Thursday, July 15, 2021
Zoe Scott - Shades of Love
Styles: Vocal
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:25
Size: 103,5 MB
Art: Front
(3:45) 1. Quiet Nights
(4:07) 2. I'll Stand by You
(3:49) 3. This Girl's in Love with You
(3:55) 4. 7 Lives
(3:34) 5. Wave
(3:05) 6. The More I See You
(3:04) 7. Baby It's You
(4:17) 8. Once I Loved
(3:31) 9. My Cherie Amour
(3:02) 10. In My Life
(4:09) 11. Triste
(4:01) 12. You Know I'm No Good
Shades of Love
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:25
Size: 103,5 MB
Art: Front
(3:45) 1. Quiet Nights
(4:07) 2. I'll Stand by You
(3:49) 3. This Girl's in Love with You
(3:55) 4. 7 Lives
(3:34) 5. Wave
(3:05) 6. The More I See You
(3:04) 7. Baby It's You
(4:17) 8. Once I Loved
(3:31) 9. My Cherie Amour
(3:02) 10. In My Life
(4:09) 11. Triste
(4:01) 12. You Know I'm No Good
Shades of Love is a meticulously curated collection of 12 hit songs, reimagined, by international recording artist Zoe Scott, and produced by Bossa Nova stalwart and 10-time GRAMMY and two-time Emmy-winning, Moogie Canazio. A fully realized artist from early childhood, Zoe moved away from her family in London, for Rome, at 18. Leaving behind a loving mother and an alcoholic father for the life of an actress, songwriter, and singer. After years starring on stage and in films, the love of music drew her to Los Angeles where her name became synonymous with Rock ‘n’ Roll. After years spent honing a hard-edged rock voice, Zoe knew mastering Bossa Nova’s understated sensuality was a journey she couldn’t make on her own. She reached out to the master himself, Moogie Canazio, the Brazilian-born producer who ultimately helped Zoe feel her way into the silky, hushed vocal qualities she sought.
Like Bossa Nova itself born from a marriage of Jazz and Samba, and sometimes called “Brazilian Jazz” Shades of Love also represents a cross-cultural creative marriage that connects artist and producer, LA and Rio, past and present, emotion and craft. To create the album, Zoe and Moogie spent countless hours collaborating in LA and Brazil, pouring over the best songs, refining her vocals, and immersing in the history and heartbeat of Bossa Nova. Zoe also chose to honor the authentic style and original sound cultivated by Bossa Nova originators João Gilberto and Antonio Carlos Jobim, she also enlisted the talents of Bossa Nova legends, guitarist-arranger Torcuato Mariano, and Daniel Jobim, grandson of Antonio Carlos Jobim.
Daniel is a featured performer on two of his grandfather's most iconic songs; dueting with Zoe on "Wave," and playing piano on "Quiet Nights." Along with these two beloved Bossa Nova classics, Zoe reimagined iconic songs originally recorded by Stevie Wonder, Amy Winehouse, The Beatles and more, including: “I'll Stand By You,” made famous by Chrissie Hynde; “This Girl’s In Love With You” written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David, recorded by Herb Alpert; “7 Lives,” an intimate anniversary gift written by Brazilan, Zé Ricardo, to his wife.
Zoe continues her thoughtful curation with: “The More I See You,” part of the famous club scene in Roman Polanski's Frantic, starring Harrison Ford; “Baby It’s You,” written by Burt Bacharach was recorded by The Shirelles and The Beatles; “Once I Loved,” made famous by Frank Sinatra; “My Cherie Amore,” by Stevie Wonder; “In My Life,” recorded by The Beatles; “Triste,” written by Jobim in 1966 at the Sunset Marquis Hotel in Los Angeles, as he waited for Sinatra to return from a holiday in Barbados so they could begin recording their album Francis Albert Sinatra & Antônio Carlos Jobim. The album closes with “You Know I’m No Good,” by Amy Winehouse.
One special song is Zé Ricardo's "7 Lives," featuring the expressive clarinet of Rodrigo Sha, as a love letter to John, her partner of seven years. Shades of Love is an album drawing the listener to the warmth of romance, love, and compassion through every thoughtfully delivered note. In her journey from performing original indie rock to Bossa Nova covers, she embraces an expansive, openhearted vulnerability she had never experienced before, and in the process, connected her craft with who she was becoming as a person. https://www.followme876.com/2021/01/zoe-scott-shades-of-love.html
Like Bossa Nova itself born from a marriage of Jazz and Samba, and sometimes called “Brazilian Jazz” Shades of Love also represents a cross-cultural creative marriage that connects artist and producer, LA and Rio, past and present, emotion and craft. To create the album, Zoe and Moogie spent countless hours collaborating in LA and Brazil, pouring over the best songs, refining her vocals, and immersing in the history and heartbeat of Bossa Nova. Zoe also chose to honor the authentic style and original sound cultivated by Bossa Nova originators João Gilberto and Antonio Carlos Jobim, she also enlisted the talents of Bossa Nova legends, guitarist-arranger Torcuato Mariano, and Daniel Jobim, grandson of Antonio Carlos Jobim.
Daniel is a featured performer on two of his grandfather's most iconic songs; dueting with Zoe on "Wave," and playing piano on "Quiet Nights." Along with these two beloved Bossa Nova classics, Zoe reimagined iconic songs originally recorded by Stevie Wonder, Amy Winehouse, The Beatles and more, including: “I'll Stand By You,” made famous by Chrissie Hynde; “This Girl’s In Love With You” written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David, recorded by Herb Alpert; “7 Lives,” an intimate anniversary gift written by Brazilan, Zé Ricardo, to his wife.
Zoe continues her thoughtful curation with: “The More I See You,” part of the famous club scene in Roman Polanski's Frantic, starring Harrison Ford; “Baby It’s You,” written by Burt Bacharach was recorded by The Shirelles and The Beatles; “Once I Loved,” made famous by Frank Sinatra; “My Cherie Amore,” by Stevie Wonder; “In My Life,” recorded by The Beatles; “Triste,” written by Jobim in 1966 at the Sunset Marquis Hotel in Los Angeles, as he waited for Sinatra to return from a holiday in Barbados so they could begin recording their album Francis Albert Sinatra & Antônio Carlos Jobim. The album closes with “You Know I’m No Good,” by Amy Winehouse.
One special song is Zé Ricardo's "7 Lives," featuring the expressive clarinet of Rodrigo Sha, as a love letter to John, her partner of seven years. Shades of Love is an album drawing the listener to the warmth of romance, love, and compassion through every thoughtfully delivered note. In her journey from performing original indie rock to Bossa Nova covers, she embraces an expansive, openhearted vulnerability she had never experienced before, and in the process, connected her craft with who she was becoming as a person. https://www.followme876.com/2021/01/zoe-scott-shades-of-love.html
Shades of Love
Rosario Giuliani, Joe Locke - Love in Translation
Styles: saxphone And Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:23
Size: 138,9 MB
Art: Front
(5:21) 1. Duke Ellington's Sound of Love
(6:59) 2. I Wish You Love
(5:24) 3. Love Letters
(6:39) 4. Love Is a Planchette
(6:20) 5. I Can't Help Falling in Love with You
(7:10) 6. The Hidden Force of Love
(6:15) 7. Raise Heaven
(5:13) 8. Love in Translation
(5:31) 9. Everything I Love
(5:27) 10. Tamburo
Love in Translation
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:23
Size: 138,9 MB
Art: Front
(5:21) 1. Duke Ellington's Sound of Love
(6:59) 2. I Wish You Love
(5:24) 3. Love Letters
(6:39) 4. Love Is a Planchette
(6:20) 5. I Can't Help Falling in Love with You
(7:10) 6. The Hidden Force of Love
(6:15) 7. Raise Heaven
(5:13) 8. Love in Translation
(5:31) 9. Everything I Love
(5:27) 10. Tamburo
Love in Translation ”marks the return (with the Jando Music / Via Veneto Jazz label) of a splendid collaboration born in Umbria Jazz 20 years ago. They are two musicians of different nationalities, and perhaps of different characters, but who over time have become undisputed protagonists of the international jazz scene: the Italian saxophonist Rosario Giuliani and the American vibraphonist Joe Locke. Assisted by two other absolute masters in their instruments, bassist Dario Deidda and drummer Roberto Gatto, Rosario and Joe thus find themselves to seal the twentieth anniversary of their sparkling mutual interaction, which soon became friendship, with an intense, passionate, forged record. by their unrivaled musical talents.
As the title says,“Love in Translation” is a record based on the strongest and most indecipherable feeling: love. Among famous standards, such as "Duke Ellington's Sound of Love" by the great Charles Mingus, "Love Letters" by Victor Young and Edward Heyman and even a "Can't Help Falling in Love" that was in Elvis Presley's repertoire, there are also original songs, with two heartfelt tributes to two great musicians who unfortunately are no longer with us: "Raise Heaven" that Joe Locke wanted to dedicate to Roy Hargrove and "Tamburo" by Rosario Giuliani for Marco Tamburini. Here is a record so strong in feelings, but never "sentimental", promises to be one of the fundamental new recordings of 2020, and which will find its full celebration live at Umbria Jazz Winter 2019 in Orvieto.such as "Duke Ellington's Sound of Love" by the great Charles Mingus, "Love Letters" by Victor Young and Edward Heyman and even a "Can't Help Falling in Love" that was in Elvis Presley's repertoire, original songs also shine, with two heartfelt tributes to two great musicians who unfortunately are no longer with us: "Raise Heaven" that Joe Locke wanted to dedicate to Roy Hargrove and "Tamburo" by Rosario Giuliani for Marco Tamburini.
Here is a record so strong in feelings, but never "sentimental", promises to be one of the fundamental new recordings of 2020, and which will find its full celebration live at Umbria Jazz Winter 2019 in Orvieto.such as "Duke Ellington's Sound of Love" by the great Charles Mingus, "Love Letters" by Victor Young and Edward Heyman and even a "Can't Help Falling in Love" that was in Elvis Presley's repertoire, original songs also shine, with two heartfelt tributes to two great musicians who unfortunately are no longer with us: "Raise Heaven" that Joe Locke wanted to dedicate to Roy Hargrove and "Tamburo" by Rosario Giuliani for Marco Tamburini. Here is a record so strong in feelings, but never "sentimental", promises to be one of the fundamental new recordings of 2020, and which will find its full celebration live at Umbria Jazz Winter 2019 in Orvieto.with two heartfelt tributes to two great musicians who unfortunately are no longer with us: "Raise Heaven" that Joe Locke wanted to dedicate to Roy Hargrove and "Tamburo" by Rosario Giuliani for Marco Tamburini.
Personnel: Rosario Giuliani - alto and soprano saxophone; Joe Locke - vibraphone; Dario Deidda - bass; Roberto Gatto - drums
As the title says,“Love in Translation” is a record based on the strongest and most indecipherable feeling: love. Among famous standards, such as "Duke Ellington's Sound of Love" by the great Charles Mingus, "Love Letters" by Victor Young and Edward Heyman and even a "Can't Help Falling in Love" that was in Elvis Presley's repertoire, there are also original songs, with two heartfelt tributes to two great musicians who unfortunately are no longer with us: "Raise Heaven" that Joe Locke wanted to dedicate to Roy Hargrove and "Tamburo" by Rosario Giuliani for Marco Tamburini. Here is a record so strong in feelings, but never "sentimental", promises to be one of the fundamental new recordings of 2020, and which will find its full celebration live at Umbria Jazz Winter 2019 in Orvieto.such as "Duke Ellington's Sound of Love" by the great Charles Mingus, "Love Letters" by Victor Young and Edward Heyman and even a "Can't Help Falling in Love" that was in Elvis Presley's repertoire, original songs also shine, with two heartfelt tributes to two great musicians who unfortunately are no longer with us: "Raise Heaven" that Joe Locke wanted to dedicate to Roy Hargrove and "Tamburo" by Rosario Giuliani for Marco Tamburini.
Here is a record so strong in feelings, but never "sentimental", promises to be one of the fundamental new recordings of 2020, and which will find its full celebration live at Umbria Jazz Winter 2019 in Orvieto.such as "Duke Ellington's Sound of Love" by the great Charles Mingus, "Love Letters" by Victor Young and Edward Heyman and even a "Can't Help Falling in Love" that was in Elvis Presley's repertoire, original songs also shine, with two heartfelt tributes to two great musicians who unfortunately are no longer with us: "Raise Heaven" that Joe Locke wanted to dedicate to Roy Hargrove and "Tamburo" by Rosario Giuliani for Marco Tamburini. Here is a record so strong in feelings, but never "sentimental", promises to be one of the fundamental new recordings of 2020, and which will find its full celebration live at Umbria Jazz Winter 2019 in Orvieto.with two heartfelt tributes to two great musicians who unfortunately are no longer with us: "Raise Heaven" that Joe Locke wanted to dedicate to Roy Hargrove and "Tamburo" by Rosario Giuliani for Marco Tamburini.
Personnel: Rosario Giuliani - alto and soprano saxophone; Joe Locke - vibraphone; Dario Deidda - bass; Roberto Gatto - drums
Love in Translation
Wednesday, July 14, 2021
Hot Sugar Band - Swing for Dancers
Styles: Jazz, Swing, Big Band
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:19
Size: 101,3 MB
Art: Front
(3:58) 1. Jericho
(3:06) 2. Swing 41
(4:01) 3. Blue Drag
(3:13) 4. Yacht Club Swing
(3:05) 5. Harlem Swing
(2:48) 6. Jumping At the Woodside
(3:11) 7. Till Tom Special
(3:04) 8. Topsy
(2:41) 9. The Sheik of Araby
(3:17) 10. Into This Heart of Mine
(3:15) 11. Daphné
(3:11) 12. Sweet Georgia Brown
(4:28) 13. Jumping At the Woodside - Special Training
Swing for Dancers
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:19
Size: 101,3 MB
Art: Front
(3:58) 1. Jericho
(3:06) 2. Swing 41
(4:01) 3. Blue Drag
(3:13) 4. Yacht Club Swing
(3:05) 5. Harlem Swing
(2:48) 6. Jumping At the Woodside
(3:11) 7. Till Tom Special
(3:04) 8. Topsy
(2:41) 9. The Sheik of Araby
(3:17) 10. Into This Heart of Mine
(3:15) 11. Daphné
(3:11) 12. Sweet Georgia Brown
(4:28) 13. Jumping At the Woodside - Special Training
Born in 2010, the Hot Sugar Band has become one of the top-rated bands in the world of Lindy- hop and Swing dance in general. Based in Paris, and featuring some of the finest musicians of the french swing and jazz scene, the band has performed all around the world, including Sweden, Vietnam, Hungary, Lithuania, Canada, Spain, South Korea, China, Italy, Netherlands ... among many others !!
Its unique, highly recognisable sound, at the crossing of John Kirby's sextet, Django Reinhardt big band works, and Count Basie and Duke Ellington's classics, in addition to the band's endless energy on stage, have contributed to make it one of the most-demanded bands in the world of swing, with 300+ shows over the 5 last years, 4,5M streams, and more than 14.000.000 views on youtube.
Its unique, highly recognisable sound, at the crossing of John Kirby's sextet, Django Reinhardt big band works, and Count Basie and Duke Ellington's classics, in addition to the band's endless energy on stage, have contributed to make it one of the most-demanded bands in the world of swing, with 300+ shows over the 5 last years, 4,5M streams, and more than 14.000.000 views on youtube.
Swing for Dancers
Rebecca Luker & Sally Wilfert - All the Girls
Styles: Vocal
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:26
Size: 77,4 MB
Art: Front
(2:03) 1. You Are My Best Friend
(5:28) 2. Lovely Lies
(1:55) 3. What Did You Do to Your Face
(3:07) 4. Everybody Says Don't
(0:57) 5. There Are Delicacies
(1:54) 6. I Have Loved Hours at Sea
(1:15) 7. Marilyn Miller
(1:46) 8. A Quoi Bon Dire
(1:17) 9. War Song
(5:07) 10. Millwork/I Could Have Been a Sailor
(2:43) 11. Not Funny
(5:51) 12. Be Careful/Dear Theodosia
All the Girls
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:26
Size: 77,4 MB
Art: Front
(2:03) 1. You Are My Best Friend
(5:28) 2. Lovely Lies
(1:55) 3. What Did You Do to Your Face
(3:07) 4. Everybody Says Don't
(0:57) 5. There Are Delicacies
(1:54) 6. I Have Loved Hours at Sea
(1:15) 7. Marilyn Miller
(1:46) 8. A Quoi Bon Dire
(1:17) 9. War Song
(5:07) 10. Millwork/I Could Have Been a Sailor
(2:43) 11. Not Funny
(5:51) 12. Be Careful/Dear Theodosia
The two decade friendship of talented vocalist/actresses Sally Wilfert and Rebecca Luker is apparent on every track of this warm compilation put together, we’re told, singing, cooking, kayaking, and laughing. It’s billed as a celebration of women “in all of our messy wonderfulness.” Instead of drawing on the wealth of recognizable material each has performed, except for the medley “Shows We Could Have Starred in Together,” songs are eclectic. The album is also peppered with brief, melodically untethered poems, put to music by Music Director Joseph Thalken.
Sally Wilfert has appeared in Broadway’s Assassins, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, and David, toured the country in the first national tour of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, and acted in a roster of Off Broadway productions. She’s currently working on the world premiere of the musical ROW. Rebecca Luker graced the boards starring, in part, in Fun Home, Rodgers & Hammerstein’s Cinderella, Mary Poppins, and The Music Man. Off Broadway and film credits are many. Both women have been regulars on concert and cabaret stages. Luker and her crystalline soprano were alas lost to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis December 2020. She’ll be missed
.
“You Are My Best Friend” (Will Aronson/Kyoung-Ae Kang from My Scary Girl) is bouncy, uplifting. “People say girls’ friendship is fickle like water, but…” Really, what do they know? Harmony is grand, chemistry palpable. In “Lovely Lies” (Jeff Blumenkrantz/Beth Blatt), Luker’s character (make no mistake, she plays to character) sings to her mom with a lilting accent from below the Mason-Dixon Line. “It’s time for a southern belle to talk straight.” Her appealing vibrato buoys the feisty confrontation. A duet of Stephen Sondheim’s “Everybody Says Don’t” begins slow and considered with none of the accustomed rat-a-tat-tat pontification, then swells as Luker and Wilfret egg each other on. The arrangement gains swagger until we picture them running, jumping, climbing trees, perhaps scaling a Keep Out sign and rolling down a hill. Exhilarating.
“Shows We Could Have Starred in Together” offers a gamut of melodic emotion, each morphing to the next. “The Wrong Note Rag” (Leonard Bernstein/Betty Comden and Adolph Green) is a showcase for vocal kinship. “Marry the Man Today” (Frank Loesser) becomes advice between BFFs. “Nowadays” (John Kander/Fred Ebb) and “Every Day a Little Death (Stephen Sondheim) peek into women’s lives. “If Mama Was Married” (Jule Styne /Stephen Sondheim) has them playing sisters. Stephen Schwartz’ “For Good” finds the women frenemies.
Both flourished early in dance class as described in Marvin Hamlisch/ Edward Kleban’s “At the Ballet.” Cole Porter’s “Friendship,” and Jerry Herman’s “Bosom Buddies,” replete with vaudevillian fizz, are an obvious fit. A surprising excerpt from “The Flower Duet” (Leo Delibes – 1883’s Lakme) leaves us on the classical side with admiration for range and control.
The two voice arrangement of “Isn’t This Better?” (John Kander/Fred Ebb) conjures a woman addressing herself in a mirror with the image talking back. The blondes have it. Wilfert’s tandem “Millwork” (James Taylor) and “I Could’ve Been a Sailor” (Peter Allen) creates an emotional arc making every lyric credible. “I could have been a sailor/And sailed the seven seas…Well, I settled for safe harbors of my heart.” There are choices. An unexpectedly big ending realizes dreams. Luker’s “Not Funny” (Michael Heitzman/Ilene Reid) is clever. “I’ve looked near and far for something droll and jovial in the soprano repertoire” sings an actress longing for laughs. She’s played all the classic musical theater soprano roles, still something’s missing. “I’ll never find a funny song I fear/Because it’s just so goddamn hard to find a laugh up here!” Wry and sympathetic, the song ends on a high note worthy of young Barbara Cook.
The CD ends with a dual performance of Patty Griffith’s “Be Careful” and Lin-Manuel Miranda’s “Dear Theodosia.” “All the girls in the Paris night/ All the girls in the pale moonlight/…Be careful how you bend me/Be careful where you send me/Careful how you end me/Be careful with me…” they tell the world in the first. “If we lay a strong enough foundation/We’ll pass it on to you, we’ll give the world to you/And you’ll blow us all away…” they sing in the second. It’s compassionate and encouraging. https://www.womanaroundtown.com/sections/playing-around/cd-all-the-girls-rebecca-luker-and-sally-wilfert/
Sally Wilfert has appeared in Broadway’s Assassins, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, and David, toured the country in the first national tour of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, and acted in a roster of Off Broadway productions. She’s currently working on the world premiere of the musical ROW. Rebecca Luker graced the boards starring, in part, in Fun Home, Rodgers & Hammerstein’s Cinderella, Mary Poppins, and The Music Man. Off Broadway and film credits are many. Both women have been regulars on concert and cabaret stages. Luker and her crystalline soprano were alas lost to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis December 2020. She’ll be missed
.
“You Are My Best Friend” (Will Aronson/Kyoung-Ae Kang from My Scary Girl) is bouncy, uplifting. “People say girls’ friendship is fickle like water, but…” Really, what do they know? Harmony is grand, chemistry palpable. In “Lovely Lies” (Jeff Blumenkrantz/Beth Blatt), Luker’s character (make no mistake, she plays to character) sings to her mom with a lilting accent from below the Mason-Dixon Line. “It’s time for a southern belle to talk straight.” Her appealing vibrato buoys the feisty confrontation. A duet of Stephen Sondheim’s “Everybody Says Don’t” begins slow and considered with none of the accustomed rat-a-tat-tat pontification, then swells as Luker and Wilfret egg each other on. The arrangement gains swagger until we picture them running, jumping, climbing trees, perhaps scaling a Keep Out sign and rolling down a hill. Exhilarating.
“Shows We Could Have Starred in Together” offers a gamut of melodic emotion, each morphing to the next. “The Wrong Note Rag” (Leonard Bernstein/Betty Comden and Adolph Green) is a showcase for vocal kinship. “Marry the Man Today” (Frank Loesser) becomes advice between BFFs. “Nowadays” (John Kander/Fred Ebb) and “Every Day a Little Death (Stephen Sondheim) peek into women’s lives. “If Mama Was Married” (Jule Styne /Stephen Sondheim) has them playing sisters. Stephen Schwartz’ “For Good” finds the women frenemies.
Both flourished early in dance class as described in Marvin Hamlisch/ Edward Kleban’s “At the Ballet.” Cole Porter’s “Friendship,” and Jerry Herman’s “Bosom Buddies,” replete with vaudevillian fizz, are an obvious fit. A surprising excerpt from “The Flower Duet” (Leo Delibes – 1883’s Lakme) leaves us on the classical side with admiration for range and control.
The two voice arrangement of “Isn’t This Better?” (John Kander/Fred Ebb) conjures a woman addressing herself in a mirror with the image talking back. The blondes have it. Wilfert’s tandem “Millwork” (James Taylor) and “I Could’ve Been a Sailor” (Peter Allen) creates an emotional arc making every lyric credible. “I could have been a sailor/And sailed the seven seas…Well, I settled for safe harbors of my heart.” There are choices. An unexpectedly big ending realizes dreams. Luker’s “Not Funny” (Michael Heitzman/Ilene Reid) is clever. “I’ve looked near and far for something droll and jovial in the soprano repertoire” sings an actress longing for laughs. She’s played all the classic musical theater soprano roles, still something’s missing. “I’ll never find a funny song I fear/Because it’s just so goddamn hard to find a laugh up here!” Wry and sympathetic, the song ends on a high note worthy of young Barbara Cook.
The CD ends with a dual performance of Patty Griffith’s “Be Careful” and Lin-Manuel Miranda’s “Dear Theodosia.” “All the girls in the Paris night/ All the girls in the pale moonlight/…Be careful how you bend me/Be careful where you send me/Careful how you end me/Be careful with me…” they tell the world in the first. “If we lay a strong enough foundation/We’ll pass it on to you, we’ll give the world to you/And you’ll blow us all away…” they sing in the second. It’s compassionate and encouraging. https://www.womanaroundtown.com/sections/playing-around/cd-all-the-girls-rebecca-luker-and-sally-wilfert/
All the Girls
Fast 3 - 3's Company: A Tribute To Grant Green
Styles: Jazz, Bop
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:51
Size: 131,0 MB
Art: FRont
(7:00) 1. Grantstand
(5:56) 2. Bermuda Clayhouse
(8:46) 3. The Selma March
(7:28) 4. Softly As in a Morning Sunrise
(5:50) 5. Broadway
(9:02) 6. Cease the Bombing
(6:38) 7. Talkin About JC
(6:08) 8. Bermuda Clayhouse
3's Company: A Tribute To Grant Green
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:51
Size: 131,0 MB
Art: FRont
(7:00) 1. Grantstand
(5:56) 2. Bermuda Clayhouse
(8:46) 3. The Selma March
(7:28) 4. Softly As in a Morning Sunrise
(5:50) 5. Broadway
(9:02) 6. Cease the Bombing
(6:38) 7. Talkin About JC
(6:08) 8. Bermuda Clayhouse
The European group Fast 3, comprising guitarist Dave Wilkinson, drummer Caspar St. Charles and organist Phil Wilkinson pay tribute to the great jazz guitarist Grant Green.~ Opiniones editoriales https://www.amazon.com/3s-Company-Tribute-Grant-Green/dp/B0025KN4I8
3's Company: A Tribute To Grant Green
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