Saturday, April 6, 2024

Carmen McRae - For Lady Day, Vol. 2

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 1983
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:30
Size: 119,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:29)  1. Intro
(2:06)  2. Laughing At Life
(3:48)  3. You Ain't Gonna Bother Me No More
(2:53)  4. Easy Livin'
(4:41)  5. Yesterdays
(6:18)  6. My Old Flame
(2:50)  7. Nice Work If You Can Get It
(4:48)  8. Billie's Blues
(3:27)  9. Travelin' Light
(5:46) 10. Medley: If You Were Mine / It's Like Reaching For The Moon
(1:36) 11. I'm Painting The Town Red
(5:31) 12. You've Changed
(3:12) 13. Mean To Me

The second volume of Carmen McRae's heartfelt tribute to Billie Holiday, like the first, comes from a broadcast taped by WBGO-FM at the Blue Note in New York City on New Year's Eve, 1983. McRae takes a few minutes to explain the evolution of her tribute and she hardly attempts to sing Holiday's material in the same way, but utilizing her own powerful, emotional approach, often lagging behind the beat. McRae also delves into songs that Holiday performed but are not as readily associated with her, such as "Laughing at Life" and "You Ain't Gonna Bother Me No More." Her rhythm section, including pianist Marshall Otwell, bassist John Leftwich, and drummer Donald Bailey, provides strong support, with the occasional appearance of tenor saxophonist Zoot Sims (especially on "My Old Flame" and "Mean to Me") providing an added bonus. Like the first volume, this Novus CD was not released until after McRae's death, while this outstanding set makes jazz fans wonder why record labels don't mine public radio live broadcasts for similar performances more often.~Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/for-lady-day-vol-2-mw0000176927

Personnel : Carmen McRae (vocals); Zoot Sims (tenor saxophone);  Marshall Otwell (piano); John Leftwich (bass);  Donald Baily (drums).

For Lady Day, Vol. 2

Ronnie Cuber Quartet - Airplay

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:20
Size: 157,8 MB
Art: Front

( 8:12)  1. Bread And Jam
( 7:23)  2. New Orleans 1951
(10:42)  3. Pit Inn
( 4:58)  4. One For Hank
(10:59)  5. Jazz Cumbia
( 7:31)  6. Passion Fruit
(10:49)  7. Trane's Waltz
( 7:42)  8. Airplay

A powerful baritone saxophonist with a huge, deeply emotive sound, Ronnie Cuber is a highly respected New York bandleader and session musician with a decades-long career playing in the jazz, pop, and Latin scenes. Initially emerging as a gifted jazz soloist in New York in the 1960s, Cuber quickly distinguished himself playing a wide-ranging mix of hard bop and Latin jazz, including hits with Maynard Ferguson, Dr. Lonnie Smith, Lee Konitz, Eddie Palmieri, Mario Bauza, and others. He also became an in-demand session player and sideman, working with a list of marquee artists like Frank Zappa, Chaka Khan, and Billy Joel. While his 1976 debut, Cuber Libre, is an underappreciated Latin jazz classic, he has also contributed to such landmark albums as Paul Simon's Graceland, Steely Dan's Gaucho, and J.Geils Band's Freeze Frame, just to name a few. Cuber remains an active studio and touring performer while continuing to pursue his own jazz interests, playing regularly with the Mingus Big Band and releasing his own well-regarded albums such as 2009's Ronnie. Born in 1941 and raised in Brooklyn, New York, Cuber grew up in a musical family with a mom who played piano and a dad who favored the accordion. By his teens, the gifted tenor saxophonist had grabbed the attention of noted musician and jazz educator Marshall Brown, who selected him to play with the Newport Youth Band at the Newport Jazz Festival in 1959. Around this time, Cuber switched to baritone as his main instrument, drawing upon Gerry Mulligan and Pepper Adams as influences. By the early '60s, he was working professionally, playing first with Slide Hampton, and then joining Maynard Ferguson's band for several years. It was with Ferguson that he made his recorded debut, appearing on albums like 1963's The New Sound of Maynard Ferguson, and 1965's Color Him Wild. Stints with Woody Herman and Lionel Hampton followed, as did session and gig work playing Latin music with legendary bandleaders like Eddie Palmieri, Charlie Palmieri, and Mario Bauza. By the '70s, Cuber was recording regularly, appearing on soul-jazz sessions with George Benson, Dr. Lonnie Smith, Grant Green, and others. As a leader, he made his recorded debut on 1976's Cuber Libre!, a swaggeringly propulsive, Latin jazz date with pianist Barry Harris, bassist Sam Jones, and drummer Albert "Tootie" Heath. 

The album showcased his distinctive style, mixing an aggressive, meaty tone, with fluid, harmonically rich lines. He quickly followed-up with the more post-bop-leaning The Eleventh Day of Aquarius, which also featured trumpeter Tom Harrell. As well during the '70s, Cuber developed a fruitful relationship with saxophonist Lee Konitz, with whom he recorded several albums. He also recorded alongside R&B sax legend King Curtis. There were also notable hits with Idris Muhammad, Terumasa Hino, and more. The baritonist began branching out into pop and rock during this period, playing on Frank Zappa's Zappa in New York, and building his reputation as a reliable studio player with albums like Average White Band's Soul Searching, Chaka Khan's Chaka, Patti Austin's Havana Candy, and more. During these years, he also continued his vibrant Latin work, appearing with Dom Um Romao, Ismael Miranda, Willie Colon, and others. Cuber's reputation as a go-to session player grew throughout the '80s as he appeared on albums by bevy of marquee artists including Aretha Franklin, Chic, and Luther Vandross. He played on Paul Simon's classic Graceland, put his R&B-experience to use on J. Geils Band's breakthrough Freeze Frame, and contributed to Steely Dan's Gaucho. He also worked with Billy Joel, appearing on albums like 1983's An Innocent Man and 1986's The Bridge. Also during this period, he appeared on television as a member of the Saturday Night Live Band. 

Despite his busy schedule, he found time to record his own projects, bringing all his varied experience to bear in a jazz setting on 1981's New York Jazz, 1985's Passion Fruit, and 1987's Pin Point. Into the '90s, Cuber played regularly with the Mingus Big Band (of which he was a founding member), and furthered his long association with Dr. John, touring and arranging for the singer during the summer. In 1993, Cuber returned to his solo work with The Scene Is Clean on Milestone, a lush, string-accented, Latin-jazz session featuring organist Joey DeFrancesco, pianist Geoff Keezer, and others. He then issued handful of albums for SteepleChase, including 1994's Airplay, and 1996's In a New York Minute. 

He also organized an all-baritone Gerry Mulligan tribute band, and in 2000, again joined Dr. John on tour, alongside organist and longtime-friend Dr. Lonnie Smith. As a leader, Cuber stayed busy for SteepleChase, issuing 2009's Ronnie, and 2012's Boplicity. In 2018, he returned with the standards-heavy Ronnie's Trio, with bassist Jay Anderson and drummer Adam Nussbaum. ~ Matt Collar https://www.allmusic.com/artist/ronnie-cuber-mn0000331319/biography

Personnel:   Ronnie Cuber - baritone saxophone;  Geoff Keezer - piano;  Chip Jackson - bass;  Ben Perowsky - drums

Airplay

Candy Dulfer - Saxuality

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:00
Size: 208,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:21)  1. Lily Was Here
(3:50)  2. Pee Wee
(4:12)  3. Saxuality
(5:00)  4. So What
(4:21)  5. Jazzid
(4:08)  6. Heavenly City
(5:18)  7. Donja
(3:55)  8. There Goes The Neighbourhood
(4:57)  9. Mr. Lee
(4:15) 10. Get The Funk
(4:11) 11. Home Is Not A House
(4:27) 12. Lily Was Here (DNA Remix)

Dutch smooth jazz saxophonist Candy Dulfer's debut album, 1990's Saxuality, made a splash both critically and commercially upon its release and helped propel her to global stardom. The daughter of saxophonist Hans Dulfer, Candy Dulfer had performed since she was an adolescent and by her early twenties was opening for Madonna and Prince. Saxuality builds upon these experiences with productions from multi-instrumentalist Ulco Bed that are equal parts Prince, David Sanborn, and '80s Miles Davis. Although Dulfer's slick approach here fits squarely in the pop-jazz vein, she was inspired early on in her career by such players as Sonny Rollins and Maceo Parker. Consequently, these influences help make Saxuality a more funky and engaging listen than many similar albums of the time. While not exactly innovative, Bed's mix of programmed beats and synths next to actual instruments was fairly inspired and the album works as a bridge between the club-oriented acid jazz coming out of Europe in the late '80s and the radio-friendly smooth jazz of American artists like George Benson and Spyro Gyra. Not only did Saxuality perform well for Dulfer, selling well over a million copies worldwide, but it also garnered a Grammy Award nomination for Best Contemporary Jazz Album.~Matt Collar http://www.allmusic.com/album/saxuality-mw0000262954

Personnel:  Patricia Balrak, Wies Ingwersen, Hugh Kanza - Backing Vocals & Vocal Ad-Libs;  Ulco Bed - Guitars, Keyboards, Drum Programming, Synth Bass;  Candy Dulfer - Saxophone, Keyboards, Vocals;  Hans Dulfer - Tenor Saxophone;  Frans Hendrix - Percussion, Programming;  Edwin Rath – Drums; Dave Stewart – Guitars;  Michel Van Schie, Dimitri Veltkamp – Bass;  Fred Anindjola, Bobby Van De Berg – keyboards;  Martino Latupeirissa – percussion;  Bill "Funky Cold" Malina - engineer

Saxuality

Kenny Drew Jr. - The Rainbow Connection

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:58
Size: 134,5 MB
Art: Front

( 5:42)  1. Confrontation
( 5:54)  2. There Is No Greater Love
( 7:07)  3. Serenity
( 4:18)  4. Boo Boo's Birthday
( 6:26)  5. Nelson Avenue Morning
( 6:20)  6. Coral Sea
( 5:18)  7. Rhythm - A - Ning
( 5:16)  8. The Rainbow Connection
(11:34)  9. Invitation

Kenny Drew, Sr. was so legendary a pianist that Kenny Drew, Jr. was bound to be compared to his father, however hard he fought to establish his own identity. And the fact that they played the same instrument didn't exactly discourage comparisons. But the son is very much his own man, and his individuality asserts itself on The Rainbow Connection, which was recorded when he was a month away from his 30th birthday. Drew has competent support in bassist Charnett Moffett, drummer Cody Moffett and trumpeter Terence Blanchard, and he proves that he's no clone of his father on material ranging from "Invitation" to the Thelonious Monk classics "Rhythm-A-Ning" and "Boo Boo's Birthday" (a difficult tune that, unlike "Rhythm-A-Ning," is far from well-known). Especially revealing is his interpretation of his father's haunting "Serenity." If anything would have encouraged Drew, Jr. to emulate Drew, Sr., it would be "Serenity," but he manages to do his own thing with it. Initially released by the Japanese Jazz City label, this decent post-bop/hard bop date was reissued on CD by Evidence in 1998. ~ Alex Henderson https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-rainbow-connection-mw0000035007

Personnel: Piano – Kenny Drew Jr.; Bass – Charnett Moffett; Drums – Codaryl "Cody" Moffett; Trumpet – Terence Blanchard

The Rainbow Connection

Django Reinhardt And The Swingbands Of Paris - Avec Django À Montmartre

Styles: Gypsy Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 51:17
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 118,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:17) 1. A.B.C.
(2:15) 2. Le Sheik
(2:12) 3. Margie
(2:18) 4. Finesse
(2:40) 5. Blues primitif
(2:43) 6. Honeysuckle Rose
(2:58) 7. Crazy Rhythm
(2:36) 8. A Pretty Girl Is Like A Melody
(2:21) 9. Swing Guitar
(2:38) 10. Sérénade D'Hiver
(2:37) 11. Oriental Shuffle
(3:09) 12. Tel Quel
(3:05) 13. After You've Gone
(2:54) 14. Are You In The Mood?
(2:36) 15. Zuidersee Blues
(3:01) 16. Topsy
(2:31) 17. I Know That You Know
(2:54) 18. Jumping At The Woodside
(3:16) 19. Porto Cabello
(2:46) 20. Babik

The man who became the 1st European jazz giant was born Jean Baptiste Reinhardt on January 24 1910 in a Gypsy encampment at Liberchies Belgium. His father was a traveling entertainer so he lived with his mother and her tribe. His early childhood was spent in and around Liberchies. At age 8 he moved with his mother and her clan to France and settled in a camp outside the gates of old Paris. He first started playing music on an old banjo/guitar at age 12 and soon started playing in cafes and dance halls in Paris accompanying and accordionist. He made his first recordings under the name of Jiango Reinhardt when he was in his late teens.

On November 2nd, 1928 a fire destroyed the caravan that Django Reinhardt shared with his wife together with all their belongings and severely burnt his left hand and his right leg. Despite initial hesitation to seek medical attention on his part and talk of amputating the leg by the first physician he saw, proper care received in a nursing home helped save his leg but permanently scarred his left hand.

During the 18 months spent convalescing he created a new technique in playing the guitar that made up for the extremely limited use he had of his 4th and 5th fingers. In 1934 Django and other musicians including Stéphane Grappelli, whom Django had met during an intermission when both were playing at a local hotel, Louis Vola, Roger Chaput and Django's brother Joseph formed the Quintette du Hot Club de France. They recorded their first jazz sides under that name and these early 78s propelled them into stardom.

They created the concept of lead guitar backed by a rhythm guitar and they also used their string instruments to create percussion like sounds since they lacked any percussionists or drummers in their group. After this initial success they continued to record and tour Europe. They started recording material composed by Django himself and American standards. Django did not know how to read and write music and only later in life taught himself how to read and write French. They also played and recorded with expatriate and visiting American musicians such as Coleman Hawkins, Benny Carter, Rex Stewart and Louis Armstrong.

When World War II broke the Quintet was touring England. Django and other returned to Paris but Grappelli stayed in England thus ending the first incarnation of the Quintette du Hot Club de France. Clarinetist Hubert Rostaing was hired to replace Grappelli. Django somehow survived the dark years of Nazi rule when many of his people perished in concentration camps. Jazz was banned under Hitler.

Django was only allowed to play his music because of the aid of a Luftwaffe official who loved jazz and admired his skill. After the war he rejoined Grappelli and they continued to tour even visiting the US and playing in 1946 with Duke Ellington. He stayed in New York for a while but in 1948 returned to France and played mostly electric guitar except on his later days masterpiece Djangologie which he recorded together with Grappelli and a trio of Italian musicians.

In 1951 he retired to to Samois sur Seine, near Fontainebleau France. He lived there until May 16, 1953, when, collapsed outside his house and was declared dead from a brain hemorrhage on arrival at the hospital in Fontainebleau.https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/django-reinhardt/

Avec Django À Montmartre

Friday, April 5, 2024

Raul De Souza - Sweet Lucy

Styles: Trombone Jazz
Year: 1978
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:31
Size: 95,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:27)  1. Sweet Lucy
(3:19)  2. Wires
(7:34)  3. Wild And Shy
(4:18)  4. At Will
(4:57)  5. Banana Tree
(6:17)  6. A Song Of Love
(4:25)  7. New Love
(5:09)  8. Bottom Heat

Raul De Souza is one of the mysteries of the jazz world. In the 1970s, it was obvious that the Brazilian trombonist had a lot going for him: a distinctive and appealing tone, major chops, versatility, and a lot of soul and warmth. So why did he mysteriously fade into such obscurity in the 1980s? In an ideal world, De Souza would have built a huge catalogue. But regrettably, his recording career was short-lived. Produced by George Duke, 1977's Sweet Lucy is the first of three albums that De Souza recorded for Capitol in the late '70s. Vocal-oriented funk jams like "Wires" and the title song (both written by Duke) are catchy, but the fusion and pop-jazz instrumentals are where De Souza really shines. When he stretches out on "Bottom Heat," "Wild and Shy," and other pieces that he composed himself, De Souza shows a great deal of potential as a soloist. The LP's weakest track is a performance of the Brazilian ballad "New Love (Cancão do Nosso Amor)," which finds De Souza attempting to sing. 

The song is gorgeous, but De Souza doesn't do it justice because, quite honestly, he can't sing calling his voice thin is being charitable. Besides, De Souza doesn't need to use his vocal chords to sing; he does plenty of "singing" with his trombone, and his command of that instrument makes Sweet Lucy an LP that is excellent more often than not. ~ Alex Henderson http://www.allmusic.com/album/sweet-lucy-mw0000869231

Personnel:  Trombone – Raul De Souza;   Backing Vocals – Deborah Thomas (tracks: 1, 2, 5), Lynn Davis (tracks: 1, 2, 5), Sybil Thomas (tracks: 1, 2, 5), Victoria Miles (tracks: 1, 2, 5);  Bass – Byron Miller, Embamba (tracks: 6, 7);  Drums – Leon Ndugu Chancler;  Guitar – Al McKay;  Keyboards – Dawilli Gonga (tracks: 1, 2, 6), Patrice Rushen;  Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Freddy Hubbard* (tracks: 2, 3, 8)

Sweet Lucy

Carmen McRae - For Lady Day, Vol. 1

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 1983
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:15
Size: 117,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:32)  1. Intro
(2:34)  2. Miss Brown to you
(4:21)  3. Good morning heartache
(4:24)  4. I'm gonna lock my heart and throw away the key
(6:23)  5. Fine and mellow
(1:26)  6. Them there eyes
(6:18)  7. Lover man
(2:20)  8. I cried for you (now it's your turn to cry over me)
(6:42)  9. God bless the child
(2:57) 10. I hear music
(3:17) 11. I'm pulling through
(4:06) 12. Don't explain
(2:50) 13. What a little moonlight can do

Carmen McRae always considered Billie Holiday to be the most important influence not only on her singing but on her life. Six years before she recorded her monumental tributes to Thelonious Monk and Sarah Vaughan, McRae performed a Billie Holiday set at New York's Blue Note Club that was broadcast over the radio; on the first of two volumes, McRae, who talks movingly about Lady Day at the beginning of the set and accompanies herself on piano on "I'm Pulling Through," is heard in prime form, combining the power and range of her earlier years with the emotional depth and behind-the-beat phrasing of her last period. Accompanied by her rhythm section of the time (pianist Marshall Otwell, bassist John Leftwich, and drummer Donald Bailey) and occasionally the tenor of Zoot Sims, McRae really digs into the material, interpreting the songs in her own style but with a knowing nod toward Holiday. This wonderful set is far superior to most of the Billie Holiday tribute albums and reminds one how much Carmen McRae is missed.~Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/for-lady-day-mw0000123562

Personnel: Carmen McRae (vocals, piano), Zoot Sims (tenor saxophone), Marshall Otwell (piano), John Leftwich (bass), Donald Bailey (drums).

For Lady Day, vol. 1

Ronnie Cuber - Live at JazzFest Berlin

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:15
Size: 145,0 MB
Art: Front

(12:31)  1. Tokyo Blues
( 6:11)  2. Coco B
( 9:28)  3. Things Never Were What They Used to Be
( 8:27)  4. Passion Frui
( 8:45)  5. Tell Me a Bedtime Story
( 8:18)  6. Perpetuating the Myth
( 9:31)  7. Arroz con Pollo

Baritone saxophonist Ronnie Cuber’s third release for SteepleChase predates his association with the label, and might be thought of as a happy accident. At the titular fest, in 2008, Cuber’s quartet-with pianist Kenny Drew Jr., electric bassist Ruben Rodriguez and drummer Ben Perowsky-played a two-set show that the four remembered as a highlight of their European tour. Unbeknownst to them, the concert was recorded for a radio broadcast, and Cuber subsequently opted to give the music an official release. He had good instincts: The seven tunes culled from the evening have Cuber and co. in fine form, with the saxophonist, underappreciated pianist Drew and the in-sync rhythm section excelling on blues, swing and Latin-oriented tunes, including four originals.

The band romps from the get-go with Horace Silver’s “Tokyo Blues,” its call-and-response head opening up into an extended solo for Cuber, who incorporates artful repetition, syncopation, overblowing effects and a Gershwin reference before turning it over to Drew. He proceeds to build a dizzying, masterful solo, and Rodriguez and Perowsky also shine on the 12 1/2-minute tune. The samba rhythms of Clare Fischer’s bright, catchy “Coco B” fuel sterling improvisations by Drew and Cuber. So, too, do the fertile Afro-Caribbean grooves of Cuber’s “Passion Fruit,” the title track from the saxophonist’s 1985 album, which opens up for a high-energy montuno section, and his “Arroz con Pollo,” bolstered by Rodriguez’s fleet-fingered workout. 

The quartet also takes on Herbie Hancock’s melancholy, slowly shifting “Tell Me a Bedtime Story” and two originals from Drew: the funk-edged “Things Never Were What They Used to Be,” a nod to the Mercer Ellington tune, and “Perpetuating the Myth,” a strolling, twisting, bluesy piece with a bari-and-piano unison melody that nods to Monk. Fat, gritty tone? Check. Agile, clever improvisations? Check. Cuber still has it. ~ Philip Booth https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/ronnie-cuber-live-at-jazzfest-berlin/

Personnel: Ronnie Cuber: baritone saxophone; Kenny Drew Jr.: piano; Rubén Rodríguez: bass; Ben Perowsky: drums.

Live at JazzFest Berlin

Christian McBride/Edgar Meyer - But Who's Gonna Play the Melody?

Styles: Jazz Fusion
Year: 2024
Time: 66:15
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 152,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:56) 1. Green Slime
(4:43) 2. Barnyard Disturbance
(3:29) 3. Bebop, of Course
(5:15) 4. Bass Duo #1
(3:59) 5. Solar
(4:33) 6. Canon
(3:25) 7. Philly Slop
(1:55) 8. Interlude #1
(4:18) 9. FRB 2DB
(6:01) 10. Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered
(6:08) 11. Bass Duo #2
(5:05) 12. Lullaby for a Ladybug
(5:35) 13. Days of Wine and Roses
(1:45) 14. Interlude #2
(4:02) 15. Tennessee Blues

It is not known exactly how many duets of this nature have fallen into the lackluster bin of audio history. But rest assured that But Who's Gonna Play The Melody? is as far from that incalculable number as the moon is from the sun.

Emblematic of Christian McBride's whole groove credo, everything falls into place quickly, smoothly, and easily on But Who's Gonna Play The Melody?. On the bassist's gazillionth high spirited musical offering, McBride soul-teams with finger-snapping, bluegrass-bred, classical composer & bassist Edgar Meyer who has previously played with Joshua Bell, Bela Fleck, and Yo-Yo Ma for a most rousing revelry. Both virtuosos with a keen sense of humor, McBride and Meyer curate their heartland musical idiosyncrasies, resulting in some very sweet moments such as the hip swaying "Green Slime" and the see-sawing "Barnyard Disturbance," both mischievous Meyer originals.

McBride answers those compositional hijinks with "Bebop, Of Course" and, as the duo reels and rolls from that throbbing bounce-a-thon, they willingly engage in "Bass Duo #1," a complex yet informal and actively conversational Meyer invention. In the overall scheme of things, it comes as no surprise that the duo follow up with a romping take on Miles Davis's richly languid "Solar" (Miles Davis Quintet, Prestige, 1954.)

"Canon," with its chamber echoes and achingly emotive arching, catches the lift and frees itself with "Philly Slop," a noir jump-hop which the ever- agile duo jitterbug merrily through. On "FRB 2DB" Meyer thoroughly enjoys his time on the grittier side of the classical tracks and McBride is gleeful to be his bro-boy companion.

With McBride sidling over to the piano to provide delicate guardrails, an extremely wistful "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered," gracefully unravels as Meyer takes his bow to the tune and soars. "Bass Duo # 2" pops as elegantly and playfully as its predecessor, with the two masters slurring, walking, giving way. It is a six-minute lesson in the art of being human, ready to compromise for the better of all, here and now, ready to support, to huddle, to move forward towards a more perfect union. And that is what But Who's Gonna Play The Melody? is really all about.By Mike Jurkovic https://www.allaboutjazz.com/but-whos-gonna-play-the-melody-christian-mcbride-mack-avenue-records

Personnel: Christian McBride – acoustic bass (all tracks except 8, 12); piano (tracks 8, 12); Edgar Meyer – acoustic bass (all tracks except 10, 14); piano (tracks 10, 14)

But Who's Gonna Play the Melody?

Viktoria Tolstoy - Stealing Moments

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2024
Time: 44:22
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 102,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:27) 1. A Love Song
(4:43) 2. Good and Proper End
(4:07) 3. Wherever You're Going
(4:23) 4. Hands Off
(4:34) 5. Summer Kind of Love
(4:32) 6. I Don't Wanna Lose You
(4:49) 7. License to Love
(3:51) 8. What Should I Do
(6:16) 9. Synchronicity
(4:35) 10. Stealing Moments

For me, the album that stands out and allowed me to discover the music of Viktoria Tolstoy was her beautiful album “Letters to Herbie“, released in 2011. Her previous album “Stations” from 2019 only added to Viktoria’s musical excellence over time.

With a beautiful vocal technique and a selection of tracks from musicians and singers well-known to those who listen to Bayou Blue Radio, including Nils Landgren, Iro Rantala, Esbjörn Svensson, Ida Sand, Lars Danielsson, Caeclie Norby, etc., Viktoria adeptly appropriates each track with great intelligence. It’s an album characterized by its gentle and remarkably interpreted style.

Talking about this album so long before its release might surprise you, but the reason is simple: we receive so many albums that it’s challenging to keep up with the latest releases. With this album set to be released on March 1st and February already filled with other releases, the only way for us to talk about it is now.

“When you sing, the sun rises,” as Pat Metheny once told Viktoria Tolstoy. The common thread across all the tracks on “Stealing Moments” is her powerful, crystal-clear voice, coupled with her temperament, where lightness and sparkling energy irresistibly coexist. Listeners will enjoy this music as much as she does, and she knows it. As she subtly reformulates the words of the album title into an implicit invitation: “Let me steal a little bit of time to listen.”

Surrounded by remarkable musicians: Joel Lyssarides on piano & keys, Krister Jonsson on guitar, Mattias Svensson on bass, Rasmus Kihlberg on drums & percussion, all skillfully highlighting Viktoria’s voice, make this album a very intimate experience. The finesse is not only in the voice but also in the musicians’ play. This album is so easy to listen to that one finds oneself almost frustrated at the end, wishing for two or three more tracks. So, you go back to the beginning and settle in even more comfortably.

What better way to celebrate the arrival of spring? Artists like Viktoria Tolstoy have contributed to the radiance of the ACT label, and we are delighted that she hasn’t fallen through the cracks like many other talented artists who have disappeared from the label over the years.

“Stealing Moments” is a very European album that will certainly be appreciated in the USA for its sincerity in its creative form. The editorial teams of Bayou Blue Radio and Paris-move have once again placed this beautiful album on the “must-have” pile. If you enjoy romantic and poetic albums, this one is for you! https://www.paris-move.com/reviews/viktoria-tolstoy-stealing-moments/

Stealing Moments

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

Ruby Braff - The Mighty Braff

Styles: Cornet Jazz
Year: 1989
Time: 61:28
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 142,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:40) 1. Blue And Sentimental
(2:38) 2. This Can't Be Love
(3:02) 3. Mean To Me
(2:27) 4. Ellie
(2:50) 5. Blue Room
(3:14) 6. I Can't Get Started
(2:58) 7. You're A Sweetheart
(2:45) 8. Struttin' With Some Barbecue
(7:48) 9. Sometimes I'm Happy
(5:42) 10. Auld Lang Syne
(3:44) 11. Easy Livin'
(4:27) 12. Flowers For A Lady
(3:54) 13. Foolin' Myself
(3:59) 14. I'll Be Around
(2:23) 15. It's Easy To Blame The Weather
(3:52) 16. Pullin' Through
(2:58) 17. You're A Lucky Guy

Ruby Braff began his jazz career as an out-of-time traditionalist playing with veteran jazzmen of an earlier age, and rose to establish his own standing as one of the handful of leading artists playing in traditional and mainstream idioms.

He did so on the back of one of the most beautiful instrumental sounds in jazz, a prodigious gift for phrasing melody, and an acute harmonic sense which revealed his awareness of more modernist developments in jazz. Louis Armstrong remained his touchstone and only avowed master, but his playing also reflected the influence of musicians like Bix Beiderbecke and Bobby Hackett. His musical voice, though, was always very much his own.

He was born Reuben Braff in Boston, and was self-taught on his instrument. He said that he wanted to play saxophone, but his father bought him a cornet instead. His trumpet style, which largely eschewed high-note pyrotechnics in favour of a softer exploration of the middle and bottom registers of the instrument, reflected that original love of reed rather than brass sonorities.

He began working in local clubs in the Forties, and was recruited for the band led by the veteran clarinettist Edmond Hall at the Savoy Cafe in Boston in 1949. He made the move to New York in 1953, and was soon in demand for gigs and recording sessions in a traditional and mainstream vein.

His loyalty to traditional jazz at a time when the focus had shifted to more modern styles starved him of work for a time in the Fifties, but he returned to prominence with an All-Star touring band created by pianist and jazz impresario George Wein. Wein remained a loyal backer of the cornetist, and featured him regularly on his international tour and festival circuit.

He worked with major band leaders like Buck Clayton, Benny Goodman and Bud Freeman as a young man, and in turn became something of a musical mentor to a new generation of young mainstream musicians in the Seventies, including saxophonist Scott Hamilton and guitarist Howard Alden.

In the Eighties and Nineties he made a series of recordings for the major mainstream jazz labels Concord Jazz and Arbors, and formed highly-regarded duo partnerships with pianists like Mel Powell, Ralph Sutton, Dick Hyman, Ellis Larkins and Roger Kellaway.

Braff worked with singer Tony Bennett for two years from 1971-73, then formed a very popular and artistically successful band with guitarist George Barnes. The relationship ground to a halt in 1975 in characteristic fashion when Braff fell out with his collaborator.

That pattern of alienating those around him was repeated on many occasions. Braff may have made some of the most beautiful music in jazz, but his own character was precisely the opposite. He was notorious for his abrasive and insulting behaviour to other musicians, promoters and even fans, a tendency made all the worse by his failing health over many years (he suffered from emphysema, glaucoma and heart problems).

He was the headline artist at the first Nairn Jazz Festival in northern Scotland in 1990, and his appearance at the 2002 event was to be the last performance of his life. He cancelled a subsequent scheduled concert at the Brecon Jazz Festival in Wales and returned home. He was never fit enough to perform in public again.https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/ruby-braff/

The Mighty Braff

Conte Candoli Octet & Art Pepper - Mucho Calor

Styles: Trumpet And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1958
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:48
Size: 103,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:55) 1. Mucho Calor
(3:07) 2. Autumn Leaves
(5:30) 3. Mambo De La Pinta
(2:22) 4. I'll Remember April
(3:23) 5. Vaya Hombre Vaya
(5:48) 6. I Love You
(3:49) 7. Mambo Jumbo
(5:27) 8. Old Devil Moon
(3:58) 9. Pernod
(4:23) 10. That Old Black Magic

This recording brings back an obscure session from the long defunct Andex label that was probably recorded around 1956. The emphasis is on Latin jazz with altoist Art Pepper, trumpeter Conte Candoli, tenor saxophonist Bill Perkins, pianist Russ Freeman, bassist Ben Tucker, and drummer Chuck Flores interacting with the percussion of Jack Costanza and Mike Pacheko. With arrangements by Bill Holman, Johnny Mandel, Benny Carter, and Pepper, the music is quite jazz-oriented if a touch lightweight. Worth investigating by fans of the idiom. By Scott Yanow
https://www.allmusic.com/album/mucho-calor-mw0000731997

Personnel: Trumpet – Conte Candoli; Alto Saxophone – Art Pepper; Bass – Ben Tucker; Bongos – Jack Costanza, Mike Pacheko; Drums – Chuck Flores; Piano – Russ Freeman; Tenor Saxophone – Bill Perkins

Mucho Calor

Rod Stewart with Jools Holland - Swing Fever

Styles: Swing
Year: 2024
Time: 38:25
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 87,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:02) 1. Lullaby Of Broadway
(3:02) 2. Frankie And Johnny
(2:18) 3. Walkin' My Baby Back Home
(2:39) 4. Almost Like Being In Love
(3:20) 5. Tennessee Waltz
(2:33) 6. Oh Marie
(2:54) 7. Sentimental Journey
(2:58) 8. Pennies From Heaven
(2:56) 9. Night Train
(2:55) 10. Love Is The Sweetest Thing
(2:24) 11. Them There Eyes
(2:50) 12. Good Rocki'n Tonight
(2:26) 13. Ain't Misbehavin'

Through his five volumes of the Great American Songbook, the rascally Rod Stewart has been down this way before, but the addition of Jools Holland adds an extra dimension to his latest outing. Stewart’s age-worn and smoky voice can still deliver, as these 13 covers of classic big band numbers prove.

The album opens with the snappy, rousing ‘Lullaby Of Broadway’, which sets a high bar for an orchestra who come on as full-blooded as you might expect. Although Stewart says he wants to leave the rock ‘n’ roll stuff behind for a while, the versions of ‘Good Rockin’ Tonight’ and ‘Night Train’ suggest a reluctance to go all the way with that aim.

He even manages to smuggle a languid touch of mischief into the relatively sedate ‘Tennessee Waltz’. Elsewhere, the singer can still surprise with comfortable and convincing run-throughs of such harmless classics as ‘Pennies From Heaven’ and ‘Love Is The Sweetest Thing’ , while he even dusts off ‘Ain’t Misbehavin’ from volume five of his “songbook” series for a worthy re-run.
https://www.hotpress.com/music/album-review-rod-stewart-with-jools-holland-swing-fever-23010196

Swing Fever

Sarah Jane Morris - Sisterhood

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2024
Time: 53:14
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 122,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:29) 1. Sisterhood
(5:35) 2. Couldn't Be Without
(4:24) 3. Tomorrow Never Happens
(5:04) 4. So Much Love
(5:33) 5. Jazz Side Of The Road
(5:34) 6. Rimbaud of Suburbia
(4:34) 7. Sing Me A Picture
(4:33) 8. Junk In My Trunk
(5:07) 9. For The Voiceless
(7:17) 10. Miss Makeba

On International Women’s Day 8 March 2024, British soul, jazz and R&B singer Sarah Jane Morris launched her new album The Sisterhood.

It is her tribute to ten iconic women singers and songwriters, who have had a massive influence on the development of the popular song. This is Morris’s lock-down project. She and her husband artist Mark Pulsford spent the months of isolation studying the lives of pioneering singers and musicians, women whose music is world famous, but whose stories are less well known. Together Morris and Pulsford then wrote a series of song lyrics, each an illuminating, sometimes shocking tale from the lives of these remarkable women.

Morris then got together with her long time co-writer/co-producer/guitarist Tony Rémy to write the music. Each song would be absolutely contemporary, it would also reflect the styles, forms and influences of the artists depicted. The ten women chosen are: Bessie Smith, Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, Miriam Makeba, Aretha Franklin, Janis Joplin, Joni Mitchell, Rickie Lee Jones, Annie Lennox and Kate Bush representing a wide mixture of styles of popular music.

To honour the legacies of these stars, whilst creating new work demands a breadth of experience of different popular musical forms as well as great versatility in performance styles. Clearly Morris and Rmy have the necessary skills.

The Sisterhood is a musical tour de force. Right from the funky opening bars of the Aretha Franklin tribute Sisterhood, with its rousing refrain “We lock arms in sisterhood”, the wall of sound arrangement, and beautiful Jason Rebello piano solo, you know you are in for a musical ride. Bessie Smith gets a potted biography, Couldn’t Be Without, and a lovely horn arrangement courtesy of Byron Wallen. I was impressed by the way Rémy comfortably inhabits the wild man rock guitar of Big Brother and the Holding Company on the Janis Joplin inspired Tomorrow Never Happens. Morris, who once, inexplicably, was passed over by Hollywood to play Joplin in a biopic, a role for which she would have been perfect, is right at home in that rock genre.

The hit single of the album for me would be the Nina Simone homage So Much Love, for which Rémy has written a soul ballad with a smooth groove and Sally Herbert, former fellow-Communard violinist turned orchestral arranger, has provided a lush string arrangement it’s a lovely tune which deserves airplay.

Most of the lives of the women featured are extraordinary. Morris says of On the Jazz Side of the Road, the song she wrote for Rickie Lee Jones: “Her grandfather was a one-legged tap dancer in vaudeville. You couldn’t make that up. She went out for a year with Tom Waits. Dr John got her hooked on heroin. She was influenced by Van Morrison and she was hitching her way round America aged 12. It’s all in this song….”

Then comes a complete change, Rimbaud of Suburbia, Morris’s homage to Kate Bush whom she links to Rimbaud – both started their creative lives as young teenagers. There are guest appearances from Orphy Robinson on vibes, David Coulter on jaws harp, some appropriately electronic drums from Martyn Barker (echoes of Peter Gabriel in there somehow) and a dreamy pop string arrangement from Italian cellist Enrico Melozzi, with whom Morris has played over many years.

I am on more familiar territory with the next track, a homage to one of my favourites, Joni Mitchell. Nice details in this one something of a Tom Scott period feel, Patrick Clahar has a lovely solo, another set of strings from Melozzi, and the repeated line “Joni of starlight”.

And so the variety continues with, in my opinion the other hit single of the piece, the Billie Holiday tribute Junk in my Trunk. It’s a gentle jazz/hip hop number underpinned by drummer Westley Joseph, with a plethora of guitars and some gorgeous brass from Quentin Collins.

A classy piece dedicated to Annie Lennox For the Voiceless celebrates both her music, and her work for human rights charities, before the tribute to Miriam Makeba brings the album (and the live show too) to a rousing close, with the huge sound of the Soweto Gospel Choir, Morris’s voice weaving in and out, above and below.

Morris and Rémy play with their usual bandmates Henry Thomas on bass guitar, Tim Cansfield on guitar, and new member Jason Rebello on piano and keyboards. The band is augmented by many starry friends and colleagues and there are guest appearances from Courtney Pine and Dominic Miller too, arrangements from The Chaps, with sterling work from backing singers Gina Foster and Beverley Skeete.

Rémy’s guitar runs through the album, though so chameleon-like is his playing that you may need to check the sleeve notes, as I did to see who was playing which guitar bits on Miss Makeba (answer Tony Rémy – all guitars). His range is astonishing, playing every kind of guitar, including bass, but also keyboards, and even occasionally drums and drum programming.

What ties this varied collection of songs together is Morris’s magnificent voice. As John Fordham writes in the liner notes, on first hearing Morris in the 1980s: “Sarah Jane’s sound caught the raw majesty of legends like Janis Joplin and Nina Simone, and her octave-vaulting contralto range stretched from sonorous reverberating low tones to a searingly soulful falsetto.” https://londonjazznews.com/2024/03/14/sarah-jane-morris-the-sisterhood/

Sisterhood

Monday, April 1, 2024

Charles Mingus - Incarnations

Styles: Post Bop, Jazz
Year: 2023
Time: 42:49
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 98,3 MB
Art: Front

( 8:27) 1. Bugs (Take 3)
(11:50) 2. R&R (Take 1)
( 4:50) 3. All The Things You Are (All)
( 6:58) 4. Reincarnation of a Love Bird (2nd Version Take 1)
(10:41) 5. Body And Soul (Take 6)

A collection of recordings culled from Charles Mingus' 1960 sessions on the Candid label, 2024's Incarnations is a swinging yet still heady album that finds the bassist bridging the mainstream jazz of the '40s and '50s with the avant-garde post-bop and third-stream explorations he would pursue just a few years later.
https://www.allmusic.com/album/incarnations-mw0004165948

Personnel: Bass – Charles Mingus; Alto Saxophone – Charles McPherson, Eric Dolphy; Bass Clarinet – Eric Dolphy; Drums – Dannie Richmond, Jo Jones; Piano – Nino Bunick, Paul Bley, Tommy Flanagan; Tenor Saxophone – Booker Ervin ; Trombone – Britt Woodman, Jimmy Knepper; Trumpet – Lonnie Hillyer, Roy Eldridge, Ted Curson

Incarnations

Robert Stewart - Nat The Cat: The Music Of Nat King Cole

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 51:38
Size: 118.2 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz, Post bop
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[5:54] 1. Nat The Cat
[4:31] 2. Make Her Mine
[8:31] 3. Harlem After Midnight
[4:05] 4. Blue Gardenia
[5:22] 5. Somewhere Along The Way
[3:54] 6. A Blossom Fell
[2:27] 7. That Sunday, That Summer
[3:59] 8. The Sand And The Sea
[2:46] 9. I Don't Want To See Tomorrow
[6:03] 10. The Ruby And The Pearl
[4:00] 11. Mona Lisa

Sure, Robert Stewart's blowing is derivative. If you close your eyes, you might think that this loving and beautiful tribute to the music of Nat "King" Cole is being performed by a quartet featuring Ben Webster. That's how good Stewart can be. The tenor saxophonist plays in a classy style, his big, round, woozy sound a joy for late-night listening. It is strange listening to these tunes how many of them seem familiar even though the melodies seem only vaguely recognizable. Stewart appreciates the melodies, and respectfully follows a traditional path of head-solos-head in mining each of them. The results fully satisfy, as Stewart's warm sound can be effortlessly cut with a butter knife. His tight rhythm section of pianist Ed Kelly, bassist Mark Williams, and drummer Sly Randolph is a perfect match, with the pianist, in particular, offering invigorating, swinging solos. (Kevin Stewart and Robert Stewart III appear on piano and bass, respectfully, on a couple of tracks.) For those who enjoy that old-time religion, Stewart is a perfect fit. ~Steve Loewy

Nat The Cat: The Music Of Nat King Cole

Clark Tracey Quintet - Introducing Emily Masser

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2024
Time: 51:52
File: MP3 @ 128K/s
Size: 48,0 MB
Art: Front

(7:04) 1. A Bitta Bittadose
(6:30) 2. A Sleepin' Bee
(7:34) 3. Nothing Like You
(8:59) 4. The Man I Love
(3:37) 5. Passarim
(7:53) 6. So Near, So Far
(6:04) 7. Then I'll Be Tired Of You/A Time For Love
(4:09) 8. Suddenly Last Tuesday

Drummer and composer Clark Tracey (born 1961) first came to the attention of jazz audiences in the 1980s as a member of a series of groups led by his late father, the much missed pianist and composer Stan Tracey (1926-2013).

Although never as prolific a writer as Stan the younger Tracey has composed some strong tunes of his own and has been leading his own groups since 1986. Initially he played with members of his jazz peer group, such as trumpeter Guy Barker, saxophonist Jamie Talbot and pianist Steve Melling, but in recent years his bands have seen him nurturing the talents of younger musicians, earning him something of a reputation as “The British Art Blakey”. Among those to have passed through the ranks of Tracey’s groups are pianists Zoe Rahman Kit Downes and Rueben James, vibraphonist Lewis Wright and bassist Daniel Casimir, all now well established names on the UK jazz scene and beyond.

Tracey’s latest quintet features three more rising stars, saxophonist and flautist Alex Clarke, bassist James Owston and vocalist Emily Masser, whose singing is highlighted throughout the course of this new release.

Clarke is a composer and bandleader in her own right and released her debut album “Only A Year” in 2022, a recording that features her leading a stellar quartet of highly experienced musicians, pianist David Newton, bassist Dave Green and Tracey at the drums. The album is reviewed elsewhere on these web pages, as are a number of Clarke’s live performances. She is a musician who has become a very popular and in demand presence on the UK jazz scene.

A graduate of the Jazz Course at Birmingham Conservatoire bassist James Owston has been a member of previous Clark Tracey groups and I have also heard him performing with saxophonist Xhosa Cole, trombonist Dave Sear and drummer Gaz Hughes. Owston is a former BBC Young Jazz Musician of the Year finalist and is a superb technician, an immaculate time keeper and an inspired bass soloist.

Vocalist Emily Masser is a new name to me, and probably to many other jazz listeners, but the twenty year old has attracted the attention and approval of such jazz luminaries as fellow vocalists Claire Martin and Liane Carroll in addition to Tracey himself. It’s astonishing to think that she is still a student at London’s Guildhall School of Music, where she is studying both singing and saxophone. If the Masser name sounds familiar it is because she is the daughter of the respected saxophonist Dean Masser, a musician who has also appeared on the Jazzmann web pages as a member of groups led by drummer Gaz Hughes and fellow saxophonist Alan Barnes. Dean has also worked with Clark Tracey, hence the connection.

The quintet is completed by pianist Graham Harvey, a more mature musician whose exemplary playing has been heard in groups led by saxophonists Derek Nash, Dave and Judith O’Higgins and bassist Geoff Gascoyne, among others. He has also worked with vocalists Wilma Baan and Stacey Kent.

I think I’m correct in believing that this is the first of Tracey’s solo releases to feature a vocalist quite so prominently, but Tracey is no stranger to working with singers, having appeared on numerous releases by both Claire Martin and the late, great Tina May (1961-2022).

The new album commences with “A Bitta Bittadose”, written by the US alto saxophonist and former Jazz Messenger Bobby Watson. It is introduced by a highly impressive passage of unaccompanied double bass from Owston, who eventually establishes a groove that the rest of the quintet respond to, the full band kicking in and swinging ferociously with Masser’s soaring wordless vocals surfing the wave with a remarkable maturity and confidence. The singer then hands over to Clarke for the first instrumental solo, the saxophonist exhibiting a similar assurance and fluency. Masser returns for another bout of bravura scat singing, powered by Tracey’s crisp and authoritative drumming, the cymbals positively fizzing. Harvey, the band’s other ‘old head’ delivers a concise piano solo before Masser’s voice is featured for a third time, but it’s not just about the singer, this attention grabbing opener is also a superb group performance.

Masser displays a different side of her talent on the song “A Sleepin’ Bee”, composed by Harold Arlen and with lyrics written by the author Truman Capote. A gently lyrical introduction features the duo of Masser and pianist Harvey before the full band come in and lift the tempo, taking the music into more familiar bebop territory. Masser sings with an impressive maturity on the quiet intro before displaying great fluidity and adventurousness on the swooping up-tempo sections. Clarke and Harvey again excel as instrumental soloists, with each stretching out expansively as Tracey and Owston continue to supply a swingingly propulsive rhythmic groove. The leader is then featured with a series of volcanic, Blakey-esque drum breaks before Masser returns to steer things home with a brief vocal reprise.

The Bob Dorough / Fran Landesman song is delivered above a rolling, undulating groove with Masser’s audacious interpretation of the lyrics augmented by the melodic instrumental soloing of Harvey, Clarke and Owston.

Introduced by Harvey at the piano and with Clarke featuring on powerful, Coleman Hawkins influenced tenor sax the quintet’s surprisingly robust and daring arrangement of the Gershwin song “The Man I Love” has attracted a good deal of critical acclaim, and rightly so. The song is performed at an uncharacteristically fast pace, with Masser delivering yet another stunningly adventurous vocal that includes her own ‘vocalese’ lyrics, these additional words putting a witty and very contemporary slant on the proceedings. The piece also incorporates instrumental features for Clarke and Tracey, the latter contributing a dynamic drum solo, in part underpinned by Owston’s bass. Harvey then takes over with a dazzling piano solo before Masser returns to sing joyously, reprising the lyrics, embarking on a brief but dazzling scat episode and adding her own ‘ vocalese’ coda. Her singing has been compared to that of that great British jazz export Annie Ross, and on the evidence of this performance it’s easy to see why.

The Antonio Carlos Jobim song “Passarim” sees Masser delivering the English language lyric in an unusual arrangement that features the sounds of Clarke on flute, Harvey on Rhodes and Tracey doubling on drums and backing vocals.

“So Near, So Far”, written by drummer Tony Crombie and saxophonist Benny Green, incorporates extended instrumental solos from Harvey and Clarke plus a series of exchanges between Owston and Tracey, with Harvey in the role of mediator. Masser is featured at the start and towards the close, but this is a piece that places the main focus on the instrumentalists, and is none the worse for that.

There’s a greater emphasis on Masser’s vocals on “Then I’ll Be Tired Of You”, a song written by E.Y. Harburg and Arthur Schwartz. The opening verses feature voice and piano only with the singer continuing to impress in this exposed format. Brushed drums, double bass and smoky tenor sax are then added, with Clarke’s warmly emotive solo demonstrating that, like Masser, she has the maturity to handle a ballad convincingly.

The album ends as it began with a hard bop inspired burst of energy in the form of “Suddenly Last Tuesday”, a tune written by the late, great Scottish trumpet player Jimmy Deuchar (1930-93). Older readers may remember that this piece was the title track of Clark Tracey’s debut solo album, an all instrumental quintet recording released by Cadillac Records way back in 1986. Introduced by the leader’s drums this latest version features Masser’s tongue-twisting, gravity defying wordless vocals alongside exuberant instrumental solos from Clarke on tenor and Harvey on piano, all powered along by the volcanic rumble of Tracey’s drums.

“Introducing Emily Masser” may be a showcase for the emerging vocal talent that is Emily Masser but it’s also a great band recording with all the members of the quintet contributing hugely to the success of the album. Masser, Clarke and Owston bring a youthful vitality to a set of adventurous arrangements that make these old songs sound fresh and invigorating. Tracey and Harvey also play with an admirable energy, skill and verve, also helping to breathe fresh life into the songs.

Masser impresses both with her technical ability and her emotional maturity and she also impresses as an improviser with her wordless vocals on the first and last tracks. With the quintet scheduled to tour extensively in the UK in support of the album Masser is surely going to win herself a lot of new friends and admirers in the coming months. This album introduces an outstanding new talent who is surely destined to make a big impression on the jazz scene in the years to come. And having heard her often extraordinary singing I’d love to get the chance to hear her on saxophone too.https://www.thejazzmann.com/reviews/review/clark-tracey-quintet-introducing-emily-masser,

Personnel: Clark Tracey – drums, backing vocals, Emily Masser – lead vocals, Alex Clarke – alto & tenor saxes, flute, Graham Harvey – piano, Rhodes, James Owston – double bass

Introducing Emily Masser

Hilary Gardner - On the Trail with The Lonesome Pines

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2024
Time: 47:11
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 109,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:52) 1. Along the Navajo Trail
(3:20) 2. Cow Cow Boogie
(4:08) 3. Call of the Canyon
(3:55) 4. Under Fiesta Stars
(3:30) 5. Silver on the Sage
(3:27) 6. Jingle Jangle Jingle (I Got Spurs)
(5:42) 7. A Cowboy Serenade (While I'm Smokin' My Last Cigarette)
(3:40) 8. Song of the Sierras
(3:41) 9. Along the Santa Fe Trail
(4:14) 10. Lights of Old Santa Fe
(3:27) 11. I'm an Old Cowhand (From the Rio Grande)
(4:08) 12. Twilight on the Trail

It might be hard for the young'uns to believe, but there was a time when movie houses and television screens were filled with westerns. Tales of cowpokes and their trusty horses, outlaws, dogies and tumblin' tumbleweeds were so popular that various sub-genres of westerns flourished as brand extensions. One of these featured the singing cowboy trope, and elevated such figures as Roy Rogers, Tex Ritter and most notably, Gene Autry, to stardom.

The songs they sang were western-ish, not really country, and relied heavily on stock imagery. You do not hear these songs much anymore. In truth, many have not aged well while others seem so distant from contemporary culture that heard again, they can deliver the shock of the new.

Enter Alaska-born vocalist Hilary Gardner, who clearly loves this material and has chosen a program of 12 cowboy songs for her passion project On the Trail with The Lonesome Pines.

The first thing to note is that Gardner presents this material absolutely straight. There is not a hint of condescension or winking postmodernist irony here. Strip away the fringed-vest and sequined costuming and what you have is a program of pop tunes from the 1930s and '40s, many of them with a conventional AABA structure, written by New York or Hollywood composers (Johnny Mercer, Frank Loesser and even Benny Carter are among the tenderfoots represented).

Gardner sings with a lovely, clear tone and a welcome absence of twang. The way her sustained notes ascend into dreamy reverie can recall another daughter of the West, Linda Ronstadt, as well as countless pop vocalists of yesteryear. Jo Stafford comes to mind. She is immensely aided by the sensitive and genre-appropriate work of her band, especially guitarist Justin Poindexter whose clean-toned, baritonal sound immediately establishes the aural mise-en-scène. Noah Garabedian puts some giddy-up into the rhythm from the bass chair and drummer Aaron Thurston has mastered the now-arcane skill of moving a shuffle forward on brushes. Sasha Papernik adds atmospheric accordion on two cuts.

But Gardner is the singing cowgirl star of the session, investing these sometimes corny songs with a care and dignity that would not be out of place in Ella Fitzgerald's landmark Songbooks series.

Like that material, this is largely a collection of love songs, though the sincerest emotion here is often reserved not for a sweetheart back home, but for the Western landscape. These odes to purple mountains and starry skies and a lot of sunsets serve as a reminder that at the time this music was written, the West was as exotic to most of the North American population as Tahiti or Paris.

You do not have to remember the Saturday double features of cheaply produced oaters to relish Hilary Gardner's carefully curated and affectionately performed love letter to the Old and not-so-wild West. Saddle up and enjoy the ride.By John Chacona https://www.allaboutjazz.com/on-the-trail-with-the-lonesome-pines-hilary-gardner-anzic-records

On the Trail with The Lonesome Pines

Sunday, March 31, 2024

Matt Carter Octet - Read Between The Lines

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2023
Time: 62:05
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 142,4 MB
Art: Front

(0:57) 1. Sunny Side
(7:06) 2. Abode
(5:33) 3. They Can't Take That Away From Me
(7:17) 4. Fighting Talk
(8:10) 5. High Germany
(5:51) 6. Girl Talk
(5:57) 7. Hope Song
(6:30) 8. Duke's Mood
(7:24) 9. Like It Or Not
(7:16) 10. Read Between The Lines

For those who like their jazz upbeat and straight-ahead comes this entertaining first studio album from a young British pianist and composer. Matt Carter was still studying at the Royal Academy of Music in London when he began putting together its band members and music, while also backing singers such as Joss Stone and Mica Paris. Though he’s no purist, Carter’s heart clearly lies with purring big bands. His octet (all young) comes with a five-strong brass section, augmented by the guest flute of relative veteran Gareth Lockrane on three cuts.

Among the cover versions is the luscious Girl Talk by Neal Hefti, Count Basie’s arranger, who also composed the Batman theme, while a couple of originals here, Abode and Fighting Talk, sound like theme tunes in search of an action TV series. Another great band leader, Duke Ellington, gets a more ruminative tribute on Carter’s Duke’s Mood, with a blousy trombone solo from Harry Maund.

They Can’t Take That Away from Me is arguably an over-covered item from the Great American Songbook, but Carter’s solo swings delightfully, as does the brass arrangement. More unlikely is a version of the folk tune High Germany, here hauled unceremoniously into the clattering modern age. An auspicious debut. https://www.theguardian.com/music/2023/jul/22/matt-carter-octet-read-between-the-lines-review-an-auspicious-debut

Personnel: Piano – Matt Carter; Bass – Joe Lee; Drums – Luke Tomlinson; Trumpet – Geroge Jefford; Tenor sax – Tom Smith; Baritone sax – Harry Greene; Alto sax – Jonny Ford; Trombone – Harry Maund; Flute – Gareth Lockrane

Read Between The Lines

Joel Harrison - Anthem of Unity

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2023
Time: 50:22
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 116,3 MB
Art: Front

(8:16) 1. Anthem Of Unity
(4:35) 2. Survival Instinct
(5:30) 3. The Times They Are A-changin'
(5:08) 4. Today Is Tomorrow's Yesterday
(7:55) 5. Doxy
(4:21) 6. Migratory Birds
(8:31) 7. Parvati
(6:03) 8. Mohawk Valley Peace Dance

American guitarist/composer Joel Harrison showcases the pragmatic eclecticism that characterizes his music on Anthem of Unity, his 25th album as a leader. The disc features phenomenal rhythmic pulsations engendered by legendary drummer Jack DeJohnette, the adventurous melodicism of saxophonist Greg Tardy, and the extra harmonic color of organist Gary Versace, who, together with Harrison, creates colorful groove-centered tapestries.

Inspired by the influential late guitarist Mick Goodrick, the title track opens the album as an enjoyable concoction of funk, rock and Americana. The anthemic theme reveals a mild temperament but the solos by Tardy and Harrison are pure fire. In a similar tone but with a more incisive post-bop attack, “Survival Instinct” features another otherworldly tenor statement and the excellent underpinning of DeJohnette, who assures that his drum fills shine with a special energy.

Only two of the eight tracks that compose this work weren’t penned by Harrison, namely, “The Times Are A-Changin’” and “Doxy”, by Bob Dylan and Sonny Rollins, respectively. The former, a protest folk tune, waltzes smoothly with jazzy colors; the latter, served with jazz and funk ingredients at the base, boasts its heavenly melody with transparency and a laid-back groovy feel.

“Migratory Birds” develops in five and at some point places a heart-reaching flute at the center in unison with guitar, whereas “Today is Tomorrow’s Yesterday” swings energetically with casual post-bop fling. Before bringing the album to a close with “Mohawk Valley Peace Dance”, a blues rock incursion with a saucy wah-wah guitar solo on top of a dub substratum, Harrison offers “Parvati”, a rousing fusion with a great melodic theme, chromatic shifts, and a drum intro that’s quite interesting to hear.

Versatility abounds in a record that, not reaching the levels of America at War (Sunnyside, 2020), consistently satisfies. https://jazztrail.net/blog/joel-harrison-anthem-of-unity-album-review

Personnel: Joel Harrison: guitar; Greg Tardy: tenor saxophone, flute; Gary Versace: Hammond B-3 organ, piano; Jack DeJohnette: drums.

Anthem of Unity