Wednesday, May 25, 2022

Ben Sidran - Swing State

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:55
Size: 96,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:19) 1. Lullaby of the Leaves
(6:10) 2. Swing State
(5:35) 3. Laura
(4:53) 4. Ain't Misbehavin'
(4:49) 5. Stompin' at the Savoy
(4:00) 6. Over the Rainbow
(5:09) 7. Tuxedo Junction
(5:57) 8. Laura (Alt. Take)

Swing State is my first all instrumental record. I’ve done instrumentals before but this is my first piano trio project. My favorite records when I was a kid were the trios of Horace Silver, Bobby Timmons, Bud Powell, and later Sonny Clark. The piano trio format was what first excited me. So circling back sixty-some years later I wanted to feel like those musicians felt when they played. I know I can’t play like them, but I can feel like them. That’s what Swing State is.

When I started thinking about the repertoire I first considered doing some of my favorite bebop compositions from the 50s, and from there I started looking at older and older material until I wound up choosing mostly songs from the 1930s. I now realize that these are the first songs I played when I started learning to play piano as a boy.

I had a Fake Book an illegal book of sheet music - that was given to me by a friend of my father’s, a piano player who had worked professionally in the 1930s. So I got my start playing all these tunes from that period. Songs like “Tuxedo Junction,” “Ain’t Misbehavin,” “Lullaby Of The Leaves,” and “Over The Rainbow.” I wasn’t even aware of it when we recorded the album, but now I can see that my reasons for choosing this repertoire run very deep.

I like the title Swing State because it describes the emotional space that the music puts you into when it swings. It’s not from your brain, it’s from your body. It’s what it feels like when that pulse - that loose, loping pulse that was at the heart of what people have always tried to do in jazz (until recently when swing is just an option). Swing used to be the thing that you wanted to establish to make people feel good.

The first time I felt this I was 6 or 7 years old and I heard a record by Jimmy Forrest called “Night Train”. It flipped me out! I heard it in an art class I went to where the teachers played us the song and asked the kids to draw what it felt like. I don’t remember my drawing, but I do remember running around the room. I never felt that way before. It set something off in me that all these years later is still there.

As human beings, we have a tendency to clench. It’s our fight or flight impulse when we’re threatened. Sometimes it’s work just to relax and to let go. You can’t really feel good unless you’re relaxed and you let go. It’s been a real challenge to do that recently. I’ve used these troubled times over the last couple of years to try my best to get in touch with my best intentions from when I was young.

For example, I always told myself that when I got to a certain age I would read all of the great books that I pretended to read when I was in college. This record is kind of a piece with that: to make a trio record filled with the songs of my childhood. As the saying goes, “leave with the one that brought you”.

I couldn’t have made this record without Billy Peterson on bass and Leo Sidran on drums. The three of us have played together in so many situations over decades that we don’t have to talk about anything. The music just comes together. We walked into the studio without any arrangements and within 10 or 15 minutes we had a fully developed conception for the record. It came together naturally, authentically and quickly.
It really reflected who I am right now. It’s not an idea that got done; it’s a done deal. http://bensidran.com/album/swing-state

Personnel: Ben Sidran, Piano; Billy Peterson, Bass; Leo Sidran, Drums

Swing State

Tuesday, May 24, 2022

Claudia Acuña - Rhythm Of Life

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:11
Size: 126,6 MB
Art: Front

(6:54)  1. My Romance
(7:19)  2. Ay Mariposa
(4:57)  3. A Child Is Born
(5:56)  4. Nature Boy
(6:42)  5. I Fall In Love Too Easily
(6:09)  6. Volver A Los Diecisiete
(7:08)  7. Nowhere To Go
(3:55)  8. Maria Maria
(6:05)  9. More Than You Know

Claudia Acuña dedicates her sophomore effort to her friend and mentor Dianne Reeves, and indeed, there’s a certain Reevesian drama to Rhythm of Life. Whereas Acuña’s debut was driven mainly by pals Jason Lindner and Avishai Cohen, the new record features a broader cast of characters, including the perfect-10 rhythm team of Dave Holland and Jeff "Tain" Watts. Lindner is still quite present, however, playing piano and penning five of the nine arrangements (four of the five collaboratively with Acuña). But Acuña co-produced the disc with pianist/arranger Billy Childs, one of Reeves’s chief musical partners. It is Childs’s piano, and arrangements, that we hear on four cuts, including an ethereal 6/4 reading of "A Child Is Born" and a lush string quartet treatment of "I Fall in Love Too Easily." Avi Leibovich, a major presence on Wind From the South, is less prominent here, but his flute textures fill out "Nature Boy" beautifully. 

(The ending vamp is a tad overblown, with background vocalists repeatedly blurting out "There was a boy!"). Acuña’s voice is strong and versatile, generating excitement and bountiful passion. In addition to her inventive way with standards ("My Romance," a fast and highly irreverent "More Than You Know"), she excels again with Spanish-language material. Violeta Parra, the author of "Gracias a la Vida" from the previous record, is again represented with "Volver a los Diecisiete," which soars, as do Milton Nascimento’s "Maria Maria" and Pedro Luis Ferrer’s "Ay Mariposa." And last but not least, Acuña weighs in with an original bossa-ballad, the beautiful "Nowhere to Go." While the big production serves Acuña’s voice well, it’s always wonderful to hear her interact with a small band live. Her just-announced U.S. tour, which includes a week-long run at New York’s Iridium beginning April 16, will feature Lindner, Reid Anderson on bass, and Clarence Penn on drums. In all likelihood, the bandstand is where this material will really take flight. ~ David Adler   http://www.allaboutjazz.com/rhythm-of-life-claudia-acuna-verve-music-group-review-by-david-adler.php#.U3JSSShnAqY 

Personnel includes: Claudia Acuna (vocals); Sherman Irby (saxophone); Avi Leibovich (trombone, flute); Krista Bennion Feeney, Anca Nicolau (violin); Joanna Hood (viola); Myron Lutzke (cello); Sara Cutler (harp); Billy Childs, Jason Lindner (piano); Romero Lubambo (guitar); Dave Holland (bass); Jeff "Tain" Watts (drums); Luisito Quintero (percussion).

Rhythm Of Life

Sylvie Courvoisier, Ned Rothenberg, Julian Sartorius - Lockdown

Styles: Contemporary Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:31
Size: 113,7MB
Art: Front

( 8:45) 1. La Cigale
(12:50) 2. Outlander
( 8:44) 3. Requiem d'un Songe.mp3
( 5:33) 4. Deep Rabbit Hole
( 5:18) 5. Quarantina
( 4:53) 6. After Lunch
( 6:13) 7. Popcorn
( 5:57) 8. D'Agala

Recording in the studio in Switzerland, the trio of Sylvie Courvoisier on piano, Ned Rothenberg on alto saxophone, clarinet, bass clarinet & Shakuhachi, and Julian Sartorius on drums & percussion perform a mix of compositions, with 3 from Courvoisier and 1 by Rothenberg, and 4 collective improvisations; a unified and accomplished album of diverse approaches to free improv.

"It's not the first time we can hear Sylvie Courvoisier and Ned Rothenberg playing together. Both of them were included in a trio with Mark Feldman also released by Clean Feed (In Cahoots, 2017). That listening made us hope for more. Here it is with another trio, this time with drummer Julian Sartorius as the third contributor.

Without a leader, and enlisting compositions from all the three members, this music reflects the present pandemic context, as the title, Lockdown, clearly suggests. There's a reflexive and introspective approach all along, with exquisite writing serving the collective improvisations and enabling lots of space for each musician to develop his/her own ideas.

Sometimes it's difficult to identify when the scores give place to spontaneity and vice-versa: the boundaries are always marked where we least expect, or the lines of separation (union, maybe?) aren't clearly defined, everything coming in a very natural flux. The musical situations gain several dimensions, sometimes adopting a narrative, almost cinematographic character, and others choosing more textural, impressionistic, procedures, but mainly combining the emanations of those two polarities in different and surprising ways. Convergence (for instance, the unisons between piano and sax (or bass clarinet, or shakuhachi) and divergence (the meticulous knittings provided by Sartorius are a good exemple) are constantly in equation, opening the possibilities for this endeavour that questions our innerselves and the strangeness of these days."~Clean Feed https://www.squidco.com/miva/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Store_Code=S&Product_Code=30299

Personnel: Sylvie Courvoisier Piano; Ned Rothenberg Alto Saxophone, Clarinet, Bass Clarinet, Shakuhachi; Julian Sartorius Drums, Percussion

Lockdown

Gene Harris And The Philip Morris Superband - Live At Town Hall, N.Y.C.

Styles: Piano Jazz, Big Band
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:39
Size: 151,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:41)  1. The Surrey With The Fringe On Top
(4:42)  2. Creme De Menthe
(4:25)  3. When It's Sleepy Time Down South
(5:31)  4. Love Is Here To Stay
(6:39)  5. I'm Just A Lucky So And So
(6:41)  6. Serious Grease
(4:14)  7. Like A Lover
(5:05)  8. Old Man River
(5:57)  9. Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans
(6:26) 10. Porgy And Bess Medley: Strawberry Woman / I Loves You Porgy / It Ain't Necessarily So
(3:18) 11. You're My Everything
(3:48) 12. There Is No Greater Love
(4:06) 13. Things Ain't What They Used To Be

This CD documents one of the first concerts by Gene Harris' star-studded big band, an orchestra heard at the beginning of an 80-day world tour. Unlike his earlier big band Basie tribute album, Harris is not the only musician to get significant solo space on this set although, due to the overflowing lineup, not enough is heard from everyone. The straightforward arrangements (by John Clayton, Frank Wess, Torrie Zito, Bob Pronk and Lex Jasper) balance swingers with ballads. Among the more memorable tracks are Harry "Sweets" Edison's feature (both muted and open) on "Sleepy Time Down South," a pair of fine vocals apiece by Ernie Andrews and Ernestine Anderson, the roaring "Old Man River" and Harris' interpretation of Erroll Garner's ballad "Creme de Menthe." Toss in short solos from the likes of Ralph Moore, James Morrison (on trombone), Frank Wess, Michael Mossman and baritonist Gary Smulyan and the result is a satisfying, swinging and fairly fresh big band date.~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/live-at-town-hall-nyc-mw0000202851

Personnel:  Alto Saxophone, Flute – Frank Wess, Jerry Dodgion;  Baritone Saxophone – Gary Smulyan;  Bass – Ray Brown;  Bass Trombone – Paul Faulise;  Drums – Jeff Hamilton;  Guitar – Herb Ellis;  Piano – Gene Harris;  Tenor Saxophone – Ralph Moore ;  Tenor Saxophone, Flute, Clarinet – James Moody; Trombone – Eddie Bert, James Morrison, Urbie Green;  Trumpet – Harry "Sweets" Edison, Joe Mosello, Johnny Coles, Michael Philip Mossman;  Vocals – Ernestine Anderson, Ernie Andrews .

Live At Town Hall, N.Y.C.

Alex Sipiagin - Ascent to the Blues

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:12
Size: 156,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:53) 1. Dolphin's View
(5:25) 2. Blues for Wood
(5:27) 3. Doppio
(6:57) 4. Infant Eyes
(4:35) 5. Hindsight
(5:54) 6. No Doubts
(4:38) 7. Rush Hour
(8:39) 8. One More Shot
(9:16) 9. Novgorod Bells
(4:16) 10. Sandrigo Blues
(6:09) 11. Twelve More Bars to Go

Trumpeter Alex Sipiagin is no newcomer to jazz, but he also seems to have really grown as both a player and a leader in recent years deepening his sound sound with a sense of color and timing that we've never heard before, and really making the most of his comrades in a combo especially in a setting like this! The tunes are mostly all originals by Alex, delivered with a strong focus by the quintet a lineup that also features Diego Rivera on tenor, Art Hirihara on piano and Rhodes, Boris Kozlov on bass, and Rudy Royston on drums and percussion a group who work with an innate sort of energy throughout, really packing a heck of a lot into a small space while still allowing for plenty of individual moments of expression! Titles include "Dolphin's View", "Doppio", "Hindsight", "No Doubts", "Rush Hour", "Sandrigo Blues", and "Novorod Bells". © 1996-2022, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/112312

Ascent to the Blues

Monday, May 23, 2022

Bill Charlap Trio - Street of Dreams

Styles: Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:34
Size: 105,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:48) 1. The Duke
(6:17) 2. Day Dream
(4:49) 3. You're All the World to Me
(5:15) 4. I'll Know
(4:00) 5. Your Host
(5:27) 6. Out of Nowhere
(7:34) 7. What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?
(5:20) 8. Street of Dreams

Celebrating 24 years together, pianist Bill Charlap’s trio with the Washingtons (bassist Peter and drummer Kenny no relation) comes as close as any piano trio can to batting a thousand. Even their less inspired efforts, whether onstage or on record, still bear the marks of high-level professionalism and empathy that only a long-lived and prolific ensemble can develop.

And Street of Dreams is not one of their less inspired efforts. If anything, the degree of inspiration on opener “The Duke” alone could carry the whole album. Charlap finds new reserves of depth and nuance in the fond reverence of Dave Brubeck’s paean to Ellington, and that’s without considering the rhythmic oneupmanship of his and Kenny Washington’s interplay during the pianist’s solo.
~ Michael J.Westhttps://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/bill-charlap-street-of-dreams-blue-note/

Personnel: Bass – Peter Washington; Drums – Kenny Washington; Piano – Bill Charlap

Street of Dreams

James Morrison - Higher Than Here

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:10
Size: 104,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:17) 1. Demons
(3:39) 2. Stay Like This
(4:16) 3. Heaven To A Fool
(3:51) 4. Right Here
(3:14) 5. Reach Out
(3:43) 6. We Can
(4:16) 7. Too Late For Lullabies
(3:50) 8. Something Right
(3:36) 9. Easy Love
(5:02) 10. I Need You Tonight
(3:17) 11. Just Like A Child
(3:03) 12. Higher Than Here

The album opens with Demons. Very apt and it certainly pays for him getting his demons out of the way in the first track, the pop-auto-tune experimentation is far from the guilty pleasure crooning we are used too. Higher Than Here is Morrison’s 4th studio album, and the first in 4 years. Luckily it doesn’t Stay Like This in the next song and does highlight the fact that he has a great and enjoyable singing voice. The composition here is still quite safe, although that is forgivable after the first track.

Heaven To A Fool immediately catches your attention with a throaty opening of what sounds like a didgeridoo, closely followed by a choral backing that gives the piece a very complete and composed feel. This smooth soul track has a much more individual sound and Morrison’s voice bends itself to it very well. Channelling The Wanted or 1D, the next song takes a bit of a dive until We Can in the middle of the album reels us in again. Sounding like the interlude to Interstellar, the airy, atmospheric ballad may not be for everyone but it is ear-catching and relaxing.

Too Late For Lullabies maintains a strong soul feel, created by well-timed drums and punchy rhythmic lyrics. The verbal imagery may be cliché in places but it is tastefully included and overall creates an enjoyable atmosphere, reminiscent of his old hit Wonderful World. The following track Something Right does just that. It’s listenable, familiar but a little bit vague musically and lyrically.

Easy Love is the penultimate pleasure on the album. Jubilant, busy and raucous, the song has some real passion to it. Listened to through a good sound system, however, you may find the additional electronic fizzes and whirls a bit unnecessary to the mix. Skipping a song to Just Like a Child would have been the perfect album finisher slow, soul searching and sincere. With the acoustic backing not distracting anything from Morrison’s voice and a clear link to an actual event into his life, this song feels the most real on the entire album.

Unfortunately, the album finishes with Higher Than Here which sounds over-written, musically forced and much too obvious. There are moments when you feel like Morrison is actually fighting the supporting musicians for his space on the track, not helped by the background clapping used as an unnecessary signpost for an audience to join in. Morrison is a talented musician and you can hear that, he has a strong following amongst easy listeners and most of this album will please them. https://blog.richersounds.com/album-review-james-morrison/

Higher Than Here

Gregory Lewis - Organ Monk Blue

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:33
Size: 118,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:42) 1. Green Chimneys
(7:30) 2. Blue Sphere
(4:53) 3. Raise Four
(6:50) 4. Misterioso
(9:20) 5. Blue Hawk
(7:44) 6. Nutty
(4:26) 7. Blues Five Spot
(5:04) 8. Ba-Lue Bolivar Ba-Lues-Are

Pianist Thelonious Monk is organist Gregory Lewis' primary source of inspiration, so much so that Lewis has adopted the stage name Organ Monk. His first two releases were mostly homages to Monk and replete with the latter's originals. After forays into other material, including the poignant The Breathe Suite (Self Produced, 2017) about recent racial injustices that unnecessarily claimed young lives, Lewis returns to the "genius of modern music" with Organ Monk Blue.

On the current album Lewis is in an intimate trio setting with guitarist Marc Ribot and drummer Jeremy "Bean" Clemons. The three musicians exhibit delightful camaraderie and satisfying synergy. For example, the band intriguingly reconstructs "Blue Sphere" infusing it with hefty dose of bluesy spontaneity. Ribot and Lewis' eerie call and response exchanges over Clemons' sharp percussive bursts set an otherworldly mood. As Ribot's sharp, piercing phrases bounce off Lewis' dense and angular chords and Clemons' kit roars and rumbles in the backdrop the tune becomes simultaneously elemental and complex. Lewis has a soulful style and a blistering tone both of which are demonstrated on such gems as "Misterioso." He embellishes the main theme with passion and gusto as his gritty solo simmers and glows with indigo hues. Ribot takes his turn in the spotlight, over lush organ and drum refrains, letting loose a sinewy and captivating improvisation.

Lewis demonstrates his virtuosity on, among others, the riotous "Raise Four." His deceptively facile and fluid performance is full of breathtakingly fast and daring lines Clemons' swaggering beats and Ribot's full bodied guitar sounds bring in hints of early rock and roll to the piece. Organ Monk Blue is a high energy and utterly enjoyable recording. It is a novel albeit not necessarily innovative, reinterpretation of Monk's work. It is, nevertheless, a welcome addition to Lewis' evolving and impressive discography.~ Hrayr Attarianhttps://www.allaboutjazz.com/organ-monk-blue-gregory-lewis-self-produced-review-by-hrayr-attarian

Personnel: Gregory Lewis: organ, Hammond B3; Marc Ribot: guitar; Jeremy "Bean" Clemons: drums.

Organ Monk Blue

Melody Gardot - Entre Eux Deux

Styles: Vocal
Time: 43:30
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 104,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:32) 1. This foolish heart could love you
(4:31) 2. What of your eyes
(4:49) 3. Plus fort que nous
(3:53) 4. À la Tour Eiffel
(4:34) 5. Fleurs du dimanche
(4:35) 6. Samba em prelúdio (un jour sans toi)
(4:45) 7. Perhaps you'll wonder why
(2:10) 8. Recitativo (instrumental)
(5:52) 9. Ode to every man
(4:45) 10. Darling fare thee well

Melody Gardot’s sixth studio album is both bigger and smaller, in different ways. “Entre eux Deux” can be seen as a more minimalist collection, certainly, in that it’s the first time she’s recorded with only a piano for accompaniment instead of a full band. But the billing, at least, has expanded it’s a duo record, with that piano played not by her, accomplished as she is, but by Philippe Powell, whom she calls “the Bill Evans of Brazil.” He’s un of the titular deux in every way, having also fully collaborated on the album as her co-writer as well as pianist, with the album coming out of an intensive two-week workshop in her Paris studio apartment, writing around the clock with a view of the Eiffel Tower for inspiration.

But you may find yourself checking and re-checking the credits to make sure most of the songs on “Entre eux Deux” really were written by these two. Many of them sound like forgotten trunk songs from the Great American Songbook… or the Great French Songbook, since half of them are in the language of the city where they were conceived. In fact, unlike Gardot’s previous album, 2020’s “Sunset in the Blue” where most of the songs were original but she also threw in a few standards like “Moon River” and “I Fall in Love Too Easily” this album eschews reaching back to the classics, at least in everything but ear-deceiving spirit.

“We tested the material out, and we had some New Yorkers and some cats from San Francisco and Paris in the room, and they said it sounded like standards,” affirms Gardot. “I just went, ‘Cool.’ Because I think we need more! I think there's a kind of a chain-formed policy, whether it's in Hollywood or art or literature or music, where we redo old things and look back and go, ‘Okay, let's do that again.’ And it's nice to have people who are working forward, with the same aestheticism, creating something new. So I'm happy if people think that they feel like standards. But mostly I’m hoping that they mean something to somebody, because otherwise there's no point in doing this at all.”

Gardot’s music often gets shunted into the category of jazz, which she’s perfectly happy to be in, or not to be in that’s the listeners’ choice, not the lady’s. “I never really worried about genre; that, to me, was just consequence. They actually didn't even know where to put these records for a long time, but I just love music. That's the only thing that ever made sense to me, and coming from where I came from, I'm lucky to be able to do anything at all. If this is where the world said you ought to go, I take it as a great responsibility but also an amazing opportunity to do something beautiful and to hold myself to a standard that maybe is a little bit too high,” she laughs.

“I know for a fact it's niche,” Gardot continues, “and I know that this kind of music is definitely not going to be bopping on the radio more than Bieber at the end of the day. But it's cool to have something that's out there as art for art's sake, and hope that somebody finds it and it does them a world of good, too. But no, I don't worry about genre I worry about song. A long time ago a drummer said to me, ‘You know, if you got rid of the snare, the upright bass and the sax, your songs would be pop.’ And I went, ‘Yeah, but I like the snare and the upright bass.’”

Of course, she did ditch both those instruments this time, ironically, but not so that she could add electronic programming or samples. The idea of doing a solo-piano record that is not actually a real solo album appealed to her. “I had some friends who had encouraged me a long time ago to do one alone, because I think my first love is the piano, versus the guitar,” she says. “I’m more skilled at it, arguably. But I never really had the courage.” Bravery didn’t really figure into it, anyway, once she met Powell and was just inexorably drawn to engage him in a full-scale collaboration.

There is some musical backstory that led her to this point. In 2005, when she was living in her native Philadelphia in a freezing apartment, Gardot was, in all her poverty, being courted by a succession of jazz labels that had heard about her becoming a phenomenon on the local scene. Part of the romancing that was being done by these gentleman-caller labels involved them sending her stacks of records from their storied catalogs, and these sent her on a multi-cultural jazz journey. She loved Stan Getz’s “The Girl From Ipanema: The Bossa Nova Years,” and proceeded from there to a serious love affair with an album by Brazil’s most legendary jazz guitarist, Baden Powell the father of her future collaborator, Philippe Powell.

The senior Powell had moved from Brazil to Paris when he was about 25, and stayed for about 25 years a period that included the birth of Baden, who, though retaining Brazilian citizenship, has stuck around the city of love since. “I can’t put words on what exactly it is, but there is a love story between the Brazilian and the French,” says Philippe, who certainly counts as a spiritual love child of the two territories.

By the mid-2010s, Gardot, whom Baden says is “very famous in Paris,” was traveling in the circles where she was bound to meet the son of one of her heroes. But she’s quick to establish that he does not ride on any coattails, and it doesn’t hurt that he picked a different instrument to excel on than the one he might’ve seemed destined for. “Even though he's the son, you don't really feel his father,” says Gardot. “He's his own entity. He's unbelievable. As a piano player, it's pretty funky to have the idea to give up your instrument for somebody else. But I’ve got to say, I wouldn't have done it for anyone but him. There's a lot of great musicians, but not a lot of people who know the art of the duo.”

Speaking of duos, their collaborating really felt like kismet when they started collaborating and she urged him to think of what she calls “one of my favorite records of all time,” “Tony Bennett and Bill Evans.” It was around that point that Gardot sheepishly learned that there was more of an Evans connection than she could have guessed: Powell had studied under a teacher who was very close to that late jazz great at Paris’ Bill Evans Academy so that ticked off some unexpected bingo boxes. http://www.frontview-magazine.be/en/news/melody-gardot-philippe-powell-announce-new-album-entre-eux-deux

Entre eux deux

Sunday, May 22, 2022

Claire Martin, Barb Jungr, Mari Wilson - Girl Talk

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:25
Size: 161,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:17) 1. Girls Talk
(2:51) 2. Doctor's Orders
(2:32) 3. Walkin' Miracle
(3:56) 4. Different for Girls
(1:47) 5. Substitute
(4:04) 6. Wivers and Lovers
(2:35) 7. Keep Young and Beautiful
(3:14) 8. My Guy
(3:51) 9. Terry
(3:30) 10. You Keep Me Hangin' On
(2:39) 11. Girl Talk
(1:27) 12. Wishin' and Hopin'
(3:02) 13. Ladies Who Lunch
(2:09) 14. I Enjoy Being a Girl
(2:48) 15. A Woman's Touch
(3:47) 16. Single Girl
(4:04) 17. D.i.v.o.r.c.e.
(1:47) 18. Let's Jump the Broomstick
(3:24) 19. Chapel of Love
(4:32) 20. It Should've Been Me
(2:32) 21. When Do the Bells Ring for Me
(2:35) 22. Needle in a Haystack
(2:52) 23. I'm Gonna Make You Mine

Award winning British Jazz Singer of the Year Claire Martin, International Cabaret award winner Barb Jungr and Neasden Queen of Soul Mari Wilson, solo and in harmony, bring the songs you love to hate to life again in this glamorous celebration of all things girlie.

"Take three of the UK's finest female vocalists, add a bunch of songs at the oh-so-cheesy end of the spectrum and sprinkle liberally with postmodern irony and that, in a nutshell, is Girl Talk. As camp as Christmas and huge fun, this brassy, sassy and supremely arch review takes a deliciously tongue-in-cheek look at love, marriage and make-up in the 21st century via the hallowed classics of yesteryear. Heard solo and in glorious three-part harmony, Mari Wilson, Barb Jungr and Claire Martin are all fabulous singers in their own right, and by some strange work of alchemy their respective worlds of pop, cabaret and jazz combine seamlessly in this common cause. Of course one can't ignore the fact that some of these songs are in fact completely brilliant. It's great to hear Bacharach and David's "Wives and Lovers", Sondheim's "Ladies Who Lunch" and the evergreen Motown number "It Should've Been Me". Also included are such epics of stereotyping as "A Woman's Touch" ("A touch of paint, one magic nail, can turn a kitchen chair into a Chippendale"), complete with its comedic music hall style arrangement. In the role of MD, accompanist and producer Adrian York performs heroically." (Jazzwise, Peter Quinn, 2006)

"These three British divas have combined to deliver a series of tunes all coming from a woman's perspective. You can't deny the strong harmonies they put together and with 23 tunes in all, there is sure to be something appealing for all. It is good entertainment." (O's Place Jazz Newsletter, 2006) https://jazzsociety.se/items/girl-talk-31802

Girl Talk

Barbara Rosene & Her New Yorkers - It Was Only A Sun Shower

Size: 179,7 MB
Time: 75:35
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2007
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals, Ragtime
Art: Front

01. Oo-Oo-Ooh! Honey (What You Do To Me) - Ooh! That Kiss (2:32)
02. There Must Be Somebody Else (2:50)
03. My Baby Knows How (2:35)
04. Close Your Eyes (3:17)
05. Tip Toe Through The Tulips (4:01)
06. Love Me Tonight (3:29)
07. Mine All Mine (3:10)
08. Song Of The Wanderer (Where Shall I Go ) (3:18)
09. Just Like A Melody Out Of The Sky (3:18)
10. It Was Only A Sun Shower (3:17)
11. Jeannine, I Dream Of Lilac Time (3:28)
12. Love Me Or Leave Me (2:13)
13. Red Lips, Kiss My Blues Away (2:32)
14. Say It Isn't So (3:29)
15. Nobody's Using It Now (3:27)
16. We're Back Together Again (3:03)
17. He's My Secret Passion (4:50)
18. I Think You'll Like It (4:20)
19. Was It A Dream (2:46)
20. The Right Key But The Wrong Key Hole (3:58)
21. I Don't Mind Walking In The Rain (2:50)
22. Funny, Dear, What Love Can Do (3:26)
23. Got No Time (3:16)

Barbara Rosene has built an unequalled reputation for interpreting the great music of the 1920s and 30s and 40s. She is a passionate vocalist whose interpretations uncover the richness of jazz classics through the subtle, skilled delivery of one truly in love with the genre she sings.

Rosene gives voice to songs in ways that are both gracefully provocative and warmly welcoming. Few singers have her feel for classic material, from all eras of Jazz, interpreting the music with not only a full understanding and love of the original time period but with the rare ability to make the material sound fresh and emotionally relevant today.

In her established career she has shared stages with jazz icons, performing internationally with The Harry James Orchestra, Vince Giordano and The Nighthawks, the late Les Paul at New York’s Iridium Jazz Club, The Woody Allen Band, at The Carlyle Hotel, as well as directing her own New Yorkers, and as guest artist with orchestras and in festivals across the world. She has played such venues as The Iridium, Lincoln Center’s Rose Hall, The Montreal Jazz Festival, Night Town (Cleveland), Blues Alley (DC), The Arizona Music Festival, Jazz Amarinois, and The Hotel Villa Flori, Lake Como.

Barbara has been featured on Judy Carmichael’s NPR program ”Jazz Inspired”, and recently on NPR’s “Hot Jazz Saturday Night.” She has been recognized by Backstage Magazine (Bistro Award, 2006), “Jazz Improv Magazine”, and is featured in Scott Yanow’s “Great Jazz Singers.”

Rosene is personally committed to the significance of jazz music in American Popular Song and in America’s roots and spirit. Finding the soul of a song and linking its heart and expression with her own story brings this seductive blonde singer the satisfaction of a career well-spent. Recently she has begun lecturing on The Tin Pan Alley composers and early women jazz singers.

“Do what thrills you. Do what has meaning,” says Rosene, genuinely. “One thing I know is that it really is a privilege to perform. When someone is touched or broadened by something you have given them it is a gift to be able to give back to the world in that way.”

Barbara’s CDs include several on the Stomp Off label, all of which pay homage to the great composers and vocalists of the 1920s and 30s. Including “Nice and Naughty”, a collection of double entendre tunes, which features Conal Fowkes who’s voice and piano stylings as Cole Porter, were featured in “Midnight In Paris”. Vince Giordano and The Nighthawks ( Boardwalk Empire) collaborated on Barbara’s first CD entitled “Deep Night”.

Will Friedwald, author of Jazz Singing and Sinatra! has written: “No one evokes more vividly the music of the great singers of the 1920s than Barbara Rosene.”

It Was Only A Sun Shower

Ian Matthews - If You Saw Thro' My Eyes

Styles: Vocal And Guitar Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:36
Size: 89,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:27) 1. Desert Inn
(3:01) 2. Hearts
(2:52) 3. Never Ending
(4:42) 4. Reno Nevada
(2:51) 5. Little Known
(1:25) 6. Hinge
(0:27) 7. Hinge

(3:09) 8. Southern Wind
(3:44) 9. It Came Without Warning
(3:35) 10. You Couldn't Lose
(6:42) 11. Morgan the Pirate
(2:34) 12. If You Saw Thro' My Eyes

In late 1970, shortly after his band Matthews Southern Comfort hit number one in Great Britain with its version of Joni Mitchell's "Woodstock," Ian Matthews decided that he needed more creative freedom and left for a solo career. The subsequent album, If You Saw Thro' My Eyes, his fourth and best release since leaving Fairport Convention in 1969, was recorded and released within the next few months. It also reunited him with former Fairport bandmates Sandy Denny, who had left the band in late 1969, and Richard Thompson, who would depart by the time of this album's release. Both would bring their distinctive personalities to the proceedings without ever overwhelming Matthews' own vision. As a bandleader and songwriter, Matthews' growth is quite evident here, guiding a stellar cast through seven excellent new originals and three well-chosen covers (also included is the a cappella "Hinge" and its instrumental reprise).

Throughout, Matthews' sweet yet evocative tenor is perfect for the material, which succeeds in its blend of British and American folk, rock, and pop. Furthermore, he once again shows a keen eye for the work of others, while also proving his prowess as a first-rate interpretive singer. A pair of songs written by the late folksinger Richard Farina "Reno, Nevada" (resurrected from Ian's days with Fairport) and "Morgan the Pirate" are given fresh, inspired readings, highlighted by Thompson, Tim Renwick, and Andy Roberts' superb guitar interplay, providing a real folk-rock edge. But it's the beautiful, prayerlike title track that is the record's crowning moment. Joined simply by Denny's piano and breathtaking second vocal, along with a tasteful backwards guitar interlude by Renwick, Matthews' quiet plea for guidance is as moving and personal a song as he's ever recorded. A number of other highlights, such as "Hearts," "Southern Wind," "It Came Without Warning," and "You Couldn't Lose," make If You Saw Thro' My Eyes one of the best efforts by a Fairport alumnus. https://www.allmusic.com/album/if-you-saw-thro-my-eyes-mw0000532470

Personnel: Ian Matthews - guitar, vocals; Sandy Denny - piano, harmonium, vocals; Richard Thompson - electric and acoustic guitar, accordion; Pat Donaldson - bass; Andy Roberts - acoustic guitar; Tim Renwick - electric and acoustic guitar; Gerry Conway - drums; Keith Tippett - piano on "Never Ending" and "Southern Wind"; Doris Troy, Liza Strike and Nanette Workman - backing vocals on "Southern Wind"

If You Saw Thro' My Eyes

Scott Hamilton - Classics

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:04
Size: 137,9 MB
Art: Front

(7:03) 1. I Think of You
(6:37) 2. The Lamp is Low
(4:43) 3. If You are but a Dream
(6:47) 4. Theme from Swan Lake
(6:12) 5. My Reverie
(8:53) 6. Yours is my Heart Alone
(7:30) 7. Moon Love
(7:10) 8. Humoresque
(5:07) 9. Skymning

Scott Hamilton and a swinging rhythm section deliver a delightful and creative program of well-known themes from the classical repertoire - reimagined and repurposed for jazz quartet.

Scott Hamilton (born September 12th, 1954) needs no introduction. The celebrated American tenor icon is instantly recognizable with his timeless sound, impeccable taste, and flawless decision-making. That perfect storm of ingredients is no happy accident it’s all been honed and refined over decades of bringing joy to the musicians he plays with, and the audiences he plays for.https://www.jazzmessengers.com/en/91404/scott-hamilton/classics

Personnel: Scott Hamilton (tenor sax); Jan Lundgren (piano); Hans Backenroth (bass); Kristian Leth (drums)

Classics

Saturday, May 21, 2022

Jo Stafford - Once Over Lightly

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:46
Size: 82,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:50)  1. Almost Like Being in Love
(3:06)  2. A Foggy Day
(2:49)  3. The Lady Is a Tramp
(3:25)  4. These Foolish Things
(2:30)  5. Mine
(3:27)  6. The Gypsy in My Soul
(3:03)  7. Autumn Leaves
(2:18)  8. You're Mine, You
(1:52)  9. Nice Work If You Can Get It
(3:19) 10. My Old Flame
(3:14) 11. But Not for Me
(3:49) 12. One for My Baby

During the immediate postwar years, singer Jo Stafford rose to fame as both a member of Tommy Dorsey's band and as a solo act. Part of a loose sorority of pop-jazz vocalists that also included Kay Starr, June Christy, and Julie London, Stafford excelled at both swingers and ballads using her patented smooth pipes. On this mid-'50s outing, she's joined by accordionist Art Van Damme and His Quintet. Covering a ballad and mid-tempo mix of standards, Stafford especially excels on "Almost Like Being in Love," "One for My Baby," and "But Not for Me." While not in the same league of contemporary work by Christy and London, Once Over Lightly still fits in well with the many cocktail vocal offerings from the '50s. ~ Stephen Cook http://www.allmusic.com/album/once-over-lightly-mw0000849362

Once Over Lightly

Mike Vax - On A Jazz Mission

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:37
Size: 104.4 MB
Styles: Trumpet jazz
Year: 2001
Art: Front

[3:30] 1. Louis Meets The Bird (Back Home In Indiana Donna Lee)
[4:00] 2. Freddie Freeloader
[2:35] 3. Day By Day
[4:21] 4. A Night In Tunisia
[4:56] 5. Night Of The Capricorn Moon
[2:30] 6. Trumpet Blues And Cantabile
[3:42] 7. Wild Man Blues
[5:17] 8. Kiss And Run
[1:50] 9. Lickety Split
[5:34] 10. I Can't Get Started
[4:38] 11. Short Stop
[2:37] 12. Heckler's Hop

Acoustic Bass – Bill Langlois; Cornet – Mike Vax; Drums – Eric Thompson; Flugelhorn – Bob Doll, Mike Vax, Steve Campos, Warren Gale; Guitar – Steve Draper; Keyboards – Larry Dunlap; Piano – Larry Dunlap; Trumpet – Bob Doll, Mike Vax, Steve Campos, Warren Gale; Trumpet [Piccolo] – Mike Vax; Wind Chimes – Larry Dunlap.

As a recording musician, Mike has performed on more than 75 albums, including 20 under his own name. Mike has done workshops and concerts in over 2500 middle schools, high schools, colleges and universities all around the world over the past 40 years. He is very active as a clinician and soloist in both the classical and jazz idioms.

TRPTS (Trumpets) was formed in 1985 as an experimental group to bring the history of jazz trumpet to audiences through performing voiced out solos from famous jazz trumpet players, playing music associated with trumpet jazz over the years, and also presenting new music written for especially for us. The CD “Transforming Traditons” (Later re-issued as “On a Jazz Mission” on Summit Records) has sold over 25,000 copies. The group has performed all over the United States. Our roster has included at different times: Mike Vax, Wayne Bergeron, Carl Saunders, Clay Jenkins, Claudio Roditi, Jeff Jarvis, Andrea Toffanelli, Steve Campos, Bob Doll, Warren Gale, and John Capobianco.

On A Jazz Mission

Eric Reed - Something Beautiful

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:46
Size: 123,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:00)  1. Sun Out
(5:07)  2. In Your Own Sweet Way
(5:16)  3. Black Tables
(7:19)  4. How Deep Is the Ocean
(4:41)  5. I Still Believe in You
(3:52)  6. Lift Up Your Hands to the Lord
(4:03)  7. Mad About the Boy
(5:19)  8. Citadel
(4:19)  9. Honesty
(3:28) 10. Something Beautiful
(5:15) 11. If I Knew You

Eric Reed's Something Beautiful is well-named: a collection of mostly standards, delivered with sensitive hands and unerring taste. The pianist shows a knack for choosing great material, mostly staying away from jazz's grossly overplayed warhorses in favor of lesser-known material that is, nonetheless, classic and elegant. The album offers a unified atmosphere of down- and mid-tempo melodies sometimes melancholy, sometimes bouncy, and occasionally even uplifting. Jesse Tabish's "Black Tables" is almost hymn-like, with deep left-handed chords creating gravity under the melody, as drummer Rodney Green conveys the rhythm on the low toms. As he works out, Reed makes sure to allow a pause almost breathing room between ideas, preventing his improvisations from overwhelming the soft forward urge of the song. It takes a moment to grasp the melody of Billy Joel's "Honesty," with the almost pace diminished to a dirge. But it's there, and it turns out to be one of the best interpretations on the album. 

With only bassist Reuben Rogers accompanying, Reed draws this familiar pop song into exceptional new territory, with a deep connection to the music, and a delivery that places its emphasis on poignancy rather than pyrotechnics. It's a masterful performance. Reed's own compositions are equal to his interpretations and fit quite naturally with the rest of the album. The title track bounces a little more, with a prominent bass line, an accessible melody, and some really tight syncopation. Again, Reed employs those subtle pauses in the rhythm and in his improvisational delivery, adding an ingenious effect to an already well-crafted tune. The closing "If I Knew You," performed solo, returns to the larghissimo pace employed in "Honesty," with largely the same effect. Reed has a true feel for these ballads, playing with enough self-restraint to allow the melodies to shine through employing his considerable technique in the service of the piece, but never the other way around. 

That's a difficult balancing act, and one he manages with aplomb. If there's any criticism of his original compositions it's that there aren't more of them.  Reed's last effort, The Dancing Monk (Savant, 2011), was also an excellent effort, but Something Beautiful is better. Constrained by a single composer, Reed was forced to concede some of his own stylistic ground to compositions that that could never be mistaken for anyone other than Thelonious Monk. Here, he's free to interpret the material in his own style, and as a result he delivers a much more passionate performance. It has been noted that ballads can be the most difficult songs to master because of the subtlety involved. If that is the case then Something Beautiful represents the performance of a truly gifted and sensitive balladeer. ~ Greg Simmons  
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=41153#.Usm2urRc_vs
 
Personnel: Eric Reed: piano; Reuben Rogers: bass; Rodney Green: drums.

James & Bobby Purify - Shake A Tail Feather: The Best Of James & Bobby Purify

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:43
Size: 159.6 MB
Styles: Pop/Soul/R&B
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[2:58] 1. I'm Your Puppet
[2:48] 2. You Left The Water Running
[2:06] 3. Shake A Tail Feather
[2:31] 4. I Was Born To Lose Out
[2:37] 5. So Many Reasons
[2:15] 6. Wish You Don't Have To Go
[2:33] 7. You Can't Keep A Good Man Down
[2:12] 8. I Take What I Want
[2:25] 9. Let Love Come Between Us
[3:13] 10. I Don't Want To Have To Wait
[2:04] 11. You Don't Love Me
[1:43] 12. Goodness Gracious
[2:16] 13. Hello There
[2:12] 14. Keep Pushing Me
[2:59] 15. Just Like Old Times
[2:35] 16. I Can Remember
[2:33] 17. We're Finally Gonna Make It
[2:30] 18. Untie Me
[2:15] 19. Everybody Needs Somebody
[2:20] 20. Last Piece Of Love
[2:16] 21. Help Yourself (To All My Lovin')
[2:28] 22. I Don't Know What It Is You Got
[2:35] 23. Section C
[2:42] 24. My Adorable One
[2:28] 25. Do Unto Me
[2:51] 26. The Weeper
[2:45] 27. She Ain't Gonna Do Right
[2:19] 28. Somebody Cares

You couldn't ask for a better compilation of James & Bobby Purify than this one, which fits no less than 28 songs onto a single disc, all from their prime 1966-1969 Bell era. In addition to a wealth of singles, B-sides, and LP tracks, there are five previously unissued cuts, the whole deal expertly annotated. The duo was harder to fit into a niche than many soul acts of the era; although there have been some comparisons to Sam & Dave, at times their sides were more pop-oriented than what Sam & Dave cut at Memphis, particularly on songs with sophisticated production touches like vibes. At other times, though, they were indeed in the late-'60s Southern deep soul bag; sometimes some doo wop and older R&B influences surfaced; and there's even a reading of the blues classic "You Don't Love Me." It makes for a varied and nice set, though there really isn't anything as instantly memorable as the song that will be always be their calling card, "I'm Your Puppet." If you do like "I'm Your Puppet" in particular, you'll probably go for the half a dozen or so other tracks in which Dan Penn and Spooner Oldham were also involved in the songwriting, like "So Many Reasons" and a version of "You Left the Water Running" that stands up to the better-known one by Otis Redding. For more up-tempo numbers, their interpretation of "I Take What I Want," with fuzzy guitar to the forefront, is at least as good as the more famed
version by Sam & Dave. ~Richie Unterberger

Shake A Tail Feather: The Best Of James & Bobby Purify

Wednesday, May 18, 2022

Tal Farlow - The More I See You (Remastered)

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:11
Size: 142,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:46)  1. The More I See You 
(3:35)  2. Topsy 
(5:07)  3. Tal's Blues 
(3:20)  4. Little Girl Blue 
(4:40)  5. Taking a Chance on Love 
(5:13)  6. Yardbird Suite 
(6:45)  7. Gone with the Wind 
(3:07)  8. I Like to Recognize the Tune
(4:59)  9. Autumn in New York
(4:54) 10. Have You Met Miss Jones 
(4:18) 11. Night and Day 
(4:20) 12. And She Remembers Me
(6:00) 13. How About You

Tal Farlow was born in Greensboro, North Carolina, and was brought up in a musical atmosphere. His father played several musical instruments, including some of the fretted ones, while the piano in the house was played by his mother and his sister, who became a fine classical pianist. Tal trained as a signwriter and continued with this work throughout his life in parallel with his music. He listened to the radio and heard outside broadcasts of the big bands of the day, bands like Artie Shaw, Jimmy and Tommy Dorsey, and Benny Goodman. It was then that he first heard Charlie Christian playing and started to copy the solos. During the war, he was stationed in Greensboro. He worked there with a lot of musicians who had come from up north.It was sometime after this, while Tal was working for the vibraphonist Dardanelle, that he worked the Copacabana Lounge in New York. While he was there he regularly visited 52nd Street to soak up the sounds of some more of his favourite musicians, namely Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Bud Powell and some of the other members of the bop era. When Jimmy (Lyons) returned, Tal and bassist Lennie de Franco (Buddy's brother) all set off to New York to get their local 802 union cards. Shortly afterwards Tal worked with the Marjorie Hyams trio. Again it was with vibes. For a while they worked at the Three Deuces opposite Charlie Parker's group, which featured Miles Davis and Al Haig. Tal seemed to have an affinity with vibraphone players - he worked with Milt Jackson when he joined Buddy de Franco's group and then, at the end of 1949, he finally joined Red Norvo's trio when he took Mundell Lowe's place. While in New York, Tal lived in an apartment house on West 93rd Street. It seems to have acted like a honey-pot on the jazz musicians in town. Guitarists Jimmy Raney and Sal Salvador lived there and others like Johnny Smith and John Collins would call by to join the frequent jam sessions held there. Various other musicians lived there from time to time, including Phil Woods, Joe Morello and Chuck Andrews. Tal probably never envisaged the success he was about to have, when he joined Red Norvo's trio. At first Tal struggled to keep up with Norvo's very fast tempos but soon improved his technique so much that he became one of the fastest guitarists in the world at that time. Within a year they were recording and soon became one of the most popular groups of the fifties, and the ideas Tal used brought him to the forefront among jazz musicians. He won the Down Beat New Star Award in 1954 and the Critics Poll in 1956.

Tal left Red in 1953, to join Artie Shaw's Gramercy Five for six months, but returned to work with him for a further year straight afterwards. When Tal left Red for the second time, he formed his own group with Eddie Costa on vibes and the bassist Vinnie Burke. Over the next three years this trio made a number of very successful records and Tal won several awards. Apart from his tremendous speed of execution he had developed a very rich sense of harmony for which his very large hands were a tremendous asset being able to stretch to play chords which most players could not reach. He also developed great facility in playing artificial harmonics and a number of other devices such as tapping the strings to give a very realistic imitation of bongo drums. The trio played regularly at the Composers Club in Manhattan until Tal married in 1958, and moved out to Seabright, New Jersey. Apart from going back to sign painting, he carried on playing with various musicians. During the 1970' Tal has been in and out of things. He participated in several albums produced by Schlitten, including the late Sonny Criss' 'Up, Up And Away' for Prestige and Sam Most's 'Mostly Flute' for Xanadu. There were two Farlow albums on Concord, and Tal did play the Newport and Concord festivals, touring a bit with a Newport group. In the 1980s Tal became much more visible. He made half a dozen recordings for the Concord label and began playing much further afield again including Europe and even Japan. His playing had developed and was now more lyrical with richer harmony than ever before although perhaps with a little trade off against outright speed. He would often deputise for one of Barney Kessel, Herb Ellis, or Charlie Byrd in the “Great Guitars” band when needed. Tal continued to play concerts world wide until the mid 1990s when he slowed down a little although he still remained very busy in his native country with concerts and workshops. In 1997 he was diagnosed with oesophageal cancer. He continued to teach but sadly was unable to play in public any more and he passed away in 1998. https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/talfarlow

The More I See You

Tony Bennett - I Wanna Be Around

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:32
Size: 102.0 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 1963
Art: Front

[2:14] 1. The Good Life
[3:18] 2. If I Love Again
[2:10] 3. I Wanna Be Around..
[1:44] 4. I've Got Your Number
[2:51] 5. Until I Met You
[1:59] 6. Once Upon A Summertime
[2:14] 7. If You Were Mine
[2:26] 8. I Will Live My Life For You
[1:57] 9. Someone To Love
[3:04] 10. It Was Me
[3:15] 11. Quiet Nights Of Quiet Stars (Corcovado)
[2:14] 12. Autumn In Rome
[2:55] 13. The Way That I Feel
[2:13] 14. The Moment Of Truth
[1:59] 15. Got Her Off My Hands (But Can't Get Her Off My Mind)
[2:41] 16. 'long About Now
[3:21] 17. Young And Foolish (From 'Plain And Fancy')
[1:47] 18. Tricks

While there is no shortage of masterful Tony Bennett albums, the Bennett of the 1960s is one of the most finely honed voices of popular music. 'I Wanna Be Around' shades more toward the 'popular' (soft swing) style than jazz, but delivers two of the singer's signature numbers and much more. 'The Good Life' and the title track are inextricably part of the Bennett story - combining a bit of the soaring, almost operatic passages with the almost conversational. Throughout, you can sense these songs fit the singer like a custom tailored suit. I agree with one of the other reviewers -- if 'I Wanna Be Around' doesn't have you reaching for the 'repeat' button, you're really missing something special.

The songs are fully up to the performance, plenty of Johnny Mercer numbers, plus Coleman and Leigh's pleasing 'I've Got Your Number' which finds singer phrasing some clever lyrics in tempo with the arrangement that neither buries the singer nor buries him in excess accompaniment. Not as jazz-touched as 'I Wanna Be Around', but another example of a singer at his peak. The original album seems to have the better music, but the performances on the additional tracks from the 'This is All I Ask' album are a satisfying way to round out the otherwise short featured collection.
Antonio Carlos Jobim's 'Corcovado' -- a huge hit for Stan Getz and later interpreted by Sinatra on his album with Jobim -- seems less perfect. Beautiful song, sensational voice, but Bennett seems to grope his way through a few of the English lyrics. Fault the lyrics, translated from Portuguese -- they're not up to the music. Sinatra performs it wonderfully on his 1967 album, maybe because he was nearly 30 years into his career and Bennett was young on this 1962 version.

This may be too much detail for most people. The bottom line is that even Sinatra considered Tony Bennett the best popular singer of the century, and it is difficult NOT to reach that conclusion. All of his albums from this era -- including the concert at Carnegie Hall -- are a real treat. Highly recommended. ~Jon Warshawsky/Amazon

I Wanna Be Around

Barbara Rosene - Nice And Naughty

Size: 183,6 MB
Time: 78:28
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Jazz Vocals, Ragtime
Art: Front

01. There Ain't Much Good In The Best Of Men Now Days (4:43)
02. Kiss Your Pretty Baby Nice (3:17)
03. Easy Come, Easy Go (4:39)
04. My Man O' War (4:07)
05. I've Got Somebody Now (4:04)
06. Nuthin' (3:15)
07. Don't Take That Black Bottom Away (2:59)
08. Do What You Did Last Night (2:33)
09. Go Home And Tell Your Mother (2:50)
10. Don't Tell Him What Happened To Me (3:55)
11. Get Up Off Your Knees, Papa (3:48)
12. If You Want The Rainbow (You Must Have The Rain) (3:15)
13. What Do I Care What Somebody Said (2:51)
14. Don't Leave Me, Daddy (2:44)
15. Don't You Leave Me Here (I'm Alabama Bound) (3:24)
16. My Handy Man Medley (3:57)
17. You're The Cream In My Coffee (3:36)
18. Glad Rag Doll (4:38)
19. You're My Everything (4:15)
20. I'm Wild About That Thing (5:05)
21. We Just Couldn't Say Goodbye (4:24)

Barbara Rosene has built an unequalled reputation for interpreting the great music of the 1920s and 30s. She is a passionate vocalist whose interpretations uncover the richness of jazz classics through the subtle, skilled delivery of one truly in love with the genre she sings.

Rosene gives voice to songs in ways that are both gracefully provocative and warmly welcoming. Few singers have her feel for classic material, from all eras of Jazz, interpreting the music with not only a full understanding and love of the original time period but with the rare ability to make the material sound fresh and emotionally relevant today.

In her established career she has shared stages with jazz icons, performing internationally with The Harry James Orchestra, Vince Giordano and The Nighthawks, the late Les Paul at New York’s Iridium Jazz Club, The Woody Allen Band, at The Carlyle Hotel, as well as directing her own New Yorkers, and as guest artist with orchestras and in festivals across the world. She has played such venues as The Iridium, Lincoln Center’s Rose Hall, The Montreal Jazz Festival, Night Town (Cleveland), and The Arizona Music Festival.

Barbara has been featured on Judy Carmichael’s NPR program ”Jazz Inspired”, and recently on NPR’s “Hot Jazz Saturday Night.” She has been recognized by Backstage Magazine (Bistro Award, 2006), “Jazz Improv Magazine”, and is featured in Scott Yanow’s “Great Jazz Singers

Nice And Naughty