Cohen Trio - Gently Disturbed

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:47
Size: 130,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:50)  1. Seattle
(5:10)  2. Chutzpan
(5:25)  3. Lo Baiom Velo Balyla
(6:30)  4. Pinzin Kinzin
(3:53)  5. Puncha Puncha
(5:16)  6. Eleven Wives
(3:48)  7. Gentle Disturbed
(6:16)  8. The Ever Evolving Etude
(5:33)  9. Variations In G Minor
(5:42) 10. Umray
(6:20) 11. Structure in Motion

With this release on his own Razdaz Recordz, Avishai Cohen firmly entrenches himself as a frontrunning innovator in the piano trio medium. The Israeli bassist is joined by Mark Guiliana on drums and countryman Shai Maestro on piano the latter a change in personnel from Continuo (Razdaz, 2006) and Live At The Blue Note (Razdaz, 2007). "Seattle" represents a slightly ponderous start, with a lyrical bass solo from Cohen over meandering chordal piano vamps, but it is not more than a gentle prelude to what is coming up. The next track, "Chutzpan," gives a fuller insight into the incredible locked synchronisation that exists between these three musicians. Shifting between angular, cascading motifs and jumping, jittery movements with consummate ease, the trio is well-drilled yet instinctive in its manner of interaction. "The Ever Evolving Etude" is an outstanding track, a perfect example of Cohen's minutely accurate compositional style. Based around a couple of piano riffs and building in degrees, it works up to a frenzy of intricately subdivided phrasing with manically precise off-pulse syncopations. It's a wall of sound that doesn't stand still. Similar traits are present on tunes such as "Pinzin Kinzin," "Eleven Wives," and the dense album closer "Structure in Emotion," but they are all different enough to make the CD unpredictable. 

A few slower items add further spice to the mix: "Variations in G Minor," "Puncha Puncha," and the title track, "Gently Disturbed," are more relaxed but no less crafty. It's all perfectly executed and Cohen's compositional identity has become distinctively recognisable particularly in piano voicing and the rhythmic intensity he draws from his group. In Maestro and Guiliana he has found ideal poetic partners.  The disc's title is reflective of the music many of Cohen's ideas are challenging, but not inaccessible. Listeners can almost obliviously float through the advanced concepts without getting hung up, in the same way the musicians do. So, while it can take several listenings to fully understand what's going on, that effort should not be a deterrent to enjoying this release. ~ Frederick Bernas https://www.allaboutjazz.com/gently-disturbed-avishai-cohen-razdaz-recordz-review-by-frederick-bernas.php

Personnel: Avishai Cohen: bass; Mark Guiliana: drums; Shai Maestro: piano.

Gently Disturbed

Larry Coryell - Inner Urge

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:01
Size: 127,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:31)  1. Compulsion
(5:45)  2. Abra Cadabra
(5:25)  3. Inner Urge
(4:48)  4. Tonk
(8:01)  5. Dolphin Dance
(6:48)  6. Allegra's Ballerina Song
(5:50)  7. In a Sentimental Mood
(3:59)  8. Turkish Coffee
(8:51)  9. Terrain

Without a second thought, jazz listeners acknowledge Larry Coryell’s prowess on the guitar. But ask one of those listeners to name one recent Larry Coryell performance they have attended or one tune he has recorded within the past decade, and you may get a blank stare. That’s because Larry Coryell unlike, for example, John Scofield or Pat Metheny loses his persona in his music. According to the demands of the music, Coryell transforms his technique and his musical concept for the total fulfillment of a tune’s spirit. Depending on the circumstances, Coryell may be playing flamenco, classical, fusion, blues, rock or jazz guitar. Now, one can’t describe Coryell as modest, but he certainly is dedicated. Having devoted his life to the muse and to the music, Coryell, intensely private, seems to have sacrificed high personal recognition for the opportunity to investigate the guitar in its infinitude of possibilities. The possibilities that Inner Urge offers are those, in large part, of bebop. Consistent in his presentation, Coryell remains out front on each tune as a relaxed, unpretentious and brilliant presence. Don’t believe for a second his claim in the liner notes that “it was a matter of showing up...and staying out of the way.” Rather, Coryell leads the way among a group of equally proficient musicians. Producer and trumpeter Don Sickler suggested the cohesive idea for Inner Urge. Even though the album is appropriately named after a challenging Joe Henderson number, the first and last tunes framing the repertoire were composed by the often neglected tenor saxophonist Harold Land. It seems that Sickler, to his great credit, is pulling together all of Land’s compositions into a single reference. Having been inspired especially by Wes Montgomery, Coryell makes no bones about alluding directly to Montgomery’s unmistakable octaved style and effortless swing on Land’s “Terrain.” 

However, Coryell personalizes his own “Turkish Coffee,” the notes ringing through with crystalline assuredness, due in no small part of Rudy Van Gelder’s sound engineering genius as he employs two amplifiers to document the richness of the guitar. While “Turkish Coffee” hints at Coryell’s wide-ranging flexibility beyond bop tunes, “Allegra’s Ballerina Song,” written in tribute to his daughter, opens Coryell’s heart through his preferred medium of communication music. The slower tunes give evidence, not just of Coryell’s mastery, but of the instrument’s gorgeousness. His note choices on “Dolphin Dance,” not to mention its overall rippling texture, extend the mellowness of the song beyond piano, as established forever by Herbie Hancock. “Dolphin Dance” is one tune that doesn’t seem to be appropriate when led by a horn. “In A Sentimental Mood” exists on the album, it seems, purely for its lyrical strength, which Coryell underplays, sometimes by subtly dampening the strings for a sly percussive commentary. In addition, one may notice that the instruments are so well tuned and that Coryell and Hicks are so intuitive that when Coryell plays a phrase and Hicks repeats it, the differences of the instruments’ timbral characteristics melt away. The third in Coryell’s HighNote “trilogy,” Inner Urge presents a locked-in group for the joyful exploration of jazz, which drives the inner urge of them all. ~ AAJ Staff https://www.allaboutjazz.com/inner-urge-larry-coryell-review-by-aaj-staff.php

Personnel: Larry Coryell, guitar; Don Sickler, trumpet; John Hicks, piano; Santi Debriano, bass; Yoron Israel, drums

Inner Urge

Musica Nuda - My Favorite Tunes

Styles: Vocal, Post Bop
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 79:48
Size: 184,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:40)  1. Come Together
(4:55)  2. Fever
(3:18)  3. Roxanne
(3:50)  4. I Will Survive
(2:43)  5. Couleur café
(3:20)  6. Quando
(2:38)  7. Non andare via
(2:51)  8. La voce del silenzio
(3:22)  9. Vado giù
(4:06) 10. La canzone dei vecchi amanti
(2:54) 11. Like a Virgin
(2:29) 12. Guarda che luna
(3:46) 13. Libera
(2:45) 14. Il cammello e il dromedario
(3:10) 15. Bach Aire
(2:32) 16. Pazzo il mondo !?
(2:34) 17. Angeli
(2:50) 18. Una notte disperata
(3:58) 19. Le due corde vocali
(2:24) 20. Amarilli
(2:38) 21. Dindiandi
(3:13) 22. Io sono metà
(3:48) 23. Si viaggiare
(1:37) 24. Nessuno
(4:15) 25. Lei colorerà

Sometimes things happen for no coincidence. This is the story of MUSICA NUDA, the unconventional duo born from the accidental meeting of Petra Magoni and Ferruccio Spinetti. In 2003 the pair cross paths for the first time: Petra sings and Ferruccio plays double bass in Aviontravel (he played with them from 1990 to 2006). In that period Petra Magoni plans a mini tour in some of her Tuscany small clubs, with a frien playing guitar for her. But the day of their first concert together, he gets sick. Petra, instead of cancelling the date, asks Ferruccio if he feels like covering for him and he promptly accepts. The concert is such a success that in the span of few weeks the two members of this “Voice’n’bass” combo put up a full repertoire, made of the songs they love the most, and in half a day they record their first album: “MUSICA NUDA”, in a studio close to Pisa. MUSICA NUDA spontaneously becomes the name of their project and of the band itself. The chemical between them is perfectly clear, but neither Petra and Ferruccio themselves would have ever imagined to reach so important goals in such a little time: hundreds of concerts in Italy and abroad, prestigious awards (Targa Tenco 2006, best tour for Mei in Faenza, Les quatre clés de Télérama in France), recognition from fans and medias, tv appearances and radio plays on all main italian and foreign FM stations. 

It all comes from constant work and commitment from Petra, Ferruccio and all those who believed in this project over the years, but mostly thanks to an original, both cultured and popular, simple yet articulated behind the project MUSICA NUDA. A bit of jazz, a bit of songwriting, some elements of rock, some punk and the occasional classic vibe. When “music” is “naked” there are no boundaries, the peculiar sound of Petra and Ferruccio flows into every single track and brings them all back to a new life, proving that they are a really eclectic combo. MUSICA NUDA is a brave project, independent, free, almost a modern version of canto con accompagnamento di basso continuo, in uso nel Rinascimento, and it’s also the art of trace music back to its core and find in its inside the ultimate meaning of any track, classical, jazz, pop or soul. And there’s something else to tell: Musica Nuda is the art of enjoying the silence in music, a basic and often underrated aspect of it, that leads to the true emotion and underline the value or a lyric, a story, the meaning of every single song, no matter if it’s dramatic, funny, energetic, romantic, sarcastic. In MUSICA NUDA we have two different yet perfectly complementary artists like Petra Magoni and Ferruccio Spinetti, that face each others musically with complicity and sense of humor that stand for themselves. A voice (Petra’s) that performs great emotions, a double bass (Ferruccio’s) that becomes orchestra. With easyness, humbleness, commitment, devotion and deep love for past, present and future music, for the music that’s been forgotten and has to be re-discovered (it’s the case of the successful “Il cammello e il dromedario” by Virgilio Savona). http://www.musicanuda.com/bio-3/

Personnel: Petra Magoni (voce) e Ferruccio Spinetti (contrabbasso)

My Favorite Tunes

Tuesday, November 26, 2019

One For All - Return of the Lineup

Styles: Jazz, Straight-Ahead/Mainstream
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:32
Size: 125,7 MB
Art: Front

(7:15)  1. Jackpipe
(6:38)  2. But Not For Me
(6:04)  3. Silver and Cedar
(6:37)  4. Treatise For Reedus
(6:02)  5. Dear Ruth
(7:22)  6. Forty-Four
(8:07)  7. Road to Marostica
(6:24)  8. Blues For JW

One for All is a band of New York-based veterans who've played with one another in various combinations, as well as making a number of CDs together under this name with little change in personnel, and of whom all but one are founding members. Featuring tenor saxophonist Eric Alexander, trombonist Steve Davis, and trumpeter Jim Rotondi in the front line, plus a rhythm section with pianist David Hazeltine, bassist John Webber, and drummer Joe Farnsworth. While each of them (save Webber) works and records often as an individual bandleader, there is an incredible blend of inspired solos, fresh compositions, and arrangements, along with a spirit of cooperation where no egos get in the way of great music. 

Hazeltine's peppy "Treatise for Reedus" is an uptempo salute to the talented drummer, who died suddenly at the premature age of only 49 a few days prior to this recording session. Alexander's Latin-flavored "Road to Marostica" features tight ensemble work and invigorating solos, while he was also responsible for the updated treatment of George Gershwin's "But Not for Me." This is a rewarding date by a sextet that is always ready to give their all. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/return-of-the-lineup-mw0000814360

Personnel: Piano – David Hazeltine; Tenor Saxophone – Eric Alexander; Trombone – Steve Davis ; Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Jim Rotondi; Bass – John Webber; Drums – Joe Farnsworth

Return of the Lineup

Jerry Bergonzi - Napoli Connection

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:27
Size: 144,3 MB
Art: Front

(9:07)  1. Love for Sale - Version 1
(7:56)  2. Grand Trine
(5:07)  3. Napoli Connection
(6:25)  4. Neptunian Verse
(8:08)  5. Conclusive Evidence
(5:38)  6. Estate
(4:59)  7. Don't Look Now
(5:54)  8. Jab
(9:08)  9. Love for Sale - Version 2

Tenor saxophonist, Jerry Bergonzi, is an internationally recognized jazz performer, composer, author and educator. His music is renowned for its innovation, mastery, and integrity. Relentless drive, inner fire, total command, awesome technique, elastic lyricism, rich resonance, world-class, a musical visionary, are among the rave reviews credited to his sound. Bergonzi's music has been applauded throughout the world at festivals, concert halls, and jazz venues and his dedication to jazz music has been well documented by an extensive discography.Born in Boston, Massachusetts, Bergonzi became interested in music early on. He started playing clarinet when he was eight years old listening to Duke Ellington, Count Basie, and Lester Young. His uncle, who was a jazz musician and lived upstairs, used to write out solos for him to play. At twelve years old he got his first saxophone, an old Conn alto, and a year later when a friend introduced him to Miles, Coltrane, and Sonny Rollins, there was no turning back! At thirteen, Jerry was already playing gigs with a band called The Stardusters. During his high school years he switched to tenor, and in addition to weekly sessions with Berklee College students, Jerry also played in John LaPorta's youth band. He recalls, “It was a great experience, I learned so much, John would tell you like it was. He'd let you know what your shortcomings were, he would stop the band to tell you! “Bergonzi attended Lowell University but left after one year because he was continually being thrown out of the practice rooms for playing jazz. “If I had heard me practicing in one of those cubicles I might have thrown myself out!” he adds. He and fellow student, Charlie Banacos, used to begin their day in the practice rooms at 6:00 am. After a year at Berklee College, he returned to Lowell for financial reasons and graduated in 1971. He then played bass in local bands behind singers, strippers, and comedians, saving up enough money to move to New York City in 1972.During 1972 and 1978 Bergonzi lived in New York City and experienced what he considers his real college education. There, where he had a third floor loft and friend and bass player, Rick Kilburn, lived on the first floor, was the scene of many sessions. “Often, there was one drummer, one bass player, and five saxophone players!” Bergonzi remembers. “Sometimes I was the drummer, each guy would tell a friend, everyone was hungry to play and it was great experience.” Joe Lovano, Steve Slagle, Billy Drewes, Paul Moen, Pat LaBarbera, Dave Liebman, John Scofield. Mike Brecker, Bob Berg, Tom Harrell, Steve Grossman, and Victor Lewis were a few of the many players who came to play.

During this time, Bergonzi gained worldwide recognition while performing with, Two Generations of Brubeck. The group, with Dave Brubeck and his kids, Darius, Chris, and Danny, also featuring Perry Robinson on clarinet and Mad Cat Ruth on harmonica, toured extensively from 1973 through 1975. Carnegie Hall, the Sydney Opera House, London's Royal Festival Hall and Alexander's Palace, Lincoln Center, and the Hollywood Bowl were among the many stages their music was applauded, as well as, at the JVC Newport, New York Kool, North Sea, Monterey, and Nice jazz festivals, to name a few. Returning to Boston at the end of 1977, Bergonzi was gigging five nights a week at the many local venues including Michael's Pub, 1369 Jazz Club, Pooh's Pub, Ryles, and the Sunflower. “It was exactly what I needed at that point,” says Bergonzi, “making a statement on a tune in front of an audience is a lot different than playing a jam session”. It was during this period that the innovative group, Con Brio, formed. Including bassist Bruce Gertz, drummers Bob Kaufman and Jeff Williams, pianist Eric Gunnison, and guitarists Mike Stern and Mick Goodrick, the group has played on throughout the years in various incarnations. At that time they recorded six records for their own independent label called Not Fat Records. These recordings featured Bergonzi's talent as a composer. Today he has almost one hundred tunes recorded and registered with ASCAP, his most recent compositions are available in a book and play-along published by Jamey Aebersold and five of his tunes can be found in the pages of Chuck Sher's All-Jazz Real Books. During these years, Bergonzi also played with the dynamic trio called, Gonz, including Gertz and Bob Gullotti on drums. Gonz sometimes became Gargonz when they added the talents of another Boston based saxophonist, George Garzone, as well as, bassist John Lockwood of The Fringe. While in the midst of the Boston jazz scene, Jerry received a call from Dave Brubeck asking if he'd again like to join his group in a quartet setting. From 1979 until 1981, Jerry toured the world with the Dave Brubeck Quartet. On the road for about 200 days a year, the group recorded Back Home, Tritonis, and Paper Moon for Concord Records between stops. Bergonzi also began his career as an educator in the early 80's. He established his private practice teaching all instruments how to improvise and during those years developed the systems described in his series entitled Inside Improvisation. In this six volume series published by Advance Music, Bergonzi offers a tangible pathway to inside the creative imagination by getting inside the harmony, inside the changes. Today, he is a world renowned educator, a full time professor at New England Conservatory, Bergonzi travels throughout the United States and Europe as a clinician and performer. Some of the many places he has taught include; master classes at Berklee College of Music, North Texas State University, Eastman College, the Paris Conservatory, the Manheim Jazz School, Taller de Musicos in Madrid, S.A.C.A.E. in Adelaide, Australia , and jazz conservatories in Pitea and Haperanda, Sweden, and Oulunkyla, Finland, to name a few.

The mid to late 80's brought some changes to Bergonzi's career as work in Boston slowed while work abroad became more plentiful. So too, did the recording industry begin to change. Bergonzi's acclaimed quartet release for Blue Note Records, called Standard Gonz, was among the first of his extensive discography. He later again recorded for Blue Note with pianist Joey Calderazzo on, To Know One and In The Door. While keeping his ties with the many musicians of the Boston and New York jazz scenes, Bergonzi also developed associations abroad yielding many musical collaborations. The Italian label, Red Records, was Bergonzi's greatest supporter. “Red Records was the first label that really believed in my music.” says Jerry. They released four CD's with Bergonzi as the leader, including, Lineage, a live recording featuring Mulgrew Miller, Dave Santoro, and Adam Nussbaum. Jerry later played with the Red Record all-stars including Kenny Barron, and Bobby Watson, as well as on a number of other Red releases with Salvatore Tranchini, Fred Hersch, and Alex Riel. He has also performed and recorded with the George Gruntz Big Band, the Gil Evans Orchestra (Miles Davis in Montreaux), and 12 Jazz Visits in Copenhagan for Stunt Records. The Riel Deal, on Stunt, featured drummer Alex Riel, Kenny Werner and Jesper Lundgaard, and was awarded a Grammy in Denmark for best jazz recording in 1997. An association with Daniel Humair and the late J.F.Jenny Clark yielded a number of recordings for the French, Label Bleu. One of which was Bergonzi's CD, Global Summit, it featured Tiger Okoshi, Joachim Kuhn, Daniel Humair and Dave Santoro. 

This was the product of one of three National Endowments awarded Bergonzi. Another project with pianist Kuhn won the accolade Best Jazz Album in France 1992. Among the many other artists that Bergonzi has performed and recorded with are; John Abercrombie, Nando Michelin, Antonio Farao, Bill Evans (with the National Jazz Ensemble), Joe D'Orio, Eddie Gomez, Miroslaz Vitous, George Mraz, Billy Hart, Andy Laverne, Steve Swallow, Hal Galper, Roy Haynes, Charlie Mariano, Bob Cranshaw, Ray Drummond, Billy Drummond, Danny Richmond, Danny Gottlieb, Dave Holland, Jack DeJonette, Paul Desmond, Bennie Wallace, Gerry Mulligan, Hal Crook, Herb Pomeroy, Mike Manieri, Mark Johnson, Michel Portal, Marcel Solal, Pat Martino, Franco Ambrosetti, and many more. The Double-Time Records label has released most of Bergonzi's recent work. Just Within, Lost in the Shuffle, Wiggy, and A Different Look, were recorded by Bergonzi's burning organ trio, with Dan Wall and Adam Nussbaum. Also on Double-Time, The Dave Santoro Standard recordings feature Bergonzi's swinging tenor along with drummer Tom Melito and pianists Bruce Barth and Renato Chicco. As a band leader, Bergonzi has performed worldwide at the Red Sea, San Remo, Moomba, and North Sea Jazz festivals, to name a few. He has appeared at the World Saxophone Congress in Montreal, Canada and Valencia, Spain with fellow saxophonist Philippe Geiss. Bergonzi's performance at the Subway in Cologne has been featured on the German TV series, Round Midnight. His quartet performs at Duc de Lombarde in Paris, the Fasching in Stockholm, the Jazz House in Copenhagan, and the Bird's Eye in Basel, and many others. Today, Bergonzi makes his home in Boston area with his wife and two children. He continues to teach and perform worldwide. He endorses Selmer Saxophones, Rico Reeds and Zildjian Cymbals. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/jerrybergonzi

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone – Jerry Bergonzi;  Bass – Tony Ronga; Drums, Producer – Salvatore Tranchini; Piano – Valerio Silvestro.

Napoli Connection

Tete Montoliu - Catalonian Fire

Styles: Piano Jazz 
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:25
Size: 132,0 MB
Art: Front

( 7:37)  1. Sweet Georgia Fame
( 7:35)  2. A nightingale sang in Berkeley Square
( 8:54)  3. Blues for Perla
(10:22)  4. Falling in love with love
( 8:08)  5. Old folks
( 4:52)  6. Au privave
( 9:52)  7. Body and soul

Tete Montoliu spent most of his career recording for various European-based record labels, with some of his best work appearing on Steeplechase, such as this trio session with bassist Niels Pedersen and drummer Tootie Heath. Montoliu chose his rhythm section well, because both of these musicians respond well to an aggressive pianist like their leader, providing both strong support and lively interplay. The program is dominated by standards, including a rather abstract take of "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square" and an extended workout of "Falling in Love With Love" with a Latin rhythm. "Old Folks" starts with an unusual solo introduction that is both eerie and playful; Pedersen's countermelody is sparse and effective. Montoliu's sole original, "Blues for Perla," also stands out. The date concludes with a freewheeling exploration of Charlie Parker's "Au Privave," with the leader occasionally leaning toward an avant-garde sound in places. Recommended. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/catalonian-fire-mw0000233581

Personnel: Piano – Tete Montoliu; Bass – Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen; Drums – Albert Heath

Catalonian Fire

Bent Fabric - Alley Cat

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1962
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 27:14
Size: 63,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:22)  1. Alley Cat
(2:10)  2. Across the Alley from the Alamo
(3:02)  3. You Made Me Love You
(1:54)  4. Trudie
(1:34)  5. Markin' Time
(2:25)  6. In the Arms of Love
(2:13)  7. Delilah
(1:55)  8. Catsanova Walk
(2:19)  9. Symphony
(2:21) 10. Early Morning in Copenhagen
(2:04) 11. Comme Ci, Cmme Ca
(2:49) 12. Baby Won't You Please Come Home

Alley Cat is the debut album by Danish pianist Bent Fabric. The album features the Grammy Award-winning single "Alley Cat", and was a charting album in 1962-63. The title song is used as a recurring gag on the short-lived 1990 TV show Get a Life. The cover was designed by Haig Adishian, and was a Billboard Album Cover of the Week in October 1962. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alley_Cat_(album)

Alley Cat

Trijntje Oosterhuis - Dit Is Voor Mij

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:57
Size: 147,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:46)  1. Dit Is Voor Mij
(4:32)  2. Mijn Hart
(4:36)  3. Ik Kan Het Niet Alleen
(4:43)  4. Wat Je Doet Met Mij
(3:49)  5. Klaar
(4:16)  6. Blijf
(5:37)  7. Als Ik Je Laat Gaan
(4:12)  8. Nooit Voorbij
(3:57)  9. Liefde Voor Mij
(6:08) 10. Maël
(3:24) 11. Ik Hou Van Jou
(3:52) 12. Ik Ga Mee
(5:07) 13. Nu Even Niet
(5:51) 14. Jij En Ik (feat. Candy Dulfer)

Amsterdam, 1994. In the club circuit a band still unknown at that time. A brother and sister, and a handful of befriended musicians. The music they make: catchy pop songs. So that was us, says Trijntje about the start time of Total Touch, which is also the start of her career. Trijntje grows up in a musical family. Her mother is a violinist, her father a pastor and a poet. As a little girl she is already singing between her sliding doors at her grandmother's house and is writing a song to the sound of The Sound of Music for her father's birthday. Singing is second nature to her. There has never been another plan either, since she is very small she knows no better than she wants to become a singer. Together with her brother Tjeerd, she founded Total Touch in the early nineties. In 1994 she toured the world with Candy Dulfer, two years later the first single from her band, Touch Me There, was picked up by the radio. Her real breakthrough comes after Trijntje opens the Amsterdam ArenA with the hymn De Zee and surprises the whole of the Netherlands with her vocal qualities. Not much later, the second single from Total Touch, Somebody Else's Lover, a big hit. The first album will be one of the most successful debut albums in Dutch pop history. In the years that followed, Trijntje emerged as one of the most versatile artists in the Netherlands. She just as easily sings a pop song with Total Touch, as a Dutch-language duet with Marco Borsato, soul songs from Stevie Wonder, but also jazz standards. From 2001 she continued as a solo artist and worked with Toots Thielemans, Herbie Hancock, Al Jarreau, Lionel Richie, John Ewbank, Carel Kraayenhof, Janine Jansen, Candy Dulfer, Anouk and for many years she was one of the Ladies of Soul of Ladies . Together with the Metropole Orchestra she recorded two albums with the repertoire of master composer Burt Bacharach, who even provided new song material for this, and performed with him at the North Sea Jazz festival. In 2019, Trijntje celebrates her 25 years in the business. In addition to a sold-out anniversary concert in Ziggo Dome and a club tour in the fall, her new Dutch-language album will also be released. The album is produced by Jett Rebel. On this album she collaborates with Alain Clark, Diggy Dex, Vieze Fur of the Youth of Today, Glen Faria and Linde Schöne. A combination of old hands in the profession and young, new talent. Making this album was a special process for Trijntje. She works with musicians who partly come from another generation, but share a certain kinship: they share the same musical roots and have a great love for music. The album 'This Is For Me' is straight from her heart and shows who she is and where she is now.Translate By Google  https://www.trijntje.nl/

Dit Is Voor Mij

Monday, November 25, 2019

The Terry Gibbs & Buddy DeFranco Quintet - Jazz at Dukes Place: Live in New Orleans

Styles: Vibraphone And Clarinet Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:23
Size: 125,7 MB
Art: Front

( 8:31)  1. Yesterdays
(10:27)  2. Austin Mood
( 3:36)  3. Body and Soul
( 3:56)  4. Blues for Brodie
( 9:34)  5. Love for Sale
( 7:33)  6. We’ll Be Together Again
( 6:48)  7. Samba Wazoo
( 3:54)  8. Air Mail Special

Shot atop the Monteleone Hotel in New Orleans French Quarter in the early 1980's for the national television series "Live in New Orleans". Terry Gibbs & Buddy DeFranco teamed up and were joined by Lou Levy on piano, Bob Maize on bass and Ray Mosca on drums, to perform before a live audience in what was then known as Dukes Place. https://vimeo.com/ondemand/terrygibbsbuddydefranco/159264006

Jazz at Dukes Place: Live in New Orleans

Barney Wilen - Barney Wilen, Jazz Stars

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 79:35
Size: 183,5 MB
Art: Front

(6:54)  1. The Way You Look Tonight
(4:24)  2. Blue Monk
(5:38)  3. We See
(3:51)  4. Radio Taxi Melody
(4:26)  5. Nature Boy
(6:59)  6. Prelude in Blue
(5:11)  7. My Melancholy Baby
(4:13)  8. Mysterioso
(4:20)  9. Vamp
(4:28) 10. Night in Tunisia
(5:15) 11. Hackensack
(3:15) 12. Life Is One Long Struggle
(4:24) 13. Blue n' Boogie
(5:34) 14. Think of One
(6:49) 15. Let's Call This
(3:48) 16. Minor Swing

Barney Wilen's mother was French, his father a successful American dentist-turned-inventor. He grew up mostly on the French Riviera; the family left during World War II but returned upon its conclusion. According to Wilen himself, he was convinced to become a musician by his mother's friend, the poet Blaise Cendrars. As a teenager he started a youth jazz club in Nice, where he played often. He moved to Paris in the mid-'50s and worked with such American musicians as Bud Powell, Benny Golson, Miles Davis, and J.J. Johnson at the Club St. Germain. His emerging reputation received a boost in 1957 when he played with Davis on the soundtrack to the Louis Malle film Lift to the Scaffold. Two years later, he performed with Art Blakey and Thelonious Monk on the soundtrack to Roger Vadim's Les Liaisons Dangereuses (1960). Wilen began working in a rock-influenced style during the '60s, recording an album entitled Dear Prof. Leary in 1968. In the early '70s, Wilen led a failed expedition of filmmakers, musicians, and journalists to travel to Africa to document pygmy music. Later Wilen played in a punk rock band called Moko and founded a French Jazzmobile-type organization that took music to people living in outlying areas. He also worked in theater. By the mid-'90s, he was working once again in a bebop vein in a band with the pianist Laurent de Wilde. Much of Wilen's later work was documented on the Japanese Venus label. ~ Chris Kelsey https://www.allmusic.com/artist/barney-wilen-mn0000117853/biography

Barney Wilen, Jazz Stars

Howard Alden - Concord Jazz Guitar Collective

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:21
Size: 149,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:57)  1. Bittersweet
(4:27)  2. Strictly Confidential
(4:38)  3. String Thing
(6:37)  4. Mating Call
(4:09)  5. Seven Come Eleven
(7:01)  6. Body And Soul
(5:28)  7. Donna Lee
(6:10)  8. Perdido
(4:57)  9. Swing 39
(5:04) 10. Four Brothers
(4:27) 11. Song D'Autumne
(5:22) 12. Ornithology

The Concord Jazz Guitar Collective was a 1995 project that united Howard Alden with fellow guitarists and Concord artists Jimmy Bruno and Frank Vignola. For Concord, a three-guitar date was hardly unprecedented; back in 1974, the label had brought Barney Kessel, Charlie Byrd, and Herb Ellis together as the Great Guitars. Despite the fact that they all play the same instrument, Alden, Bruno, and Vignola prove compatible on this outing, which also employs Jim Hughart on upright bass and Colin Bailey on drums. Although Bruno tends to be more aggressive and forceful than Alden, he can be quite lyrical when he wants to; and while Alden isn't as hard a player as Bruno, he definitely swings. The two have a strong rapport on uptempo numbers like Charlie Parker's "Ornithology," Sam Jones' "Bittersweet," and Benny Goodman's "Seven Come Eleven," as well as on more relaxed performances like Django Reinhardt's "Song D'Autumne" and the standard "Body and Soul." Vignola, meanwhile, also proves to be an asset. Though not all of his 1990s output for Concord was memorable, he's a talented guitarist; and on Concord Jazz Guitar Collective, the presence of Alden and Bruno encourages Vignola to work hard and put that talent to use instead of wasting it. This is a CD that lovers of hard-bop guitar playing will appreciate. ~ Alex Henderson https://www.allmusic.com/album/concord-jazz-guitar-collective-mw0000646483

Personnel:  Howard Alden, Jimmy Bruno (tracks: 1, 3 to 5, 7, 8, 10, 12), Electric Guitar – Frank Vignola (tracks: 8, 10, 12),  Acoustic Guitar – Frank Vignola (tracks: 1 to 7, 9, 11), Jimmy Bruno (tracks: 2, 6, 9, 11); Bass – Jim Hughart (tracks: 1 to 3, 5, 7, 8, 10, 12); Drums – Colin Bailey (tracks: 1 to 3, 5, 7, 8, 10, 12)

Concord Jazz Guitar Collective

Didier Lockwood - Lockwood: Chansons Pour Enfants

Styles: Violin Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:53
Size: 103,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:24)  1. Le Roi Dagobert
(2:18)  2. A La Claire Fontaine
(2:30)  3. Frère Jacques
(1:30)  4. Zebulon Dance
(2:55)  5. Sur Le Pont D'avignon
(2:05)  6. Quand L'oiseau S'endort
(2:08)  7. Il Était Un Petit Navire
(2:50)  8. En Passant Par La Lorraine
(2:28)  9. Gentil Coquelicot
(3:22) 10. Alouette
(2:48) 11. J'ai Du Bon Tabac
(2:43) 12. Nous N'irons Plus Au Bois
(2:28) 13. Au Clair De La Lune
(2:18) 14. Colchiques Dans Les Prés
(2:19) 15. Il Était Un Petit Radis
(2:27) 16. Mon Beau Sapin
(2:19) 17. Cadet Rousselle
(1:52) 18. Bébé Jules

Didier Lockwood (born February 11, 1956) is a French jazz violinist.He was born in Calais and studied classical violin and composition at the Calais Conservatory. However, his brother Francis made him receptive to forms of music other than the classical and he quit his studies in 1972. Didier was entranced by the improvisation of Jean-Luc Ponty on Frank Zappa's King Kong album and took up the amplified violin. He joined the progressive rock group Magma, touring and notable featured on their 1975 Live/Hhaï album. Lockwood was also influenced by Polish violinist Zbigniew Seifert and Stéphane Grappelli, whom he joined on tour. Didier Lockwood in concert (1992)He has also played with Quebecois fusion group Uzeb on their Absolutely Live album. He is famous for exploring new musical environments and for performing various sound imitations on his amplified violin, such as seagulls or trains. On July 23, 1982, in Montreux, Switzerland, he performed in concert with guitarist Allan Holdsworth, drummer Billy Cobham, bassist/vocalist Jack Bruce, and keyboardist David Sancious. Didier Lockwood created a string instruments improvisation school, CMDL (Centre des Musiques Didier Lockwood), in 2001. He is married to singer Caroline Casadesus Throughout 2006 Didier has been touring with Martin Taylor the Jazz guitarist. In these performances it is noticeable to see that he is very involved in improvisation. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/didierlockwood

Personnel: Violin, Keyboards, Programmed By, Synthesizer, Arranged By, Producer – Didier Lockwood;  Bass, Vocals – Sylvin Marc; Guitar – Jean-Marie Ecay; Keyboards, Arranged By – Francis Lockwood; Keyboards, Percussion, Vocals, Recorded By – Jean-Pierre Mas; Percussion – Angel Celada; Vocals – Claude Lombard (tracks: 8,9,14,17), Daniel Huck (tracks: 3,10,13), Florence Davis (tracks: 2,5,6,12)

Lockwood: Chansons Pour Enfants

Natalie Cressman, Ian Faquini - Setting Rays of Summer

Styles: Vocal, Trombone And Guitar Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:46
Size: 87,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:29)  1. Terê
(2:05)  2. L'aube
(3:06)  3. Lenga Lenga
(4:35)  4. Debandada
(3:32)  5. Setting Rays of Summer
(3:56)  6. Mandingueira
(3:30)  7. My Heart Again Will Rise
(2:53)  8. Uirapuru
(4:14)  9. Museu Nacional
(5:22) 10. Sereia

Some albums arrive without precedent, a world unto themselves. While bringing to mind the sophisticated, jazz-infused post-Tropicalia songs of Brazilian composers like Guinga, Milton Nascimento, and Marcos Valle, Natalie Cressman and Ian Faquini’s unusual duo album Setting Rays of Summer sounds as fresh and revivifying as a clear mountain stream. 007AA guitarist, vocalist, and composer born in Brasilia and raised since childhood in Berkeley, Calif., Faquini is responsible for the voluptuously shaped compositions and lithe but orchestral guitar work. He also possesses a pleasingly reedy voice that blends artfully with Cressman’s bright, translucent singing. She’s a top-shelf trombonist who’s worked with such diverse artists as Peter Apfelbaum and Phish’s Trey Anastasio, and is utterly at home in MPB (musica popular brasileira), the omnivorous Brazilian movement that emerged out of bossa nova and Tropicalia at the end of the 1960s. Cressman contributes lyrics to three of the 10 pieces, one in Portuguese and two in English, including the wistful title track that encapsulates the album’s evocation of brief epiphanies, fleeting pleasures, and enduring memories. 

Iara Ferreira provides the Portuguese lyrics for four songs, including the levitating ballad “Debandada,” rendered as a delicately intertwined duet, and the surging samba “Mandingueira.” Rogerio Santos wrote the lyrics for “Lenga Lenga,” which has an infectious hook worthy of a standard, and the dreamy “Uirapuru,” a lovely sigh of a song. The melody of Faquini’s instrumental piece “Museu Nacional” echoes the exquisite melancholy of Jobim’s “O Amor em Paz,” delivered with burnished intensity by Cressman’s trombone. Faquini made a vivid first impression with his 2016 debut Metal na Madeira featuring Rio-based vocalist Paula Santoro; that album featured his originals set to an array of Northeastern rhythms. The expert songcraft on display throughout Setting Rays is more than impressive, but what stands out most is the way that trombone, guitar, and two voices conjure a fully realized realm. ~ Andrew Gilbert https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/natalie-cressman-ian-faquini-setting-rays-of-summer-cressman-music/

Personnel:  Natalie Cressman: Trombone and Vocals; Ian Faquini: Guitar and Vocals

Setting Rays of Summer

Sunday, November 24, 2019

The Dizzy Gillespie Reunion Big Band - 20th And 30th Anniversary

Styles: Trumpet Jazz, Big Band
Year: 1969
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:21
Size: 99,8 MB
Art: Front

( 7:29)  1. Things To Come
( 7:07)  2. One Bass Hit
( 8:17)  3. Frisco
(10:33)  4. Con Alma
( 8:01)  5. Things Are Here
( 1:51)  6. Theme (Birks Works)

Highlights radiate through the history of the Berlin Jazz Days, and November 7, 1968 was a particularly memorable one. On that evening Dizzy Gillespie visited the city on the Spree river; that alone would be enough for every jazz fan to jump for joy, since by that time the incomparable trumpeter was one of the few remaining constants in modern jazz. And he hadn’t brought just any orchestra with him – Dizzie’s combo included outstanding soloists from every phase of his career: saxophonist Cecil Payne and trombonist Ted Kelly from the Forties, colleague Curtis Fuller out of Dizzie’s Fifties groups, and from the younger generation representing the Sixties, Gillespie protégé trumpeter Jimmy Owens. These are only a few of the creative heads in Dizzie’s star-studded “Reunion Big Band”. 

Put together by Gillespie’s long-time musical companion Gil Fuller, the band only needed a few days’ rehearsals before they were breathing as one and ready to conduct their triumphant European tour. They strut their stuff in six pieces, from the exuberant, animalistic energy of “Things To Come” through Paul West’s swinging bass work on “One Bass Hit” on to “Frisco”, pianist Mike Longo’s composition with its chromatic ostinato resounding like a gangster movie soundtrack. From the Latin-saturated “Con Alma” with Dizzy dancing through the piece, through to the precisely arranged “Things Are There”, a wild chase that, after a series of excellent solos, ends in Candy Finch’s drumming fireworks. Dizzy Gillespie commented back then that it was his best big band of the last 20 years. After listening to the music you’ll have to agree. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Dizzy-Gillespie-Reunion-Big-Band/dp/B01JQUBHK6

Personnel: Dizzy Gillespie - trumpet; Jimmy Owens - trumpet; Dizzy Reece - trumpet; Victor Paz - trumpet;  Stu Haimer - trumpet;  Curtis Fuller - trombone; Tom McIntosh - trombone; Ted Kelly - trombone;  Chris Woods - saxophone;  James Moody - saxophone; Paul Jeffrey - saxophone; Sahib Shihab - saxophone; Cecil Payne - saxophone;  Mike Longo - piano;  Paul West - bass; Candy Finch - drums

20th And 30th Anniversary

Roy Haynes Trio - Just Us (Remastered)

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1960/2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:07
Size: 94,8 MB
Art: Front

(7:31)  1. Down Home
(7:01)  2. Sweet and Lovely
(3:47)  3. As Long as There's Music
(2:00)  4. Well Now
(7:03)  5. Cymbalism
(6:35)  6. Con Alma
(7:07)  7. Speak Low

Considering his stature, drummer Roy Haynes has led relatively few sessions throughout his long career. From 1957-1977, he headed just seven albums (none from 1969-77), including this fine trio set. Haynes sounds as if he enjoys accompanying the Red Garland-influenced piano playing of Richard Wyands and the obscure bassist Eddie DeHaas on six of the songs, and he takes "Well Now" as his feature. Haynes' concise drum solos always hold one's interest, and even though this tasteful date is far from definitive, the music is enjoyable. [Originally released in 1960, Just Us was reissued on CD in 2000.] ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/just-us-mw0000648025

Personnel: Roy Haynes - drums; Richard Wyands - piano; Eddie De Haas - bass

Just Us

Gretje Angell - In Any Key

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:22
Size: 84,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:32)  1. Love Is Here to Stay
(3:58)  2. I'm Old Fashioned
(4:28)  3. Fever
(5:28)  4. Deep in a Dream
(3:41)  5. Berimbau
(4:21)  6. Do Nothing 'Til You Hear from Me
(2:31)  7. One Note Samba
(5:01)  8. Tea for Two
(2:18)  9. Them There Eyes

Jazz vocalist Gretje Angell grew up in smoky, dimly-lit clubs as a little-girl roadie for her jazz-drummer father. Her grandfather was also a jazz drummer, so you could say Gretje was born to swing. “If it doesn’t groove then I don’t give it a sh*#,” the Los Angeles-based singer says with a good chuckle. Gretje ascended the bandstand on her own time. She worked through a heavy dose of stage fright, welcomed motherhood, and studied classical and opera prior launching her jazz career. Today, she announces her debut, "…in any key", a classic jazz vocal album the kind of long player you put on while savoring wine and cooking and cleaning. "...in any key" simmers with the sensual sophistication of artists such as Anita O'Day, Chet Baker, Carmen McRae, and Ella Fitzgerald. Onstage and off, Gretje navigates lush balladry, snappy swing, and slinky Brazilian rhythms with sensitivity and dexterity. She’s a darling of the jazz underground who performs regionally, nationally, and internationally, wowing audiences in a broad array of settings. Gretje leads her own ensembles, ranging from intimate guitar and vocal duos to full-band configurations, and also appears with other acclaimed LA-based jazz combos, including Ladd McIntosh Swing Orchestra, Jack’s Cats, and Glen Garrett’s Big Band. Informing her dynamic emotionality and technical aptitude as a singer are her experiences as a soprano opera singer active with the Los Angeles Metropolitan Opera Company. Gretje was born in Akron, Ohio, and her earliest memories are the long, joyous nights spent in dark jazz clubs, falling asleep in booths while her father commanded the bandstand. Having two generations of jazz drummers ahead of her, it only makes sense that Gretje’s first instrument was bass. Despite the fact that her father passed away prematurely, she still cherishes a few early jam sessions the two shared as a rhythm section. Gretje pursued classical music in college, but battled stage fright which eroded her passion, and she eventually dropped out of college, moved to California, and didn’t sing a note for a decade. 

While at a house concert in LA five months pregnant with her son, Gretje heard a jazz vocal and guitar duo that sparked something of a seismic epiphany. “At that moment, it felt if I didn’t try music I was never going to do it,” she remembers. Inspired, but also immersed in a clearly in a time-sensitive life period, Gretje boldly set out to become a jazz vocalist, tirelessly working on her craft, and bravely confronting her stage fright. The years of woodshedding and self-growth shine through on Gretje’s debut, "…in any key". The album was recorded by gifted guitarist, producer, and arranger Dori Amarilio in his home studio, and its cheeky name is a salute to his virtuosic ability to play any jazz standard in any key, at any moment. "…in any key" manages to be lush but intimate, and vibey but pristinely produced. The album gracefully swings through balmy voyages into bossa nova and samba, and dips into snappy uptempo numbers and after-hours balladry. Select album highlights include “Love Is Here to Stay,” “Deep In a Dream,” and “Them There Eyes.” “Love Is Here to Stay” captures that elusive magic take where the ensemble work is effortless. The song boasts a breezy bossa groove, delicately nuanced band interplay, and smoldering vocals. “Deep in a Dream” oozes heartache. It is luxuriously textured with real strings courtesy of the Budapest symphony orchestra and bluesy muted trumpet, and it boasts achingly beautiful vocals. On the brisk “Them There Eyes,” Gretje flexes her scat chops, burning through the chord changes with assured ease. Though this is Gretje’s first album, she maintains the fluidly busy calendar of a consummate professional. Performing and recording as a jazz musician is something Gretje’s father would have been proud of, and, to the end, she dedicated her album to him. Reflecting on that, she shares: “Whenever I gig, I picture him in the back of the room and it always calms my nerves.” https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/gretjeangell

In Any Key

Saturday, November 23, 2019

Billy Strayhorn Septet - Watch Your Cue

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:17
Size: 93,0 MB
Art: Front

( 3:06)  1. Watch Your Cue
(10:06)  2. Cue's Blue Now
( 7:21)  3. You Brought a New Kind of Love to Me
( 5:53)  4. Cherry
( 3:31)  5. When I Dream of You
( 6:01)  6. Rose Room
( 4:16)  7. Gone With the Wind

An extravagantly gifted composer, arranger, and pianist some considered him a genius Billy Strayhorn toiled throughout most of his maturity in the gaudy shadow of his employer, collaborator, and friend, Duke Ellington. Only in the last decade has Strayhorn's profile been lifted to a level approaching that of Ellington, where diligent searching of the Strayhorn archives (mainly by David Hajdu, author of the excellent Strayhorn bio Lush Life) revealed that Strayhorn's contribution to the Ellington legacy was far more extensive and complex than once thought. There are several instances where Strayhorn compositions were registered as Ellington/Strayhorn pieces ("Day Dream," "Something to Live For"), where collaborations between the two were listed only under Ellington's name ("Satin Doll," "Sugar Hill Penthouse," "C-Jam Blues"), where Strayhorn pieces were copyrighted under Ellington's name or no name at all. Even tunes that were listed as Strayhorn's alone have suffered; the proverbial man on the street is likely to tell you that "Take the 'A' Train" perhaps Strayhorn's most famous tune is a Duke Ellington song. Still, among musicians and jazz fans, Strayhorn is renowned for acknowledged classics like "Lotus Blossom," "Lush Life," "Rain Check," "A Flower Is a Lovesome Thing," and "Mid-Riff." While tailored for the Ellington idiom, Strayhorn's pieces often have their own bittersweet flavor, and his larger works have coherent, classically influenced designs quite apart from those of Ellington. 

Strayhorn was alternately content with and frustrated by his second-fiddle status, and he was also one of the few openly gay figures in jazz, which probably added more stress to his life. Classical music was Strayhorn's first and life-long musical love. He started out as a child prodigy, gravitating toward Victrolas as a child, and working odd jobs in order to buy a used upright piano while in grade school. He studied harmony and piano in high school, writing the music for a professional musical, Fantastic Rhythm, at 19. But the realities of a black man trying to make it in the then-lily-white classical world, plus exposure to pianists like Art Tatum and Teddy Wilson, led Strayhorn toward jazz. He gigged around Pittsburgh with a combo called the Mad Hatters. Through a friend of a friend, Strayhorn gained an introduction to Duke Ellington when the latter's band stopped in Pittsburgh in 1938. After hearing Strayhorn play, Ellington immediately gave him an assignment, and in January 1939, Strayhorn moved to New York to join Ellington as an arranger, composer, occasional pianist, and collaborator without so much as any kind of contract or verbal agreement. "I don't have any position for you," Ellington allegedly said. "You'll do whatever you feel like doing." A 1940-1941 dispute with ASCAP that kept Ellington's compositions off the radio gave Strayhorn his big chance to contribute several tunes to the Ellington band book, among them "After All," "Chelsea Bridge," "Johnny Come Lately," and "Passion Flower." Over the years, Strayhorn would collaborate (and be given credit) with Ellington in many of his large-scale suites, like "Such Sweet Thunder," "A Drum Is a Woman," "The Perfume Suite," and "The Far East Suite," as well as musicals like Jump for Joy and Saturday Laughter, and the score for the film Anatomy of a Murder. Beginning in the '50s, Strayhorn also took on some projects of his own away from Ellington, including a few solo albums, revues for a New York society called the Copasetics, theater collaborations with Luther Henderson, and songs for his friend Lena Horne. In 1964, Strayhorn was diagnosed with cancer of the esophagus, aggravated by years of smoking and drinking, and he submitted his last composition, "Blood Count," to the Ellington band while in the hospital. Shortly after Strayhorn's death in May 1967, Ellington recorded one of his finest albums and the best introduction to Strayhorn's work, And His Mother Called Him Bill (RCA), in memory of his friend. ~ Richard S.Ginell https://www.allmusic.com/artist/billy-strayhorn-mn0000359199/biography

Watch Your Cue

Rahsaan Roland Kirk - Let's Talk About Jazz

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:05
Size: 84,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:10)  1. Domino
(2:30)  2. 3-In-1 Without the Oil
(3:40)  3. Rolando
(2:18)  4. E.D.
(5:01)  5. A Stritch in Time
(4:45)  6. Get out of Town
(4:21)  7. I Believe in You
(3:35)  8. Lament
(3:37)  9. Meeting on Termini's Corner
(3:06) 10. Time

Arguably the most exciting saxophone soloist in jazz history, Kirk was a post-modernist before that term even existed. Kirk played the continuum of jazz tradition as an instrument unto itself; he felt little compunction about mixing and matching elements from the music's history, and his concoctions usually seemed natural, if not inevitable. When discussing Kirk, a great deal of attention is always paid to his eccentricities playing several horns at once, making his own instruments, clowning on stage. However, Kirk was an immensely creative artist; perhaps no improvising saxophonist has ever possessed a more comprehensive technique one that covered every aspect of jazz, from Dixieland to free and perhaps no other jazz musician has ever been more spontaneously inventive. His skills in constructing a solo are of particular note. Kirk had the ability to pace, shape, and elevate his improvisations to an extraordinary degree. During any given Kirk solo, just at the point in the course of his performance when it appeared he could not raise the intensity level any higher, he always seemed able to turn it up yet another notch. Kirk was born with sight, but became blind at the age of two. He started playing the bugle and trumpet, then learned the clarinet and C-melody sax. Kirk began playing tenor sax professionally in R&B bands at the age of 15. While a teenager, he discovered the "manzello" and "stritch" the former, a modified version of the saxello, which was itself a slightly curved variant of the B flat soprano sax; the latter, a modified straight E flat alto. To these and other instruments, Kirk began making his own improvements. 

He reshaped all three of his saxes so that they could be played simultaneously; he'd play tenor with his left hand, finger the manzello with his right, and sound a drone on the stritch, for instance. Kirk's self-invented technique was in evidence from his first recording, a 1956 R&B record called Triple Threat. By 1960 he had begun to incorporate a siren whistle into his solos, and by '63 he had mastered circular breathing, a technique that enabled him to play without pause for breath. In his early 20s, Kirk worked in Louisville before moving to Chicago in 1960. That year he made his second album, Introducing Roland Kirk, which featured saxophonist/trumpeter Ira Sullivan. In 1961, Kirk toured Germany and spent three months with Charles Mingus. From that point onward, Kirk mostly led his own group, the Vibration Society, recording prolifically with a range of sidemen. In the early '70s, Kirk became something of an activist; he led the "Jazz and People's Movement," a group devoted to opening up new opportunities for jazz musicians. The group adopted the tactic of interrupting tapings and broadcasts of television and radio programs in protest of the small number of African-American musicians employed by the networks and recording studios. In the course of his career, Kirk brought many hitherto unused instruments to jazz. In addition to the saxes, Kirk played the nose whistle, the piccolo, and the harmonica; instruments of his own design included the "trumpophone" (a trumpet with a soprano sax mouthpiece), and the "slidesophone" (a small trombone or slide trumpet, also with a sax mouthpiece). Kirk suffered a paralyzing stroke in 1975, losing movement on one side of his body, but his homemade saxophone technique allowed him to continue to play; beginning in 1976 and lasting until his death a year later, Kirk played one-handed. ~ Chris Kelsey https://www.allmusic.com/artist/rahsaan-roland-kirk-mn0000864257/biography

Let's Talk About Jazz

Steve Khan - Public Access

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:05
Size: 157,4 MB
Art: Front

( 9:14)  1. Sisé
( 4:50)  2. Blue Zone 41
( 9:00)  3. Kamarica
( 7:11)  4. Silent Screen
( 8:29)  5. Mambosa
( 5:21)  6. Butane Elvin
( 7:12)  7. Botero People
( 6:28)  8. Dedicated To You
(10:16)  9. Mama Chola

Steve Khan is a bit of an enigma in jazz guitar circles, as he neither clearly succeeds nor fails in any of his efforts. This is an exception, however, as the presence of Dave Weckl makes for one of the best GRP releases of the '90s. Khan's sound is still a bit weak, but his compositions are strong, as is the amazing percussion of Manolo Badrena. A longtime collaborator with Khan, Badrena seems to have every type of percussion ever made and uses them all effectively. Weckl thrives on the Latin rhythms and both players are complementary to each other. As with his other recordings, Khan's solos are not very interesting, and like Larry Coryell, he tries to play too fast. Despite this, they all seem to be having a great time. "Kamarica" is one of the happiest tunes here and contains some phenomenal soloing by Weckl. "Botero People" has a nice relaxed feel and a great bassline, proving that the tunes here are well written with a focus on rhythm rather than just improvisation. Although Badrena's singing is in Spanish, it is pleasant and an integral part of the music even if you don't know what he's saying. "Mama Chola" is the most intense piece here and features more great soloing by Weckl, who not only helps hold the band together, but actually manages to carry it for the majority of the session. ~ Robert Taylor https://www.allmusic.com/album/public-access-mw0000203186

Personnel: Steve Khan - Guitar; Anthony Jackson - Bass; Dave Weckl - Drums; Maholo Badrena - Percussion

Public Access