Wednesday, December 15, 2021

James Clay - I Let a Song to Out of My Heart

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@192K/s
Time: 68:09
Size: 97,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:46) 1. Things Ain't What They Used to Be
(8:24) 2. My Foolish Heart
(6:31) 3. Rain Check
(6:14) 4. The Very Thought of You
(6:58) 5. I Mean You
(5:07) 6. I Let a Song Go Out of My Heart
(7:20) 7. Just in Time
(7:12) 8. I Can't Get Started
(7:07) 9. John Paul Jones A.K.A. Trane's Blues
(7:25) 10. Body and Soul

James Clay, a thick-toned tenor saxophonist who knew Ornette Coleman and Don Cherry in the 1950s, recorded a bit near the end of the decade, spent ten years touring with Ray Charles, and then in the late '60s moved back to his native Texas. He was not heard from for quite some time, until he worked a bit with Don Cherry in 1988. In 1989 he led his first record date in 29 years and it is excellent, a fine straight-ahead quartet outing with pianist Cedar Walton, bassist David Williams, and drummer Billy Higgins. Although not flawless (there are occasional reed squeaks and a few brief wandering moments), this is one of James Clay's finest recordings. He is well featured on ten jazz standards including "Things Ain't What They Used to Be," "Raincheck," "I Mean You," and "Trane's Blues." Recommended.~Scott Yanowhttps://www.allmusic.com/album/i-let-a-song-go-out-of-my-heart-mw0000320510

I Let a Song to Out of My Heart

Ron Carter, Jim Hall - Telephone

Styles: Jazz, Chamber Jazz
Year: 1985
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:38
Size: 104,8 MB
Art: Front

( 5:33) 1. Telephone
( 5:54) 2. Indian Summer
( 4:16) 3. Candlelight
( 6:57) 4. Chorale and Dance
(10:30) 5. Alone Together
( 7:45) 6. Stardust
( 4:39) 7. Two s Blues

The epitome of class and elegance, though not stuffy, Ron Carter has been a world class bassist and cellist since the '60s. He's among the greatest accompanists of all time, but has also done many albums exhibiting his prodigious technique. He's a brilliant rhythmic and melodic player, who uses everything in the bass and cello arsenal; walking lines, thick, full, prominent notes and tones, drones and strumming effects, and melody snippets. His bowed solos are almost as impressive as those done with his fingers. Carter has been featured in clothing, instrument, and pipe advertisements; he's close to being the bass equivalent of a Duke Ellington in his mix of musical and extra-musical interests. Carter's nearly as accomplished in classical music as jazz, and has performed with symphony orchestras all over the world. He's almost exclusively an acoustic player; he did play electric for a short time in the late '60s and early '70s, but hasn't used it in many, many years.

Carter began playing cello at ten. But when his family moved from Ferndale, MI, to Detroit, Carter ran into problems with racial stereotypes regarding the cello and switched to bass. He played in the Eastman School's Philharmonic Orchestra, and gained his degree in 1959. He moved to New York and played in Chico Hamilton's quintet with Eric Dolphy, while also enrolling at the Manhattan School of Music. Carter earned his master's degree in 1961. After Hamilton returned to the West Coast in 1960, Carter stayed in New York and played with Dolphy and Don Ellis, cutting his first records with them. He worked with Randy Weston and Thelonious Monk, while playing and recording with Jaki Byard in the early '60s. Carter also toured and recorded with Bobby Timmons' trio, and played with Cannonball Adderley. He joined Art Farmer's group for a short time in 1963, before he was tapped to become a member of Miles Davis' band.

Carter remained with Davis until 1968, appearing on every crucial mid-'60s recording and teaming with Herbie Hancock and Tony Williams to craft a new, freer rhythm section sound. The high-profile job led to the reputation that's seen Carter become possibly the most recorded bassist in jazz history. He's been heard on an unprecedented number of recordings; some sources claim 500, others have estimated it to be as many as 1,000. The list of people he's played with is simply too great to be accurately and completely cited. Carter's been a member of New York Jazz Sextet and New York Jazz Quartet, V.S.O.P. Tour, and Milestone Jazzstars, and was in one of the groups featured in the film Round Midnight in 1986.

He's led his own bands at various intervals since 1972, using a second bassist to keep time and establish harmony so he's free to provide solos. Carter even invented his own instrument, a piccolo bass. Carter's also contributed many arrangements and compositions to both his groups and other bands. He's done duo recordings with either Cedar Walton or Jim Hall. Carter's recorded for Embryo/Atlantic, CTI, Milestone, Timeless, EmArcy, Galaxy, Elektra, and Concord, eventually landing at Blue Note for LPs including 1997's The Bass and I, 1998's So What, and 1999's Orfeu. When Skies Are Grey surfaced in early 2001, followed a year later by Stardust, Carter's tribute to the late bassist Oscar Pettiford. In 2006 another tribute album was released, Dear Miles, dedicated to Miles Davis, also on Blue Note. https://www.jazzmusicarchives.com/artist/ron-carter

Personnel: Ron Carter - bass; Jim Hall – guitar

Telephone

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers - First Flight To Tokyo: The Lost 1961 Recordings

Styles: Jazz, Hard Bop
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 103:05
Size: 240,7 MB
Art: Front

(22:34) 1. Now's The Time
(13:32) 2. Moanin'
(11:44) 3. Blues March
( 0:32) 4. The Theme
(12:13) 5. Dat Dere
(13:28) 6. 'Round About Midnight
(17:15) 7. Now's The Time
(11:12) 8. A Night In Tunisia
( 0:30) 9. The Theme

There is a saying in the opera world which, though innocuous on the face of it, damns a work before the overture has begun let alone after the fat lady sings. The saying, beloved of breathless publicists deaf to its implication, is that such and such an opera is "rarely performed." The reason it is rarely performed, of course, is because nine times out of ten it is a dud. When it comes to jazz albums the parallel saying is "previously unreleased." Unless the recording has only recently been discovered to exist, five gets you ten that it, too, is a dud and the longer it has lain unreleased the greater that probability. First Flight To Tokyo is, Blue Note tells us, a "thrilling previously unreleased" live recording. Its subtitle, The Lost 1961 Recordings, suggests the tapes have not until recently been known to exist and that, as with the Dead Sea Scrolls, only decades of dedicated archaeological excavation have unearthed them. In fact, the tapes and their whereabouts have been known about for sixty years. One is minded, therefore, to arrange the following words into a well known phrase or saying: barrel, bottom, scrape.

Actually, First Flight To Tokyo is not that bad. It is certainly not a dud. But nor is it the masterpiece it will doubtless be dubbed by gullible reviewers who are perhaps unfamiliar with the genuinely great live albums in the Jazz Messengers' discography. It is, in fact, a solid album from one of the hardest working bands of its era and not without interest. But A Night At Birdland (Blue Note, 1954) or At The Café Bohemia (Blue Note, 1956) it is not. The alternate takes of Charlie Parker's "Now's The Time," one lasting 22:34, the other 17:15, suggest the band played two sets at Tokyo's Hibiya Public Hall on January 14, 1961. The tune had been in the band book since 1954 and is part of the aforementioned A Night At Birdland, along with Dizzy Gillespie's "A Night In Tunisia," which is also heard here. The Messengers' front line was then trumpeter Clifford Brown and alto saxophonist Lou Donaldson, not First Flight To Tokyo's trumpeter Lee Morgan and tenor saxophonist Wayne Shorter. The other Tokyo tunes pianist Bobby Timmons' "Moanin'" and "Dat Dere" and ex-Messenger tenor saxophonist Benny Golson's "Blues March" were more recent additions to the book. Nothing from Shorter, who is one of the two most interesting composers in the history of the Jazz Messengers (the other being Golson).

All these tunes get expansive going on raucous performances. The opening track is the longer of the two versions of "Now's The Time," and it is the most compelling performance on the 2xCD set, opening and closing with five minute solos from Blakey, sandwiching others by Shorter, Morgan and Timmons. Just shy of three years away from his defining hit, "The Sidewinder," Morgan is already post bop and across gospel infused hard bop. Shorter is still some distance from his nuanced mature style and attempts, on this track and the others, to follow Blakey's wish that every chorus should sound like the grand finale of the set. Throughout the album, Timmons is his own deeply funky self. The only track which does not quite convince is Thelonious Monk's "'Round About Midnight." Morgan is superb, but Blakey and the Messengers were better at belters than ballads, notwithstanding their gorgeous reading of Golson's "Whisper Not" on 1958 Paris Olympia (Blue Note).

Bottom line: First Flight To Tokyo is one for hardcore Jazz Messengers' aficionados, who will already know that this particular Messengers lineup is arguably heard at its best on two Blue Note studio albums also recorded in 1961, A Night In Tunisia and Roots And Herbs.~ Chris Mayhttps://www.allaboutjazz.com/first-flight-to-tokyo-the-lost-1961-recordings-art-blakey-and-the-jazz-messengers-blue-note-records__30509

Personnel: Art Blakey: drums; Wayne Shorter: saxophone; Lee Morgan: trumpet; Bobby Timmons: piano; Jymie Merritt: bass.

First Flight To Tokyo: The Lost 1961 Recordings

Tuesday, December 14, 2021

The Count Basie Orchestra - Live At El Morocco

Styles: Jazz, Big Band
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:43
Size: 158,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:49) 1. Gone An' Git It Y'all
(5:43) 2. A Night At El Morocco
(5:04) 3. Right On, Right On
(5:11) 4. That's The Kind Of Love I'm Talking About
(5:18) 5. Corner Pocket
(4:06) 6. Little Chicago Fire
(5:21) 7. Shiny Stockings
(5:27) 8. Angel Eyes
(6:41) 9. Major Butts
(4:40) 10. Ditty
(5:00) 11. Vignola Express
(4:48) 12. Basie
(5:29) 13. One O'Clock Jump

Even without its original leader, the Count Basie Orchestra is today one of the finest jazz big bands in existence. Frank Foster has kept the instantly recognizable sound while welcoming younger soloists and infusing the band's repertoire with new charts. This strong live program is typical of the Basie band in the '90s, performing older tunes (such as "Corner Pocket" and "Shiny Stockings") that alternate with newer and no less swinging originals, all of which leaves room for the orchestra's many promising soloists.~Scott Yanowhttps://www.allmusic.com/album/live-at-el-morocco-mw0000087296

Personnel: Alto Saxophone [Lead], Piccolo Flute – Danny Turner; Alto Saxophone, Flute – Manny Boyd; Baritone Saxophone, Bass Clarinet – John Williams ; Bass – Cleveland Eaton; Bass Trombone – Bill Hughes; Drums – David Gibson ; Guitar – Charlton Johnson; Piano – George Caldwell ; Tenor Saxophone, Flute – Doug Miller, Kenny Hing; Trombone – Clarence Banks, Robert Trowers; Trombone [Lead] – Mel Wanzo; Trumpet – Bob Ojeda, Derrick Gardner, Melton Mustafa; Trumpet [Lead] – Mike Williams

Live At El Morocco

June Christy - June Christy 1977

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1977
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:19
Size: 97,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:25) 1. My Shining Hour
(4:51) 2. Once Upon A Summertime
(2:28) 3. Show Me
(6:14) 4. Everything Must Change
(4:20) 5. Willow Weep For Me
(3:54) 6. I'll Remember April
(4:01) 7. The Trouble With Hello Is Goodbye
(4:06) 8. Autumn Serenade
(4:13) 9. Sometime Ago
(4:43) 10. Angel Eyes

Though she was the epitome of the vocal cool movement of the 1950s, June Christy was a warm, chipper vocalist able to stretch out her impressive voice on bouncy swing tunes and set herself apart from other vocalists with her deceptively simple enunciation. From her time in Stan Kenton's Orchestra, she inherited a focus on brassy swing from arranger friends like Pete Rugolo. Rugolo would become a consistent companion far into her solo days, too, arranging most of her LPs and balancing her gymnastic vocal abilities with a series of attentive charts.

Born Shirley Luster in Springfield, IL, she began singing early on and appeared with a local society band during high school. She moved to Chicago in the early '40s, changed her name to Sharon Leslie, and sang with a group led by Boyd Raeburn. In 1945, after hearing that Anita O'Day had just left Stan Kenton's Orchestra, she auditioned for the role and got it early that year. Despite an early resemblance (physically and vocally) to O'Day, the singer -- renamed June Christy -- soon found her own style: a warm, chipper voice that stretched out beautifully and enlivened Kenton's crossover novelties ("Shoo Fly Pie and Apple Pan Dowdy," the million-selling "Tampico") as well as the leader's intricately arranged standards ("How High the Moon"). As she became more and more popular within the Kenton band, arranger Pete Rugolo began writing charts with her style especially in mind. After the Kenton orchestra broke up in 1948, Christy worked the nightclub circuit for awhile before reuniting with Kenton for his 1950 Innovations in Modern Music Orchestra, a very modern 40-piece group that toured America. She had already debuted as a solo act the year before, recording for Capitol with a group led by her husband, Kenton tenor saxophonist Bob Cooper.

Christy's debut LP for Capitol, 1954's Something Cool, was recorded with Rugolo at the head of the orchestra. The album launched the vocal cool movement and hit the Top 20 album charts in America, as did a follow-up, The Misty Miss Christy. Her 1955 Duet LP paired her voice with Kenton's piano, while most of her Capitol LPs featured her with various Kenton personnel and Rugolo (or Bob Cooper) at the head of the orchestra. She reprised her earlier big-band days with 1959's June Christy Recalls Those Kenton Days, and recorded a raft of concept LPs before retiring in 1965. Christy returned to the studio only once, for 1977's Impromptu on Musicraft.~John Bush https://www.allmusic.com/artist/june-christy-mn0000837592/biography

Personnel: June Christy – vocals; Lou Levy – piano; Jack Sheldon – trumpet; Frank Rosolino – trombone; Bob Cooper – tenor saxophone, flute; Bob Daugherty – bass; Shelly Manne – drums

June Christy 1977

Earl Klugh - Late Night Guitar

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:45
Size: 81.8 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 1980/1999
Art: Front

[1:58] 1. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
[2:59] 2. Nice To Be Around (Nice To Have Around)
[2:44] 3. Like A Lover
[1:46] 4. Laura
[3:26] 5. Jamaica Farewell
[1:52] 6. Tenderly
[2:54] 7. Mona Lisa
[2:05] 8. Triste
[4:20] 9. Two For The Road
[2:47] 10. Mirabella
[2:06] 11. Lisbon Antigua
[2:51] 12. A Time For Love
[3:51] 13. I'll Never Say Goodbye (The Promise)

This is the perfect setting for acoustic guitarist Earl Klugh, playing strong melodies (including such standards as "Smoke Gets In Your Eyes," "Laura," "Mona Lisa" and "Two for the Road") while joined by strings and several horns in an orchestra arranged and conducted by Dave Mathews. As usual for a Klugh session, the guitarist sticks mostly to the themes and does not improvise much, as he never considered himself a jazz player; but the overall effect is quite pleasing.

Late Night Guitar

Carmen Lundy - Soul To Soul

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:33
Size: 163.8 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[5:21] 1. Kindred Spirits
[6:14] 2. Life Is A Song In Me
[6:36] 3. Soul To Soul
[7:11] 4. When Will They Learn
[5:12] 5. Daybreak
[4:08] 6. Between Darkness And Dawn
[6:34] 7. Grace
[4:36] 8. Grateful, Pt. 1
[4:43] 9. Grateful, Pt. 2
[6:31] 10. Everything I Need
[4:33] 11. Don't You Know How I Feel
[5:36] 12. Sardegna
[4:11] 13. What's Your Story, Morning Glory

Carmen Lundy – vocals, piano, Rhodes, keyboards, guitar, drums, percussion, string arrangements and programming; Patrice Rushen – piano, Rhodes, keyboards; Geri Allen – piano, Rhodes; Darryl Hall – acoustic bass, electric bass; Jamison Ross – drums, percussion; Mayra Casales – percussion, congas; Carol Robbins – harp; Warren Wolf – vibes; Randy Brecker – trumpet, ugelhornl Ada Rovatti – tenor sax; Bennie Maupin – tenor sax, soprano sax Simphiwe Dana – vocals; Background Vocals – Carmen Lundy, Patrice Rushen, Jamison Ross, Mayra Casales, Darryl Hall, Elisabeth Oei.

“Soul To Soul,” a passionate new song cycle from vocalist, songwriter, producer and musician Carmen Lundy is Lundy’s 14th album, and the next chapter in her critically-acclaimed career as both a musical artist and a visual artist; a return to her roots but also an exploration of these roots — and the journey that those roots can take you on. Featuring the stellar talents of guest artists Patrice Rushen, Geri Allen, Randy Brecker, Mayra Casales, Simphiwe Dana, Bennie Maupin, Carol Robbins, Ada Rovatti, and Warren Wolf along with Carmen’s core rhythm section members Darryl Hall and Jamison Ross , “Soul To Soul” invites the listener on an intriguing journey. The moods and moments of “Soul To Soul” are genre-bending and traverse many borders, both literally and figuratively.

Soul To Soul

Monday, December 13, 2021

Deborah Silver - Pure Silver

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:43
Size: 98,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:03) 1. At Last
(3:22) 2. Cheek to Cheek
(4:01) 3. Sunrise, Sunset
(4:05) 4. I Got the Sun in the Morning
(4:06) 5. All the Things You Are
(3:46) 6. More Today Than Yesterday
(4:40) 7. Can't Take My Eyes off of You
(2:57) 8. People Will Say We're in Love
(3:28) 9. I'll Be There
(4:35) 10. More Than You Know
(3:35) 11. I Wanna Be Around

An ebullient vocalist, Deborah Silver is known for her soulful but polished readings of classic jazz and pop melodies. She initially garnered attention with her 2014 debut, Pure Silver, before topping the Traditional Jazz Albums chart with 2016's The Gold Standards.

Born and raised in Indianola, Mississippi, Silver grew to appreciate all kinds of music in her youth, including pop, rock, jazz, standards, R&B, and country. Her mother was an opera singer who also worked as a vocal coach on the side. While Silver sang in choir when she was in high school, she struggled with shyness and tried to remain inconspicuous when she performed. After enrolling at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, she developed greater confidence and went on to appear in student theater productions, where her passion for singing took hold. She began taking voice lessons, and after graduating, relocated to Los Angeles. There, she continued her studies working with noted vocal coach Seth Riggs. In time, Silver moved to South Florida, married, and raised a family.

Silver still found time to perform as a jazz vocalist, and an effort to support a member of her family also helped her reach a new and larger audience. In 2009, Silver's sister was diagnosed with ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis), a progressive neurodegenerative condition also known as "Lou Gehrig's disease." As Silver spearheaded a number of projects to increase awareness of ALS and raise money for research, she put her own talent to good use. Silver's debut album, 2014's Pure Silver, was a collection of standards and pop favorites that showed off her refined vocal stylings, and she pledged that 100 percent of the proceeds from sales of the CD would be donated to ALS research. The album was well reviewed, and Silver developed a growing and appreciative audience on the cabaret circuit.

For her second album, 2016's The Gold Standards, Silver worked with producers Steve Tyrell and Jon Allen, and arranger Alan Broadbent. Grammy-winning singer Jack Jones and celebrated jazz chanteuse Ann Hampton Callaway also made guest appearances on the record, and Silver donated all proceeds from first-day sales to ALS charities. The Gold Standards debuted in the number one spot on the Traditional Jazz Albums and Heatseekers Albums charts, while hitting the number two spot on the overall Jazz Albums survey and 150 on the overall Top 200 listings. Two years later, she joined vocalist Freddy Cole for a duet on his legendary brother's song "Orange Colored Sky," which was released as a stand-alone tribute track. Silver then returned to her solo work with 2020's Glitter & Grits, a jazz and country-steeped collaboration with Asleep at the Wheel's Ray Benson.~Mark Deming https://music.apple.com/us/artist/deborah-silver/834189572

Pure Silver

The Monty Alexander Trio - Zing!

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1968
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:23
Size: 79,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:51) 1. Zing!
(5:51) 2. You're My Everything
(4:09) 3. Once Upon a Time
(3:54) 4. Always True to You In My Fashion
(3:21) 5. The Magnificent Seven
(4:12) 6. Bossa Nova Do Marilla
(3:40) 7. Small Fry
(3:06) 8. Girl Talk
(3:16) 9. Nocturne In E-Flat

Pianist Monty Alexander was 23 when he recorded his lone album for RCA, just his third recording of what would be a very productive career. Alexander, who at that point in time was most influenced by Oscar Peterson and Ahmad Jamal, already showed a great deal of maturity in his playing, as effective on uptempo tunes as he was on ballads. Last reissued as a French RCA, this outing matches Alexander in trios with either Victor Gaskin or Bob Cranshaw on bass and Roy McCurdy or Al Foster on drums. The repertoire ranges from the pianist's title cut and Cole Porter's "Always True to You In My Fashion" to some show tunes, Neal Hefti's "Girl Talk," and Chopin's "Nocturne In E-Flat," which is turned into jazz. A strong effort that is long overdue to be reissued on CD.~Scott Yanowhttps://www.allmusic.com/album/zing%21-mw0000870960

Personnel: Piano – Monty Alexander; Bass – Bob Cranshaw, Victor Gaskin; Drums – Al Foster, Roy McCurdy

Zing!

Carmen Lundy - Code Noir

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:22
Size: 122,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:50)  1. Another Chance
(4:41)  2. Live Out Loud
(3:51)  3. Black and Blues
(4:30)  4. Whatever It Takes
(4:53)  5. Afterglow
(3:41)  6. Second Sight
(4:38)  7. The Island, The Sea and You
(5:36)  8. I Keep Falling
(5:07)  9. I Got Your Number
(4:54) 10. You Came into My Life
(2:56) 11. Have a Little Faith
(4:40) 12. Kumbaya

Fantastic work from Carmen Lundy one of our favorite jazz singers of all time, and an artist who keeps on giving us her best as the years go on! This album's definitely some of Carmen's best as it features the singer working with a wonderful group that includes Jeff Parker on guitar, Patrice Rushen on piano, Ben Williams on bass, and Kendrick Scott on drums a tight core combo who really find a way to push Lundy's energy even more than usual while Carmen herself handles other keyboards with her vocals, and serves especially righteous material! There's a bit more politics here than on previous records perfect for the spirit of the moment but Carmen also mixes a lot of warmth and love into her music as well. Titles include "Black & Blues", "Afterglow", "Whatever It Takes", "I Keep Falling", "The Island The Sea & You", "Have A Little Faith", and "Another Chance". © 1996-2017, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/823955/Carmen-Lundy:Code-Noir

Carmen Lundy: vocals, keyboards, guitar, background vocals; Patrice Rushen: piano; Ben Williams: acoustic and electric bass; Kendrick Scott: drums, percussion; Jeff Parker: electric guitar; Elisabeth Oei: background vocals track 7.

Code Noir

Kirk Lightsey - Le Corbu

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:14
Size: 137.9 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[2:11] 1. Prelude Ravel
[9:58] 2. You And The Night And The Music
[6:42] 3. Footprints
[6:44] 4. Heaven Dance
[3:49] 5. Le Corbu
[6:19] 6. Lament
[7:11] 7. I Wanna Be Kissed
[7:59] 8. Everyone In Uniso
[9:17] 9. A Child Is Born

Double Bass – Tibor Elekes; Drums, Percussion – Famoudou Don Moye; Piano, Flute – Kirk Lightsey.

Famoudou Don Moye (b. 1946) is an American avant-jazz percussionist and drummer, best known as a member of The Art Ensemble Of Chicago since 1969, and recognized as an extraordinary master of Afro-Caribbean percussion instruments and rhythmic techniques. Don Moye developed his own original 'sun percussion' style of performing, and led Sun Percussion Summit with Enoch Williamson, which is a group dedicated to exploring the traditions of African-American percussion music.

Kirkland Lightsey is an American jazz pianist, born 15 February 1937 in Detroit, Michigan, USA.

Tibor Elekes is a Hungarian / Swiss bassist, composer and engineer, born 3 May 1960.

Le Corbu

Sunday, December 12, 2021

James Moody & Frank Foster - Sax Talk

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1951
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:52
Size: 170,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:43) 1. Bootsie
(3:08) 2. I Cover The Waterfront
(2:55) 3. Deep Purple
(4:37) 4. Lover Come Back To Me
(3:11) 5. That's My Desire
(3:12) 6. More Than You Know
(2:42) 7. Moody's Mode
(3:35) 8. This Is Always
(3:29) 9. Les Feuilles Mortes (Autumn Leaves)
(2:26) 10. Chanter Pour Toi
(2:49) 11. Bedelia
(2:41) 12. Aimer Comme Je T'aime
(2:28) 13. Si Jolie
(2:57) 14. September Serenade
(6:08) 15. My Heart Stood Still
(4:52) 16. Fat Shoes
(5:25) 17. I'll Take Romance
(4:44) 18. Escale A Victoria
(4:03) 19. The Things We Did Last Summer
(4:36) 20. Just 40 Bars

James Moody was an institution in jazz from the late '40s into the 21st century, whether on tenor, flute, occasional alto, or yodeling his way through his "Moody's Mood for Love." After serving in the Air Force (1943-1946), he joined Dizzy Gillespie's bebop orchestra and began a lifelong friendship with the trumpeter. Moody toured Europe with Gillespie and then stayed overseas for several years, working with Miles Davis, Max Roach, and top European players. His 1949 recording of "I'm in the Mood for Love" became a hit in 1952 under the title of "Moody's Mood for Love" with classic vocalese lyrics written by Eddie Jefferson and a best-selling recording by King Pleasure. After returning to the U.S., Moody formed a septet that lasted for five years, recorded extensively for Prestige and Argo, took up the flute, and then from 1963-1968, was a member of Dizzy Gillespie's quintet.

He worked in Las Vegas show bands during much of the 1970s before returning to jazz, playing occasionally with Gillespie, mostly working as a leader and recording with Lionel Hampton's Golden Men of Jazz. Moody, who alternated between tenor (which he preferred) and alto throughout his career, had an original sound on both horns. He was also one of the best flutists in jazz. Moody recorded as a leader for numerous labels, including Blue Note, Xanadu, Vogue, Prestige, EmArcy, Mercury, Argo, DJM, Milestone, Perception, MPS, Muse, Vanguard, and Novus. He died of complications from pancreatic cancer on December 9, 2010 in San Diego, CA. James Moody was 85 years old.~Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/james-moody-mn0000786080/biography

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone, Alto Saxophone – James Moody; Tenor Saxophone, Alto Saxophone – James Moody; Bass – Jean-Marie Ingrand, Pierre Michelot; Drums – Jean-Louis Viale, Pierre Lamarchand Drums, Strings, Woodwind – Pepito Riebe; Piano – Henri Renaud, Raymond Fol; Tenor Saxophone – Frank Foster; Trumpet – Roger Guérin

Sax Talk

Geoff Gascoyne - Keep It To Yourself

Styles: Contemporary Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:12
Size: 143,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:37) 1. Raggedy Ann
(4:02) 2. Love Won't Let Me Wait
(2:51) 3. God Only Knows
(4:02) 4. E Flat Triangle
(3:41) 5. Spring Is Here
(4:02) 6. Shapeshifter
(3:35) 7. Tribulation
(2:38) 8. All My Tomorrows
(6:04) 9. Lament
(4:26) 10. Keep It To Yourself
(4:31) 11. I'll Sing You
(3:10) 12. Somebody's Gotta Move
(4:41) 13. Theme From 'The Terminal
(3:29) 14. Scrapple From The Apple
(6:16) 15. Frankie & Johnny (Bonus Track)

Geoff Gascoyne is Jamie Cullum's bassist, and the leader of his regular band. Returning the favour Cullum turns up on two tracks here, and supplies the liner notes. But though the singer gives this set something of his familiar late-night soul-ballad spin (he sings Love Won't Let Me Wait and the Beach Boys' God Only Knows, the latter against a Gascoyne strings arrangement), and there are other guest vocalists in Trudy Kerr and the indestructible Georgie Fame, Keep It to Yourself feels like an open, if orthodox, exercise in instrumental jazzy swing, with some fine playing from pianist Tom Cawley, saxophonist Steve Kaldestad, trumpeter Martin Shaw and Gascoyne himself.

The sound of 1960s Blue Note soul-jazz hovers in the background, and Kaldestad suggests the smoky sound and leisurely pacing of that label's underrated sax master Hank Mobley on the train-rhythm hustle of Raggedy Ann or in Fame's Mose Allison cover Somebody's Gotta Move. Gascoyne's immaculate, full-bodied bass sound drives the music, and Cawley has rarely played better - both in his metallically Monkish solos (check out his playing on the fast, boppish E Flat Triangle) and in his creative prodding behind other improvisers. Fame achieves as much by insinuation as declaration on his two songs, and hangs so engagingly loosely around the beat that he seems about to fall asleep. Perhaps a bit too self-consciously a something-for-everyone set, but plenty of fine jazz for the cognoscenti. https://www.theguardian.com/music/2005/oct/14/jazz.shopping

Personnel: Geoff Gascoyne (acoustic bass); Gavyn Wright, Jackie Shave (violin); David Daniels (cello); Steve Kaldestad (alto saxophone, tenor saxophone); Martin Shaw (trumpet, flugelhorn); Tom Cawley (piano). Audio Mixers: Derek Nash; Geoff Gascoyne.; Liner Note Author: Jamie Cullum.

Keep It To Yourself

Barney Kessel - Some Like It Hot

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 57:26
Size: 131.5 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[4:16] 1. Some Like It Hot
[3:40] 2. I Wanna Be Loved By You
[3:19] 3. Stairway To The Stars
[4:42] 4. Sweet Sue
[3:20] 5. Runnin' Wild
[3:40] 6. Sweet Georgia Brown
[4:03] 7. Down Among The Sheltering Palms
[3:27] 8. Sugar Blues
[3:16] 9. I'm Thru With Love
[3:10] 10. By The Beautiful Sea
[4:49] 11. Sweet Sue
[6:32] 12. Runnin' Wild
[3:11] 13. Fascinating Rhythm
[1:58] 14. Laura
[3:55] 15. The Abc Blues

The release of the movie Some Like It Hot served as a good excuse for guitarist Kessel to join together with Art Pepper (switching between alto, clarinet, and tenor), trumpeter Joe Gordon, pianist Jimmy Rowles, rhythm guitarist Jack Marshall, bassist Monty Budwig, and drummer Shelly Manne to interpret a variety of vintage numbers, most of which dated from the 1920s. Such tunes as "I Wanna Be Loved by You," "Runnin' Wild," "Down Among the Sheltering Palms," and "By the Beautiful Sea" are given fairly modern arrangements but still retain the flavor of the 1920s, and it's particularly interesting to hear Gordon and Pepper soloing on these ancient songs. [Some reissues add two alternate takes. ] ~Scott Yanow

Some Like It Hot

Joe Sample - Invitation

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:57
Size: 115,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:53)  1. Black Is The Color
(4:57)  2. A House Is Not A Home
(5:07)  3. Come Rain Or Come Shine
(4:22)  4. Invitation
(6:49)  5. Summertime
(5:20)  6. Nica's Dream
(5:01)  7. Stormy Weather
(3:45)  8. Django
(6:12)  9. My One And Only Love
(4:26) 10. Mood Indigo

A luscious outing from piano great Joe Sample, this disc includes beautiful interpretations of ten standards and near standards. Featuring plush orchestral arrangements by Dale Oehler wrapped over and around Sample's piano trio, Invitation is simply one of the loveliest recordings of Sample's career. With a rhythm section made up of bassist Cecil McBee and drummer Victor Lewis, augmented by Lenny Castro on percussion, the music is of a piece from start to finish. Producer Tommy Lipuma has found a wonderful setting for Sample to show his gorgeous, acoustic piano stylings, and the orchestra feels like part of the trio instead of an add-on. When Sample uses synths, they are indistinguishable from the orchestra. Overall, a smooth, romantic, highly recommended recording. ~ Jim Newsom  http://www.allmusic.com/album/invitation-mw0000618430

Personnel: Joe Sample (piano, synthesizers); Cecil McBee (acoustic bass); Victor Lewis (drums); Lenny Castro (percussion). Additional personnel: New York Philharmonic, Metropolitan Opera Orchestra (strings); Joe Mardin, Larry Williams (synthesizer programming).

RIP 
(February 1, 1939 – September 12, 2014)

Invitation

Kirk Lightsey - Nights Of Bradley's

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:04
Size: 146.7 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2004
Art: Front

[ 7:02] 1. I Told You So
[12:01] 2. Speak No Evil
[10:38] 3. A Time For Love
[ 4:20] 4. Giant Steps
[10:51] 5. From Dream To Dream
[13:28] 6. In Your Own Sweet Way
[ 5:41] 7. Oleo

Pianist Kirk Lightsey and bassist Rufus Reid first played together on a regular basis as members of Dexter Gordon's quartet in the 1980s. Their duo session is particularly special due to the tight musical communication between the two players, and the fact that it took place at Bradley's. Open for 25 years in New York and usually featuring piano/bass duos, Bradley's was one of the Big Apple's top after-hours clubs and a place for pianists to play before their peers. Lightsey and Reid (who is showcased on Benny Golson's "From Dream to Dream") explore seven sophisticated compositions, all but Johnny Mandel's "A Time for Love" originating in the jazz world. The two musicians are heard at the top of their game (which two decades later they happily still are) and come up with an endless series of fresh variations, including on Wayne Shorter's haunting "Speak No Evil" and a cooking rendition of "Oleo." ~Scott Yanow

Nights Of Bradley's

Saturday, December 11, 2021

Frank Foster & George Wallington - Here Comes

Styles: Saxophone And Piano Jazz
Year: 1954
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:07
Size: 156,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:55) 1. Little Red
(5:01) 2. How I Spent The Night
(3:49) 3. Blues for Benny
(3:37) 4. Out Of Nowhere
(4:15) 5. Gracias
(3:48) 6. The Heat's On
(4:19) 7. How I Spent The Night (alt. take)
(4:08) 8. Frankie and Johnnie
(4:03) 9. Baby Grand
(3:39) 10. Christina
(3:55) 11. Summertime
(4:01) 12. Festival
(3:51) 13. Bumpkins
(4:06) 14. Frankie and Johnnie (alt. take)
(3:55) 15. Summertime (alt. take)
(3:53) 16. Festival
(3:43) 17. Bumpkins (alt. take)

This double reissue combines saxophonist Frank Foster's first U.S. recording and a session led by pianist George Wallington that took place one week later with Foster sitting in. Recorded for Blue Note in Hackensack, NJ, on May 5, 1954, Here Comes Frank Foster (also issued as New Faces, New Sounds) was only Foster's second album as a leader. His debut album was recorded one month earlier for the Vogue label in Paris, France. Here Comes Frank Foster fits neatly with other albums from the mid-'50s Blue Note catalog. Foster shares the spotlight with trombonist Benny Powell, and the rhythm section of Gildo Mahones, Percy Heath, and Kenny Clarke is superb. On tracks eight through 17, Foster is heard as a member of the George Wallington Showcase band, recorded for Blue Note on May 12, 1954. This solid little organization included James Moody's ace trumpeter Dave Burns, trombonist Jimmy Cleveland, baritone saxophonist Danny Bank, bassist Oscar Pettiford, and, once again, drummer Kenny "Klook" Clarke. Arrangements were scored by Quincy Jones. This straight-ahead hard bop is tasty and stimulating. Use the four alternate takes for a chaser.

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone – Frank Foster; Piano – George Wallington, Gildo Mahones; Baritone Saxophone – Danny Bank; Bass – Oscar Pettiford, Percy Heath; Drums – Kenny Clarke; Flute – Danny Bank; Trombone – Benny Powell , Jimmy Cleveland; Trumpet – Dave Burns

Here Comes

David Liebman - Miles Away

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:57
Size: 128,7 MB
Art: Front

(7:01) 1. Code M.D.
(4:48) 2. Wili (For Dave)
(2:59) 3. In a Silent Way
(5:23) 4. 81
(6:33) 5. Fall
(6:09) 6. All Blues
(6:52) 7. Pan Piper
(5:14) 8. Milestones
(4:00) 9. Smooch
(4:23) 10. Solar
(2:30) 11. Boplicity

Dave Liebman, who played with Miles Davis’ group during 1974-1975, pays tribute to the innovative trumpeter throughout this excellent Owl CD. To Liebman’s credit, he does not ignore Davis’ fusion period; in fact, he starts out with the most recent composition (Robert Irving’s “Code M.D.” from 1984) and works his way backwards chronologically. Actually, with Vic Juris often playing rockish guitar and the older tunes being reharmonized, there is a definite unity and freshness to the material. Charles Mingus’ moody ballad “Smooch” comes across as quite contemporary while “Solar” sounds like it could have been written in the 1970s. Liebman’s highly expressive soprano, Juris’ echoey guitar, and pianist Phil Markowitz are the main soloists, but everyone plays quite well; the inclusion of Caris Visentin’s English horn on “Pan Piper” (from Sketches of Spain) is a nice touch. Because this project does not merely copy the past but brings some fresh insight to the material, one suspects that even Miles Davis would have liked the results. By Scott Yanow. AMG. https://whoisthemonk.wordpress.com/2010/11/23/dave-liebman-group-miles-away-1994/

Personnel: David Liebman- (Soprano Sax); Vic Juris(Acoustic Guitar, Electric Guitar); Kent Heckman- (Electric Guitar); Caris Visentin- (English Horn); Phil Markowitz- (Piano, Keyboards); Tony Marino- (Acoustic Bass, Electric Bass); Scott Cutshall (Hand Claps); Jamey Haddad- (Drums, Percussion).

Miles Away

Barney Kessel - Modern Jazz Performances from Bizet's Carmen

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1958
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:34
Size: 100,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:51)  1. Swingin' The Toreador
(6:46)  2. Apadon The Edge Of Town
(4:03)  3. If You Dig Me
(5:00)  4. Free As A Bird
(3:15)  5. Viva El Toro!
(5:59)  6. Flowersville
(4:43)  7. Carmen's Cool
(3:58)  8. Like, There's No Place Like...
(3:56)  9. The Gypsy's Hip

This is an unusual set that has been reissued on CD. During an era when many Broadway and movie scores were recorded in jazz settings (thanks in part to the success of Shelly Manne's best-selling My Fair Lady album), guitarist Barney Kessel chose to interpret nine melodies from Bizet's opera Carmen. The guitarist is heard in three different settings: joined by five woodwinds and a rhythm section; with five jazz horns (including altoist Herb Geller and trumpeter Ray Linn) and a trio; and with vibraphonist Victor Feldman in a quintet. Kessel also wrote the arrangements, which pay tribute to the melodies while not being shy of swinging the themes. An interesting if not essential project. ~ Scott Yanow  
http://www.allmusic.com/album/modern-jazz-performances-from-bizets-carmen-mw0000207507

Personnel: Barney Kessel (guitar); Herb Geller (alto saxophone); Justin Gordon (tenor saxophone, flute, alto flute); Chuck Gentry (baritone saxophone); Ray Linn (trumpet); Harry Betts (trombone); Buddy Collette (flute, alto flute, clarinet); Bill Smith (clarinet, bass clarinet); Jules Jacob (clarinet, oboe); Pete Terry (bass clarinet, bassoon); Victor Feldman (vibraphone); Andre Previn (piano); Joe Mondragon (bass); Shelly Manne (drums).

Roger Kellaway - The Art Of Interconnectedness

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:43
Size: 171,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:55)  1. You Took Advantage Of Me
(5:02)  2. Lazy 'Sippi Steamer
(7:59)  3. Emily
(8:07)  4. Creole Love Call
(4:01)  5. Sophisticated Lady
(4:17)  6. Remembering You
(6:42)  7. New Orleans
(7:20)  8. Blackwall Tunnel Blues
(5:33)  9. Jorjana
(4:37) 10. When I Grow Too Old To Dream
(7:05) 11. I'm Still In Love With You
(8:00) 12. Un Canto Per la Pace

It took ten years for this excellent concert by pianist Roger Kellaway at New York City's Vineyard Theatre to be issued; but it was worth the wait. Starting with a striding "You Took Advantage of Me," Kellaway captivates his audience. His slow dreamy interpretation of "Emily," a sauntering rhythmic "Creole Love Call," and a melancholy "New Orleans" are among the fine examples of the standards he played for the hushed audience. 

There are also a number of less familiar works that Kellaway plays just as well. Louis Armstrong's "Lazy 'Sippi Steamer Goin' Home" is a joyful masterpiece of stride piano. "Blackwall Tunnel Blues," by trombonist Charles Sonnastine, has a bluesy flavor but isn't actually a blues number. Kellaway features several of his own works, too. The upbeat Latin-flavored "Jorjana" and equally infectious "Un Canto Per La Place" are very attractive, but "Remembering You" is one Kellaway piece that will surely catch the listener's ear; co-written with actor Carroll O'Connor, it was the closing melody heard on each episode of the TV sitcom All in the Family. Believe it or not, the audience doesn't explode with the outburst one would expect for such a recognizable work. 
Highly recommended! ~ Ken Dryden  http://www.allmusic.com/album/art-of-interconnectedness-mw0000042515

Personnel: Roger Kellaway (piano).

The Art Of Interconnectedness