Monday, January 9, 2023

Howard Mcghee - Introducing The Kenny Drew Trio

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:38
Size: 129,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:36) 1. Meciendo
(2:50) 2. Lo-flame
(2:52) 3. Fluid Drive
(2:53) 4. I'll Remember April
(3:10) 5. Fuguetta
(2:51) 6. Donnellon
(2:54) 7. Lo-flame (Alt. Take)
(5:21) 8. Yesterdays
(2:29) 9. Stella By Starlight
(3:24) 10. Gloria
(2:45) 11. Be My Love
(3:33) 12. Lover Come Back To Me
(4:43) 13. Everything Happens To Me
(2:50) 14. It Might As Well Be Spring
(2:27) 15. Drew's Blues
(4:23) 16. Yesterdays (Alt. Take)
(3:29) 17. Everything Happens To Me (Alt. Take)

This 1998 CD has all of the music from two formerly scarce 10" LPs. Trumpeter Howard McGhee heads an all-star group that includes trombonist J.J. Johnson, tenor saxophonist Brew Moore, pianist Kenny Drew, bassist Curly Russell, and drummer Max Roach on "I'll Remember April," an original by the leader and four songs (plus an alternate take) by Drew, who was making his recording debut.

Because it was the tail-end of the 78 era, all of the performances are between 2:34 and 3:07 in length but the concise solos are generally quite strong. Although McGhee gets the top billing on this CD, the second half of this disc is actually by the Kenny Drew Trio (with Russell and drummer Art Blakey) from three years later, Drew's debut as a leader. Other than his "Gloria" and the basic "Drew's Blues," all of the music (which is augmented by two alternate takes) is standards including "Be My Love," "Yesterdays," and a surprisingly heated rendition of "It Might As Well Be Spring." Easily recommended to bebop collectors. By Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/introducing-the-kenny-drew-trio-mw0000601264

Personnel: Howard McGhee - Trumpet; J.J. Johnson - Trombone; Brew Moore - Saxophone; Kenny Drew - Piano; Curly Russell - Bass; Max Roach - Drums

Howard Mcghee Introducing The Kenny Drew Trio

Ben Wolfe Quintet - Live At Smalls

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:12
Size: 140,1 MB
Art: Front

( 7:26)  1. Block 11
( 7:36)  2. For The Great Sonny Clark
( 8:57)  3. Telescope
(11:12)  4. Contraption
( 8:41)  5. Unjust
( 3:12)  6. I'll Know You More
( 5:06)  7. Double Czech
( 7:57)  8. Coleman's Cab
( 1:01)  9. The Trade

In New York City, there's a popular venue known as Smalls Jazz Club. The Ben Wolfe Quintet introduces a series of performance recordings, simply titled Smalls Live. A Baltimore native, Wolfe's professional associations include Wynton Marsalis, Harry Connick, Jr. and Diana Krall. He is currently a faculty member at Julliard School of Music, Jazz Division. 

The high-energy, attention-grabbing "Block 11"one of nine songs, all composed and arranged by Wolfe begins the set, with Ryan Kisor's blistering trumpet inspiring thoughts of the late Freddie Hubbard. Pianist Luis Perdomo delivers a solo, accompanied only by Wolfe and drummer Gregory Hutchinson. The band slows to a near stop before shifting back into gear as tenor saxophonist Marcus Strickland follows with a passionate solo, supported by Hutchinson, as the song downshifts again for its conclusion. The band swings on the easygoing "Telescope," with trumpet and sax blending for the melody before splitting into layered leads. Strickland takes point for a pleasure jaunt while, after Perdomo's solo, Hutchinson shows his skills in a call-and-response with the rest of the group. Te closing "The Trade" is a brief duet for Wolfe and Hutchinson.

Musically, there's nothing to complain about here, with Wolfe and his sidemen tight throughout the disc. The only negative is the packaging. Dark purple print over a solid black background makes it difficult to read song titles, players' instruments and other notes. Despite that, Live at Smalls scores big. ~ Woodrow Wilkins  
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=38413#.Uoz4KeJc_vs

Personnel: Ben Wolfe: acoustic bass; Marcus Strickland: tenor saxophone; Ryan Kisor: trumpet; Luis Perdomo: piano; Gregory Hutchinson: drums.

Benny Golson - Gettin' With It

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:20
Size: 86,1 MB
Art: Front

( 6:15)  1. Baubles, Bangles And Beads
( 5:11)  2. April In Paris
( 6:55)  3. Blue Streak
( 6:40)  4. Tippin' On Thru
(12:16)  5. Bob Hurd's Blues

Benny Golson leads a potent quintet in this 1959 studio date; the tenor saxophonist is joined by pianist Tommy Flanagan, trombonist Curtis Fuller, bassist Doug Watkins, and drummer Art Taylor. Golson's snappy arrangement of "Baubles, Bangle and Beads" features Fuller's fine mute work and Flanagan's upbeat inventive solo before he introduces his big-toned tenor into the mix. Golson's slight vibrato and Taylor's swirling brushwork are highlights of his interpretation of "April in Paris." The remaining three tracks are all originals by the leader: the up-tempo hard bop cooker "Blue Streak," the jaunty strut "Tippin' on Thru," and the extended blues "Bob Hurd's Blues," which will get anyone's feet tapping. This is one of Benny Golson's best dates as a leader because one not only gets to enjoy his always strong arrangements, but his consistently first-rate tenor sax solos. Highly recommended. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/gettin-with-it-mw0000180765

Personnel: Benny Golson - tenor saxophone; Curtis Fuller - trombone; Tommy Flanagan - piano; Doug Watkins - bass; Art Taylor - drums

Gettin' With It

Helen Merrill - Any Time

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:32
Size: 160,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:38) 1. I See Your Face Before Me
(2:27) 2. My Heart Would Know
(2:37) 3. Maybe Tomorrow
(4:46) 4. When The Sun Comes Out
(3:20) 5. Just Imagine
(2:29) 6. Condemned Without Trail
(2:39) 7. Cold, Cold Heart
(2:28) 8. Half As Much
(2:14) 9. I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry
(2:04) 10. Dearly Beloved
(3:04) 11. A Heart Full Of Love
(2:18) 12. This Time The Dream's On Me
(2:20) 13. You Don't Know Me
(2:55) 14. Bye Bye Blackbird
(4:02) 15. The Nearness Of You
(3:31) 16. All Of You
(2:21) 17. Devoted To You
(2:39) 18. Any Time
(4:19) 19. I'm Here To Get My Baby Out Of Jail
(2:08) 20. I Remember You
(2:28) 21. You Win Again
(3:17) 22. Softly As A Morning Sunrise
(3:26) 23. Summertime
(2:47) 24. Let Me Love You

Helen Merrill was born on July 21, 1929, in New York City. She is a first generation American, her parents immigrated from what is now known as Croatia. She began singing as a teenager in the late 1940s. In 1951, she was a vocalist with the Earl Hines band. She recorded two songs on the Roost label in 1953, ‘My Funny Valentine’ and ‘The More I See You’, which mark the beginning of her long recording career. These recordings led to her being signed to a contract on the newly launched EmArcy label of Mercury Records. The first single released by EmArcy Records (EmArcy 16000) was by Helen Merrill. She recorded five albums for EmArcy from 1954-1958. Her debut album, “Helen Merrill” has never been out of print. Her recordings of this period were with highly regarded and talented musicians including Clifford Brown, Barry Galbriath, Frank Wess, Marian McPartland, Bill Evans, Quincy Jones, Hal Mooney, Gil Evans, Milt Hinton, and Osie Johnson.

In 1959, she moved to Europe where she continued to record and perform. The move exposed her to a greater world-view and her music began to reveal this, recording several folk songs on the 1964 album “The Artisrtry of Helen Merrill”. In the early 1960s she made her first tour of Japan as a musician. This would have a major influence on her career later. In the mid-1960s she collaborated with Dick Katz on two memorable albums “The Feeling Is Mutual “and “A Shade of Difference.”

Both of these albums are striking in the creativity of all the musicians involved. Besides Mr. Katz these included Thad Jones, Jim Hall, Ron Carter, Arnie Wise, Hubert Laws, Gary Bartz, Richard Davis, Elvin Jones, and Pete LaRoca. Moving to Japan in the late 1960s, due to her husband’s career, she recorded several albums for the Japanese Victor label working with Japanese musicians including Sadao Wantanabe, Norio Maeda, Masahiko Satoh, Takeshi Inomata, and Hozan Yamamoto. Two of these albums included collaborations with American musicians Teddy Wilson and Gary Peacock. While residing in Japan she also hosted a program for a Tokyo radio station.

Miss Merrill returned to live in the United States in the mid-1970s. Her first recording upon her return was the 1976 album, “Helen Merrill/John Lewis”. It was nominated for a Grammy award as was her 1980 album “Chasin’ The Bird’. In the late 1970s she took on a new role as the producer for albums by pianists Tommy Flannagan, Roland Hanna, Al Haig, and Dutch vocalist Ann Burton.

Her career continued in full swing during the 1980s. Early in the decade she recorded albums once again in Japan. Other recording sessions during this time include a composer series, albums of the music of Irving Berlin, Jerome Kern, Cole Porter, and Richard Rodgers & Oscar Hammerstein. Her wonderfu 1980 album, “Casa Forte”, was produced and arranged by Torrie Zito, who she had a long marriage to until his death in 2009. Mid-decade she recorded two notable albums for the Owl label in France with pianist Gordon Beck and others.

From 1987 to the present, she has recorded a number of albums of high merit, both musically and artistically. These include a collaboration with Gil Evans as they revisited their 1956 recording “Dream of You.” The new album entitled “Collaboration.” She recorded “Brownie,” a tribute to Clifford Brown. With Ron Carter she recorded “Duets,” an album with only bass and vocal. Other albums of this period, “Clear Out of this World” and “You and the Night and the Music”, reveal her maturity and what it brought to her music and interpretations, strengthening her legacy as a jazz original.

In the late 1990s recordings continue. In 1998, she recorded “Carrousel” with Finnish composer Heikki Sarmanto, he specifically desiring to work with her. In 1999, she released “Jelena Ana Milcetic aka…Helen Merrill.” This album is an intertwining of her Croatian heritage with her musical history. It is a marriage of music and art of the highest degree.

Her last album to date, “Lilac Wine,” is of songs that she had never recorded with the exception of ‘Lilac Wine.” On this album she continues to push to the future as she took the composition, ‘You,’ from the English rock band Radiohead, and gave it her own interpretation, accompanied by her son, rock singer and composer, Alan Merrill.

It should be noted that during this long career, 60 years plus, Helen Merrill has and continues to perform live at various venues throughout the world, as well as participating on panels and discussion groups with respect to music and her experiences as a jazz musician. In 2014 was was inducted into ASCAP’s Jazz Hall of Fame as a Living Legend. Her three nights of ‘Sayonara’ performances in Tokyo, Japan at the Blue Note Club in April, 2017, were standing room only. https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/helen-merrill

Any Time

Sunday, January 8, 2023

Aga Zaryan - A Book Of Luminous Things

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:49
Size: 116,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:10) 1. Music Like Water
(4:39) 2. Like A He-bear And A She-bear
(3:43) 3. This Only
(2:33) 4. Eye Mask
(5:48) 5. Autumn Quince
(3:16) 6. Meaning
(3:42) 7. A Gift
(4:19) 8. A Parable Of The Poppy
(4:05) 9. I Talk To My Body
(4:53) 10. A Song On The End Of World
(4:30) 11. On Prayer
(4:05) 12. This World

Aga Zaryan (born Agnieszka Skrzypek January 17, 1976) is an internationally recognized Polish jazz vocalist of the new generatio.She was named Jazz Vocalist of The Year in the European Jazz Forum Magazine's yearly Jazz Top readers' poll in 2007, 2008 and 2009.She is also the first Polish artist ever to release an album on Blue Note.

'A Book Of Luminous Things' is an ambitious project focused around texts by Polish Nobel Prize winner poet Czeslaw Milosz and some of his favourite poetess(Jane Hierschfield, Anna Swirszczynska, Denise Levertov). All tracks are composed by Michal Tokaj, and they are melodious , pensive and relaxed and are sung in English. What the album lacks in diversity, it gains in unity but it's main problem is the lack of real hits.

Aga Zaryan's new project features a strong cast: Michal Tokaj on piano and Munyungo Jackson on percusion who remain from her previous project are joined by bassist Darek Oleszkiewicz ("Penumbra") and guitarist Larry Koonse who together with the Polish Radio String Orchestra manage to create a good album. Aga Zaryan is a promising young artist , I'm waiting with interest her future releases.
https://www.jazzmusicarchives.com/review/a-book-of-luminous-things/233734

A Book Of Luminous Things

Dave McKenna & Buddy DeFranco - You Must Believe In Swing

Styles: Clarinet And Piano Jazz
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:15
Size: 131,5 MB
Art: Front

(6:08)  1. You Must Believe In Swing
(8:24)  2. Invitation
(6:31)  3. The Song Is You
(5:41)  4. If You Could See Me Now
(5:26)  5. Darn That Dream
(5:30)  6. Autumn Nocturne
(5:55)  7. Poor Butterfly
(5:01)  8. You Must Believe In Spring
(4:24)  9. Anthropolgy
(4:12) 10. Detour Ahead

Sing, Sing, Sing. Dave McKenna and Buddy DeFranco have been active musicians over approximately that same period. Both are recognized as expert in their respective musical areas. Dave McKenna is an acknowledged master of the swing piano school, specializing in songs of the 1930s. Buddy DeFranco is reputed to be the evolutionary link between Benny Goodman and Eddie Daniels. These two performers make for a splendid and interesting duo. The clarinet, because of Benny Goodman, will forever be heard in terms of the swing era. Buddy DeFranco, however, cultivated it for Be-bop. Both the splendid and interesting elements in this duo are manifest in the combination of a swing instrument (clarinet) played by a Be-bopper and a Be-bop instrument (piano) played by a swing specialist. A Fine Sauce of Flatted Fifths. 

The synergistic performances on this record are of a very high order. It is fun to listen to McKenna?s full-chorded, two-handed swing approach sliding beneath the slippery, boppish DeFranco, and make no mistake about it, DeFranco is 100% Be-bop. It is not unlike a fine sauce. A sauce is actually nothing more than a well-blended emulsion, a mixture of oil and water. Well-blended, because McKenna and DeFranco respond well to one another, but still oil and water. Still different. And the listener never loses sight of that difference. Swing, Swing, Swing. The disc opens with a DeFranco original, "You Must Believe in Swing", a take off on the Bergman-Legrand composition, "You Must Believe in Spring", performed later on the disc. It is a medium tempo blues that is all Be-bop. The duo competently navigates through the ballads "Invitation" and "The Song is You" to arrive at the next Be-bop cornerstones, Tadd Dameron?s "If You Could See Me Now" and "Darn That Dream". Both are fun romps in the repertoire, but the real fun is in the Bop anthem "Anthropology". 

DeFranco begins the head straight, but soon careens off in the same way Charlie Parker did on his famous and unrecognizable recording of "Embraceable You". I cannot help but compare this clarinet version of "Anthropology" with another, Art Pepper?s performance on The Complete Village Vanguard Sessions (Contemporary 9CCD-4417-2, 1995). The first portion of this performance is also a tight and exciting duet (with bassist George Mraz). Pepper?s version possesses a greater discipline and sheer musical tension than DeFranco, but DeFranco has merit in his risk-taking abandon. Where Pepper?s performance is dead serious, DeFranco?s is playful and has fun. Having Fun. That pretty well sums up this record. Both performers sound comfortable and friendly. It is hard to believe that anyone would not like the sound of a clarinet in a piano duet. Played happy or sad, they always have a sound of hope and good will. Kind of like what these two Jazz giants have. ~ C.Michael Bailey  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/dave-mckenna-and-buddy-defranco-you-must-believe-in-swing-dave-mckenna-concord-music-group-review-by-c-michael-bailey.php#.VCy_1RawTP8
 
Personnel: Dave McKenna: piano; Buddy DeFranco: clarinet.

Ed Polcer & His Swingtet - Lionel, Red & Bunny

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:08
Size: 140.0 MB
Styles: Big band, Swing
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[3:02] 1. King Porter Stomp
[3:45] 2. Stompin' At The Savoy
[3:20] 3. Darn That Dream
[3:45] 4. Softly, As In A Morning Sunrise
[2:27] 5. It Might As Well Be Spring
[5:57] 6. Bernies Tune
[3:28] 7. I See Your Face Before Me
[4:23] 8. Down By The Old Mill Stream
[4:22] 9. Don't Take Your Love Away From Me
[2:49] 10. Just One Of Those Things
[4:01] 11. I Can't Get Started With You
[2:49] 12. Blue Skies
[4:17] 13. I'm Old Fashioned
[3:34] 14. I May Be Wrong
[4:12] 15. I Hadn't Anyone Til You
[4:50] 16. Almost Like Being In Love

In addition to Ed Polcer, this swinging CD features (among others) vibraphonist John Cocuzzi as well as Vince Giordano, John Allred, Ken Peplowski, Ken Ascher, Joe Ascione, Norman Simmons, Frank Tate, and Judy Kurtz on vocals.

Ed Polcer has become one of the most sought after performers on the jazz festival circuit. He has appeared in hundreds of concerts, festivals and jazz parties throughout the United States, Canada and Europe. Ed joined Benny Goodman's Sextet for an American tour in 1973. An expert showman, Ed has led numerous concerts with varied themes, including his extensive U.S. tours for Columbia Artists. In 1992, '93 and '94, "A Night At Eddie Condon's", transported the audience back to the famous nightclub and gave a musical retrospective of American jazz over the last 100 years. Since 1996, Ed's "Magic of Swing Street" has offered classic jazz in its many forms as it was played on New York's fabled W. 52nd Street, including four appearances at New York's Lincoln Center. Ed's recent presentation, "When Broadway Meets Swing Street", merges show tunes with the world of swing. "Lionel, Red & Bunny" is a centennial celebration of legendary jazz musicians Lionel Hampton, Red Norvo and Bunny Berigan.

In 2004, he was honored to play for the official opening of the Louis Armstrong House museum, and became a member of the Statesmen of Jazz. President Clinton invited Ed to play for the 1994 Congressional Ball in the White House, and in 2001, Ed appeared in a command performance in Bangkok for the King of Thailand. If you dropped in at Eddie Condon's club in New York City between 1975 and 1985, chances are good you ran across Ed. Besides being the resident cornetist and bandleader at that historic jazz spot, he was also the manager and co-owner. At Princeton University, he joined Stan Rubin's Tigertown Five, perhaps the best-known collegiate Dixieland group of the day. With that band he made several Carnegie Hall appearances and performed at the wedding of Prince Rainier and Grace Kelly in Monaco.

In the 1980's, Ed was honored to serve as President of the International Art of Jazz, as well as a member of the Advisory Panel of the Jazz Musicians Foundation of New York. Ed's biography has been included in the New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, the Encyclopedia of Jazz in the '70s and the Biographical Encyclopedia of Jazz, both compiled by Leonard Feather and Ira Gitler, and Trumpet Kings by Scott Yanow. In Great Britain, Ed is listed in The Guinness Who's Who of Jazz, as well as Jazz, the Essential Companion and Jazz, the Rough Guide. Chip Deffaaa devoted a full chapter to Ed in Traditionalists and Revivalists in Jazz.

Lionel, Red & Bunny

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messenger - In Concert

Styles: Jazz, Hard Bop
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:38
Size: 176,0 MB
Art: Front

( 9:05) 1. Moon River
( 6:23) 2. Contemplation
(13:08) 3. Lester Left Town
( 8:30) 4. Round Midnight
(15:06) 5. It's Only A Papermoon
(16:21) 6. Arabia
( 8:03) 7. Blues March

Recorded in Copenhagen, this set captures one of the most fabled editions of the Messengers trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, saxophonist Wayne Shorter, trombonist Curtis Fuller, pianist Cedar Walton, and the now-too-often-forgotten bassist Jymie Merritt, along with their indefatigable leader in full flight. It’s the usual mix of standards and originals, this time contributed by Shorter (“Contemplation,” “Lester Left Town”) and Fuller (“Arabia”), in the classic hard-swinging Messengers style.

Shorter’s solo on “Moon River” sets the pace: This “river” is closer to a tsunami than the gently rippling dreamscape of Mercer and Arlen’s original vision. Throughout, Hubbard summons both the technical brio of old-school bebop and the gospel fervor of the burgeoning hard-bop style. Fuller likewise melds acuity, imagination, and a timbral sureness that rivals such bop-era progenitors as J.J. Johnson. Walton exploits the percussive, as well as melodic and harmonic, capacities of his instrument, creating shifting textural landscapes that he then negotiates effortlessly. And Blakey, of course, is an unstoppable force of nature.

Hubbard’s muted tenderness as he caresses Monk’s “’Round Midnight” is toughened by his wry humor and the unwavering focus of his extended lines; Shorter’s “Contemplation” lives up to its title, albeit infused with forward-driving impetus devoid of bathos; “It’s Only a Paper Moon” is a flat-out romp, spiced by Walton’s sly insertion of a quote from Monk’s “Rhythm-a-Ning”; Shorter’s solo on Fuller’s “Arabia” is a six-minute-plus marathon that explodes into uncharted realms of power and imaginative intensity.

Such is the heat and virtuosity these artists summon that it can be almost exhausting listening to take them on their own terms and rise to meet the bar they set, but it’s well worth the effort: a bracing flight of inspiration, challenges, and, most importantly (as William Blake would remind us), “wing’d exulting swift delight.”
https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/art-blakey-the-jazz-messengers-in-concert-1962-steeplechase/

In Concert

Saturday, January 7, 2023

Dave McKenna - Solo Piano

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1973
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:00
Size: 171,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:42)  1. C Jam Blues
(4:06)  2. I Wonder Why
(3:44)  3. Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)
(4:19)  4. There Will Never Be Another You
(2:16)  5. You're Lucky To Me
(3:52)  6. Sweet Georgia Brown
(3:40)  7. Scrapple From the Apple
(3:50)  8. Lucky To Be Me
(3:53)  9. Emaline
(4:13) 10. My Cherie Amour
(5:26) 11. Yesterday-Yesterdays
(3:00) 12. Blues Chiaroscuro
(4:13) 13. Scrapple from the Apple, Pt. 2
(2:54) 14. Have You Met Miss Jones Sequence, Pt. 1
(2:49) 15. Have You Met Miss Jones Sequence, Pt. 2
(2:43) 16. Have You Met Miss Jones Sequence, Pt. 3
(3:23) 17. Chiaroscuro Blues
(4:38) 18. Sweet And Lovely
(3:35) 19. You're Lucky to Me, No. 2
(3:34) 20. C Jam Blues, No. 2

Prior to 1973, pianist Dave McKenna had not recorded as a leader in a decade and it was this particular album (now available on CD with two additional songs and a few alternate takes) that helped him gain recognition for his brilliant playing; it would be followed by three other Chiaroscuro dates and a countless number of sets for Concord. A couple of attempts at uplifting current material aside ("Norwegian Wood" and "My Cherie Amour" do not fit McKenna's sound), this solo performance finds the pianist displaying his fully formed swing style on a variety of superior tunes, including a three-part "Have You Met Miss Jones Sequence.")
By Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/solo-piano-mw0000122101

Personnel: Dave McKenna (piano).

Pamela Hines - Moon Germs

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:30
Size: 146,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:10) 1. Let's Fall In Love
(6:47) 2. Itchy
(6:17) 3. Fools Rush In
(5:03) 4. Moon Germs
(7:45) 5. Lavender
(4:40) 6. Complications
(5:16) 7. Variations on Invitation
(6:08) 8. Show Type Tune
(2:59) 9. Zonegar
(5:55) 10. Christopher Street
(6:24) 11. Variations on Invitations (Alternate Version)

Recording the real first varied-style, high energy album of her career, pianist Pamela Hines unveils Moon Germs, titled after the Joe Farrell composition, with longtime band mates, bassist John Lockwood and drummer Bob Gullotti, on an eclectic blend of driving rhythms and freer interpretations of modern jazz. With this album, Hines attempts a different approach and a new twist to some familiar music. She wastes no time accepting the challenge, proceeding to play the opening "Let's Fall In Love" as an up-tempo piece in 5/4 time.

"Itchy" is the first of two pieces featuring trumpeter Darren Barrett and tenor saxophonist Greg Dudziensky as special guests, with an intricate melody that weaves between modern and a New Orleans groove. Hines' ballad "Lavender," is the only other quintet number, offering a warm melody and structure. Johnny Mercer's classic, "Fools Rush In," is the first tune taking the trio into cushy ballad territory, incorporating a series of sensitive piano lines behind Gullotti's delicate brush work.

Originally a funk-oriented blues, the title track is revamped and rearranged, leaving no trace of its funk origin and developing a more modern jazz texture, showcasing Gullotti 's rumbling drum solo. Speaking of revamping original compositions, the 1944 Bronislau Kaper jazz standard, "Invitation," is hardly recognizable in two versions called "Variations On Invitation," as Hines and crew recast the piece as a free jazz number, the album closer providing an alternate take.

Referred to as a trio in the Bill Evans tradition, Hines' group grinds out the piano legend's original, "Show Type Tune," in spectacularly high energy, bop-ish fashion, worthy of comparison. The brief "Zonegar" pays tribute to master saxophonist George Garzone, a founding member of the 1972 The Fringe trio, which also included Hines' band mates Lockwood and Gullotti.

An unconventional reading of modern jazz, Hines ventures into new and exciting territory, presenting a unique approach to a select number of jazz standards to accompany the vibrant originals included on Moon Germs a truly entertaining, accessible and challenging piece of work. By Edward Blanco
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/moon-germs-pamela-hines-self-produced-review-by-edward-blanco

Personnel: Pamela Hines: piano; John Lockwood: bass, Bob Gullotti: drums; Greg Dudziensky: tenor saxophone ( 2, 5 ); Darren Barrett: trumpet ( 2, 5 ).

Moon Germs

Hal Galper Feat John Scofield - Ivory Forest Redux

Styles: Piano And Guitar Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:16
Size: 92,8 MB
Art: Front

(7:36) 1. Ivory Forest
(6:39) 2. Continuity
(6:34) 3. My Dog Spot
(6:02) 4. Monk's Mood
(3:47) 5. Yellow Days
(9:34) 6. Rapunzel's Luncheonette

Around the early 90’s when my John Scofield fascination led me back to his catalog prior to his Miles Davis association, I picked up his 1978 Rough House CD. While the guitarist’s advanced bop vocabulary was already fully developed by this time and he also demonstrated emerging composing chops this early on, this was a very different record than the ones he has made from, say, Still Warm onward. His signature tone wasn’t fully in place yet and he was a more balls-to-the-wall player back then. This is also one of the fairly infrequent times Sco is leading a band that included an acoustic pianist. These recordings don’t present the John Scofield that put him in the elite status he enjoys today but taken on its own merits, Rough House remains a solid jazz record today.

However, this article isn’t about Scofield specifically, it’s about the guy who played piano on that old record, Hal Galper. Less than a year after the two recorded Rough House with Adam Nussbaum on drums and Stafford Jones on bass, Scofield, Galper and Nussbaum with bassist Wayne Dockery made a similar record Ivory Forest, this time under Galper’s leadership.

While not quite a household name, Hal Galper has led a jazz career that can only be deemed a success. He’s worked with luminaries such as Chet Baker, Stan Getz, Joe Williams and Anita O’Day. He had stints in the bands of Cannonball Adderley and Phil Woods. At this writing, he’s on the faculty of both the New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music and William Paterson College. But my introduction to Galper came from his late 70’s association with Scofield.

They gigged together, primarily in NYC and Europe, and both made records for the West German Enja label. Ivory Forest, in fact, was originally issued co-headlined by Galper and Scofield, which made sense because this was ostensibly supposed to be a Scofield record but he was unable to officially lead the date due to just signing with another record company.

Scofield even has a track all to himself: an unaccompanied interpretation of “Monk’s Mood” that solves the riddle of Thelonious’ gorgeously elusive melody as he directs his big time chops toward making the song even more beautiful.

But all the originals here are Galper’s, and beginning with the title track, Galper reveals himself to be tradition-anchored but forward-looking. He throws gauntlets at Nussbaum that pushes the ever-shifting rhythm in and out of the jazz idiom, and Nussbaum handles it with equanimity. Meanwhile, Galper’s soloing (and comping) is fresh and contemporary.

While that song is groove-based, “Continuity” is introspective, made even more so by the intimacy of this being a Galper/Scofield duet. Galper uses single-line notes with discretion, showing a bias for the orchestral possibilities afforded by the full chordal capabilities of the piano. For his part, Scofield had noticeably widened his range from the prior year’s recordings.

“My Dog Spot” is a spritely change of pace, a Brazilian samba involving the whole quartet but Galper’s chord changes contain vague echoes of “Giant Steps” and Scofield seems to be mining this festive melodic progression for all it’s worth. “Rapunzel’s Luncheonette,” with its quicksilver and knotty post-bop lines, is the closest this album comes to Rough House but instead of Scofield doing a scorching five-minute run, it’s Galper. Behind his and Sco’s clinics, Nussbaum is putting one on of his own.

Galper takes on Álvaro Carrillo’s standard “Yellow Days” with only Dockery in tow, sticking to a presentation that brings out the pleasing melody that found its way into the repertoire of Frank Sinatra, Johnny Mathis and Count Basie, among others.

Sadly, Ivory Forest had been out of print stateside for a long time, perhaps twenty years or so. Origin Records had apparently licensed the rights to the masters from Enja and under Galper’s supervision, the tapes were remastered for release in late 2022 as Ivory Forest Redux. Thumbs up on the remaster job, too, as it’s easy to hear the separation between the players and gain a good appreciation of how well they were attuned to one another.

Hal Galper’s Ivory Forest Redux easily justifies the decision to polish up these recordings and take them back out of obscurity. Artists well-known and should be better-known all shine on it. By S. Victor Aaron https://somethingelsereviews.com/2023/01/01/hal-galper-feat-john-scofield-ivory-forest-redux-1979-2022-reissue/

Personnel: Piano – Hal Galper (tracks: 1 to 3, 5, 6); Bass – Wayne Dockery (tracks: 1, 3, 5, 6); Drums – Adam Nussbaum (tracks: 1, 3, 6); Guitar – John Scofield (tracks: 1 to 4, 6).

Ivory Forest Redux

Fred Hersch & Esperanza Spalding - Alive at The Village Vanguard

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Time: 67:32
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 155,0 MB
Art: Front

( 9:32) 1. But Not For Me
( 7:36) 2. Dream Of Monk
( 9:03) 3. Little Suede Shoes
(12:03) 4. Girl Talk
( 6:35) 5. Evidence
( 8:29) 6. Some Other Time
( 9:37) 7. Loro
( 4:34) 8. A Wish

Alive at the Village Vanguard captures pianist Fred Hersch and vocalist Esperanza Spalding in an intimate yet inventively expressive duo performance. On first glance, the combination of Hersch (a veteran performer known for his lyrical standards work) and Spalding (a virtuoso bassist and singer known for her highly conceptual, genre-bending albums) may seem like an odd pairing.

Yet there's an unconventional, somewhat maverick, streak running through both artists, one that balances a core respect for the jazz tradition with a desire to draw inspiration from other mediums like art, poetry, and literature. It's that vibrant combination that Hersch explored on his Walt Whitman-inspired Leaves of Grass album and one which Spalding brought to her own poetry-driven concept albums like Emily's D+Evolution. That adventurous, poetic spirit also drives Alive at the Village Vanguard. Recorded in 2018 at the storied Greenwich Village club, the album finds the duo communing over a well-curated set of standards that they bend to their boldly expressive improvisational will.

While her early work touched upon standards and bossa nova favorites, Spalding's most recent albums (Twelve Little Spells and Songwrights Apothecary Lab) were more experimental in tone, stylistically closer to prog rock and avant-garde singer/songwriter pop. She doesn't play the bass here, choosing instead to dig deep into her vocals and use each song as a springboard to spin out wholly new lyrics and melodies that make each track her own. Similarly, Hersch is unfettered throughout, offering extended intros and instrumental passages that spiral outward and back again with freewheeling bliss. Together, they seem to magically stumble into unexpected flights of fancy, as when Spalding expounds upon the lyrics to "But Not for Me," analyzing and reframing lyricist Ira Gershwin's Shakespearean word choice with a gleeful sense of irony, singing "'Oh, 'Alas,' I get that one, 'hi-ho,' not so much."

Or how she expounds on Neil Hefti and Bobby Troupe's "Girl Talk," reframing the meaning of the song on the fly with a humorous, slyly feminist point of view and bold harmonic asides that Hersch never fails to underscore with his own colorfully wry chords. Elsewhere, Spalding displays her lithe vocal skills, singing Thelonious Monk's "Evidence" in wordless vocalese, punctuating her lines with a modern tap dancer's guttural swagger as Hersch twirls around her. Much more than simply a lively jazz standards album, Alive at the Village Vanguard captures these two jazz kindred spirits in joyous, creative play. By Matt Collar
https://www.allmusic.com/album/release/alive-at-the-village-vanguard-mr0005869165

Personnel: Piano, Producer – Fred Hersc; Vocals, Producer – Esperanza Spalding

Alive at the Village Vanguard

Friday, January 6, 2023

Terrell Stafford - This Side Of Strayhorn

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 69:13
Size: 158.5 MB
Styles: Trumpet jazz
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[7:53] 1. Raincheck
[8:54] 2. Smada
[7:17] 3. My Little Brown Book
[7:39] 4. Lush Life
[8:38] 5. Multicolored Blue
[7:07] 6. U.M.M.G. (Upper Manhattan Medical Group)
[8:14] 7. Lana Turner
[7:03] 8. Day Dream
[6:25] 9. Johnny Come Lately

Trumpeter Terell Stafford's 2011 effort This Side of Strayhorn features the hornman performing a series of classic and lesser-known compositions from Duke Ellington's longtime collaborator Billy Strayhorn. Born out of his week-long participation the "Celebrating Billy Strayhorn" fest in Dayton, OH, the album is an urbane and well-crafted affair that finds Stafford wringing much joy improvisationally and otherwise out of these superb compositions. Joining Stafford here are such similarly adept players as saxophonist Tim Warfield, pianist Bruce Barth, bassist Peter Washington, and drummer Dana Hall. To these ends, tracks like "Smada" showcase Stafford's longstanding love of trumpeter Lee Morgan's bluesy and propulsive style, while "Little Brown Book" is a warm, cup-muted number. Elsewhere, the burnished slow-burn blues "Multicolored Blue" and the laid-back and sultry midtempo ballad "Lana Turner" are easily some of the best small group interpretations of Strayhorn you could ever find. ~ Matt Collar

Recording information: Systems Two Recording Studio, Brooklyn, NY (05/17/2010-05/18/2010).

Terell Stafford (trumpet, flugelhorn); Tim Warfield (soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Bruce Barth (piano); Dana Hall (drums).

This Side Of Strayhorn

Mulgrew Miller - Wingspan

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1987
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:18
Size: 124,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:38)  1. Wingspan
(6:48)  2. One's Own Room
(6:08)  3. The Eleventh Hour - Early Take
(5:25)  4. I Remember You
(7:55)  5. Soul-Leo
(7:32)  6. You're That Dream
(7:15)  7. Sonhos Do Brasil (Dreams Of Brazil)
(7:33)  8. The Eleventh Hour - Later Take

A beautiful set from Mulgrew Miller one of his greatest albums as a leader, and exemplary of the kind of underground jazz that was still bubbling strong in the 80s! The set features Miller's quintet with Kenny Garrett on alto and flute, Steve Nelson on vibes, Charnett Moffett on bass, and Tony Reedus on drums led by Miller in a range of expressive styles carried off with effortless ease. There's some really nice numbers on here with a gentle and soulful groove mixing vibes, piano, and alto in wonderful shades of colors and tone. Titles include "Sonhos Do Brasil", "Wingspan", "One's Own Room", "The Eleventh Hour", and "Soul Leo".  © 1996-2019, Dusty Groove Inc.https://www.dustygroove.com/item/476436/Mulgrew-Miller:Wingspan

Personnel:  Mulgrew Miller – piano; Charnett Moffett – bass; Tony Reedus – drums; Rudy Bird – percussion (tracks: 2 5 7); Kenny Garrett – saxophone, flute; Steve Nelson – vibraphone

Wingspan

Anders Mogensen - Brazilian Moods

Styles: Latin Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:23
Size: 88,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:13) 1. That's The Way It Is
(6:32) 2. Pele
(5:15) 3. Estate
(4:46) 4. Pulpo
(5:18) 5. Pacific
(6:45) 6. You And Me
(5:31) 7. Winther

For more than two decades, drummer Anders Mogensen has been one of the most sought after musicians on the Danish as well as the International Jazz scene. He has been a member of ground-breaking bands such as When Granny Sleeps, Jakob Anderskov Trio, Doky Brothers, Kasper Tranberg Yakuza Zhuffle, Lovedale and Copenhagen Art Ensemble. He has toured and recorded with Jazz Greats such as: Bob Berg, David Liebman, Steve Swallow, Marc Johnson, Brecker Brothers, Gary Thomas, Django Bates, Tim Hagans, Cuong Vu, Lew Soloff and Ray Anderson.

Anders holds a position as Associated Professor and head of the Jazzdepartment at Carl Nielsen Academy of Music, Odense. And he has done clinics and workshops throughout Europe, USA, Japan and Brazil.https://www.andersmogensen.dk/

Brazilian Moods

Dave Liebman - Trust and Honesty

Styles: Saxophone and Flute Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:10
Size: 106,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:38) 1. Designs
(5:08) 2. Lover Man
(4:24) 3. Time Remembered (Bonus Track)
(5:32) 4. Come Rain Or Come Shine
(4:43) 5. Stella By Starlight
(1:07) 6. Blind Pig (Bonus Track)
(6:04) 7. Moon And Sand
(2:32) 8. Blue In Green
(5:16) 9. Bye Bye Blackbird
(6:40) 10. Zingaro

Dave Liebman's Trust And Honesty is the third release in Newvelle Records' limited edition audiophile-vinyl autumn 2022 Renewal Collection. It follows Elan Mehler's There Is A Dance and Michael Blake's Combobulate, both previously reviewed on these pages.

Liebman's album is an unassuming little gem. It takes a master musician to take a selection of familiar ballads, give them simple, straightforward readings with an average duration of around four minutes, and come up with something so lovely and compelling. Liebman, more than ably assisted by Ben Monder on guitar and John Hébert on bass, does all of that.

Liebman has essayed a similar venture before, on Classic Ballads (Candid, 1991), in a trio completed by guitarist Vic Juris and bassist Steve Gilmore. On that album, he played soprano saxophone throughout. On Trust And Honesty, he plays soprano on the first seven tracks and flute on the eighth, the closer, Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Zingaro." Monder, heard on electric guitar on the earlier tracks, also switches instruments here, to 12-string acoustic, bringing an understated bossa nova-ish vibe.

Some of the material inevitably brings to mind Liebman's early and mid 1970s employer Miles Davis: Davis and Bill Evans' "Blue In Green," Victor Young's "Stella By Starlight" and Ray Henderson's "Bye Bye Blackbird." Other tunes evoke different, multiple associations: Jimmy Davis, Ram Ramirez and James Sherman's "Lover Man," Harold Arlen's "Come Rain Or Come Shine" and Alec Wilder's "Moon And Sand."

Monder and Hébert drop out for "Blue And Green" but Liebman does not monopolise the album. It is an ensemble affair, all three musicians solo, and on "Stella By Starlight" (also covered on the aforementioned Classic Ballads) he does not enter until over three minutes into the track.By Chris May
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/truth-and-honesty-dave-liebman-newvelle-records

Personnel: Dave Liebman: saxophone,soprano,flute; Ben Monder: guitar; John Hébert: bass.

Trust and Honesty

Thursday, January 5, 2023

Andrea Motis & Joan Chamorro Quintet - Live At Jamboree Barcelona (Feat. Scott Hamilton)

Styles: Vocal,Trumpet And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:20
Size: 175,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:24) 1. Exactly Like You
(6:45) 2. Meditaçao
(6:33) 3. I Fall In Love Too Easily
(4:33) 4. Sun Showers
(7:41) 5. Someday My Prince Will Come
(5:45) 6. Moody's Mood For Love
(6:19) 7. Chega De Saudhade
(7:42) 8. Summertime
(6:25) 9. Lullaby Of Birdland
(5:18) 10. Corcovado
(5:16) 11. All Too Soon
(5:27) 12. My Baby Just Cares For Me
(3:06) 13. This Year's Kisses (Bonus Track)

"A friend recommended Andrea to me, and she's definitely a "comer," someone worth a lot of encouragement. I'm frankly tired of guitar-strumming singer-songwriters who do all "original material" because the harmonies of standards (like "Body and Soul" or "All the Things You Are") are totally beyond their reach. Andrea is taking a far more sophisticated path, reminiscent of Chet Baker -in both her singing and trumpet work- than any other musician.

She was in her early teens when this album was made. Her voice lacks mature body and firm, sustaining breath support both her singing and trumpet- but is nonetheless most pleasant, with clear elocution and precise intonation. And her trumpet work sparkles with note choices that are melodic and "hip." You can only hope she has the right teachers and influences to nurture her undeniable talent. Also, one might hope that she doesn't overdo the guitars. I'm not hearing the support of a firm walking bass or of a drummer with a strong hi-hat clap and ringing ride cymbal. Pianos are on the verge of extinction the reason I go back to Bill Evans and Duke Ellington for the majority of my listening. The presence of Scott Hamilton makes this album a no-brainer.
By Samuel Chell https://www.freshsoundrecords.com/joan-chamorro-andrea-motis-albums/6061-live-at-jamboree-barcelona-cd-dvd-featuring-scott-hamilton.html

Personnel: Andrea Motis (vocal, trumpet & Alto sax), Scott Hamilton (tenor sax), Joan Chamorro (bass), Ignasi Terraza (piano & Hammond organ), Josep Traver (guitar), and Esteve Pi (drums).

Live At Jamboree Barcelona (Feat. Scott Hamilton)

Dave McKenna - Hear Me Now

Styles: Piano Jazz 
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 132:50
Size: 305,9 MB
Art: Front

( 6:39)  1. Lady Be Good
( 5:28)  2. Chinatown, My Chinatown
( 9:10)  3. Once I Loved
( 8:11)  4. I'll Only Miss Her When I Think of Her
(12:02)  5. Comes Love
( 7:18)  6. Fred
( 5:34)  7. September Song
( 9:23)  8. O Grande Amor
( 8:46)  9. The Touch of Your Lips
( 5:44) 10. Life Is Better
(10:34) 11. Holiday in the Sun
( 9:50) 12. Just You, Just Me
( 8:44) 13. Emily
(13:46) 14. It's Alright with Me
( 9:44) 15. On the Alamo
( 1:50) 16. Good Night, Travel Well

One of the top swing-based pianists of the past 25 years, Dave McKenna's hard-driving basslines give momentum to uptempo pieces, and his vast knowledge of superior songs from the 1930s has resulted in many rewarding albums of traditional but fresh music. Although talented from the start, McKenna did not achieve that much recognition until he was already in his forties. He joined the Musicians' Union when he was 15 and picked up early experience playing with Boots Mussulli (1947), Charlie Ventura (1949), and Woody Herman's Orchestra (1950-1951). After two years in the military, McKenna had a second stint with Ventura (1953-1954) and then worked with a variety of top swing and Dixieland players including Gene Krupa, Stan Getz, Zoot Sims, Al Cohn, Eddie Condon, Bobby Hackett, and Bob Wilber (in the late '70s), and was a soloist at piano bars in Massachusetts. 

McKenna had recorded for ABC-Paramount (1956), Epic (1958), Bethlehem (a two-piano date shared with Hall Overton in 1960), and Realm (1963), but in 1973, McKenna's talents finally began to be more fully documented. He led sets for Halycon, Shiah, Famous Door, Inner City (with vocalist Teddi King), and four for Chiaroscuro. And then in 1979 with No Bass Hit (a trio date with Scott Hamilton and Jake Hanna), McKenna debuted with Concord, finding his home. He has made many sessions for Concord ever since, some as a sideman or with small groups, but the best ones being unaccompanied recitals. In the mid-'90s Dave McKenna was at the top of his field. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/dave-mckenna-mn0000687586/biography

Hear Me Now

Charlie Byrd - Forever Cool [feat. Keter Betts & Bill Reichenbach]

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:08
Size: 150,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:27) 1. Don't Explain
(2:43) 2. Makin' Whoopee
(1:47) 3. Nice Work If You Can Get It
(3:39) 4. My Funny Valentine
(4:42) 5. Satin Doll
(1:30) 6. Interlude
(3:45) 7. Speak Low
(4:15) 8. What's New
(3:24) 9. Django
(1:57) 10. Taking A Chance On Love
(9:41) 11. Taboo
(3:18) 12. My Heart Stood Still
(5:25) 13. Ginny
(3:01) 14. Nuages
(2:22) 15. Um Abraço No Bonfa´.mp3
(2:52) 16. Moonlight In Vermont
(5:45) 17. Four O'clock Funk
(2:05) 18. Cancio´n Di Argentina.mp3
(3:51) 19. Ring Them Harmonics

Charles L. Byrd (September 16, 1925 - November 30, 1999), better known as Charlie Byrd, was a famous jazz guitarist, born in Suffolk, Virginia. He was the only jazz guitarist of that era whose primary instrument was the classical guitar which gave him his uniquely identifiable sound.

Byrd primarily looked up to Django Reinhardt. He moved to Washington, D.C., to study classical guitar with the renowned Sophocles Papas. He later moved to Italy where he studied with Andrés Segovia. In the early 1960's he was on a State Department tour in South America where he was introduced to a new music, the bossa nova, which was the musical passion of Brazil beginning in the late 50's. Jazz saxophonist Stan Getz had been in Brazil about six months earlier than Byrd, also on a State Department tour, where he, too, was exposed to the bossa nova. A short time later Getz called Byrd in D.C. and suggested the idea that they collaborate on a bossa nova album. That album was the introduction of bossa nova to North America.

He is perhaps most well known as a collaborator with Stan Getz on the Jazz Samba album, which featured many themes of bossa nova, and of course, samba.
https://www.last.fm/music/Charlie+Byrd/+wiki

Forever Cool

Aubrey Johnson & Randy Ingram - Play Favorites

Styles: Vocal And Piano
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:58
Size: 126,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:09) 1. My Future
(4:58) 2. If Ever I Would Leave You
(1:37) 3. Prelude
(5:32) 4. If I Should Lose You
(4:23) 5. Conversation
(5:38) 6. Olha Maria
(2:34) 7. Didn’t We
(4:57) 8. Chovendo Na Roseira
(4:53) 9. Quem É Você (Close To Home)
(3:58) 10. I’ll Remember April / April
(4:32) 11. Born To Be Blue
(3:51) 12. Bons Amigos
(3:50) 13. My Ideal

Before her 2019 debut album Unraveled introduced her as a songwriter with a keen ear as an arranger and composer, Aubrey Johnson had already earned widespread notice with her bright, crystalline tone and creative versatility via her work supporting fellow vocal explorers such as Bobby McFerrin, Sara Serpa, and Sofia Rei and contributions to recordings by Brian Carpenter’s Ghost Train Orchestra, Joe Phillips’ Numinous Ensemble, and Andrew Rathbun Large Ensemble. Her follow-up, Play Favorites, offers a very different glimpse at an artist who’s still stretching her wings.

Partnering with Randy Ingram, a pianist with a gift for distilling harmonic essentials, the duo project features a ballad-centric program sifted from a wide array of sources, starting with a beguiling take on Billie Eilish/Finneas O’Connell’s “My Future” that accentuates the melody’s gentle contours so that it could have come from the pen of Sara Gazarek. Equally arresting on standards like “If I Should Lose You” and “Born to Be Blue,” Johnson is particularly striking on Joni Mitchell’s “Conversation,” navigating the upper register leaps with the liquid grace.

The brightest thread running through the project is their deep love of the Brazilian Songbook. Singing in Portuguese, Johnson renders Chico Buarque, Antônio Carlos Jobim and Vinícius de Moraes’ abject lament “Olha Maria” in luminous pastels. Ingram’s love of classical music shines through on their setting of Toninho Horto and Ronaldo Bastos’s “Bons Amigos.” Another standout is Johnson’s take on her uncle Lyle Mays’ “Quem é Você,” which was introduced as Pat Metheny Group instrumental “Close to Home” and recorded most memorably with Luiz Avellar’s lyric by Milton Nascimento. It’s another sublime bloom in a garden, lovingly tended since the mid-20th century, where jazz and Brazilian hybrids proliferate. Johnson’s harvest with Ingram is bountiful indeed.
By Andrew Gilbert https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/aubrey-johnson-randy-ingram-play-favorites-sunnyside/

Personnel: Aubrey Johnson - vocals; Randy Ingram - piano

Play Favorites