Saturday, June 1, 2024

Maucha Adnet & Gustavo Bergalli - Unit

Styles: Vocal And Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2005
Time: 42:23
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 97,7 MB
Art: Front

(6:14) 1. Felicidade
(7:35) 2. To Wisdom The Price
(3:42) 3. Por Causa De Voce
(4:15) 4. After The Sun
(4:01) 5. Agua De Beber
(3:55) 6. Minha Saudade
(3:38) 7. So Tinha De Ser Com Voce
(2:58) 8. Chega De Saudade
(6:01) 9. Estate

On this record Jazz Unit collaborates with the Brazilian singer Maucha Adnet. The result is nothing short of great. With her warm, sensual voice Maucha brings out the essence of Bossa Nova to the delight of the listener.

Also featured on this album is Gustavo Bergalli that delivers a striking performance on trumpet/flugelhorn. This recording reflects the level of musicianship that Jazz Unit possesses. Or in the words of Maucha Adnet herself; They are great musicians ... and really captured the "vibe" of Bossa Nova. Check out Jazz Unit's First Cd, Bridges and Yaqui.

MAUCHA ADNET(vo), GUSTAVO BERGALLI(tp,flh), HAKAN ANDERSSON(acc), NICLAS HOGLIND(g), JONAS CASTELL(b), KRISTOFER JOHANSSON(ds,perc).

Unit

Dave Grusin & Lee Ritenour - Harlequin

Styles: Piano And Guitar Jazz
Year: 1985
Time: 46:56
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 107,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:43) 1. Harlequin
(4:59) 2. Early A.M. Attitude
(4:59) 3. San Ysidro
(5:18) 4. Before It's Too Late
(6:09) 5. Silent Message
(5:18) 6. Cats Of Rio
(5:37) 7. Beyond The Storm
(4:03) 8. Grid-Lock
(5:49) 9. The Bird

Harlequin is an album by American pianist Dave Grusin and American guitarist Lee Ritenour released in 1985, recorded for the GRP label. The album reached No. 2 on Billboard’s Contemporary Jazz chart.

Harlequin earned a 1986 Grammy award for Best Arrangement On An Instrumental for “Early A.M. Attitude”. The album also earned Grammy nominations for Best Engineered Recording, Best Instrumental Arrangement Accompanying Vocals, and Best Pop Instrumental Performance
(Wikipedia, https://goo.gl/Ck4b1R).
http://projazz.net/dave-grusin-lee-ritenour-harlequin-full-album/

Personnel: Dave Grusin – keyboards, conductor; Lee Ritenour – guitar; Ivan Lins – vocals; Jimmy Johnson – bass; Abraham Laboriel – bass; Carlos Vega – drums; Harvey Mason – drums
Paulinho Da Costa – percussion; Alex Acuña – percussion

Harlequin

Nat King Cole - Live At The Blue Note Chicago

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 79:04
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 182,4 MB
Art: Front

(0:16) 1. Frank Holzfeind Introduction
(2:30) 2. Little Girl
(3:44) 3. Unforgettable
(3:29) 4. It's Only A Paper Moon
(3:45) 5. Love Is Here To Stay
(3:42) 6. Too Marvelous For Words
(2:34) 7. What Does It Take
(2:34) 8. You Stepped Out Of A Dream
(3:59) 9. Exactly Like You
(4:14) 10. Sweet Lorraine
(3:55) 11. Can't I
(0:09) 12. Band Introduction
(3:30) 13. Calypso Blues
(0:27) 14. Frank Holzfeind Introduction #2
(2:08) 15. Walkin' My Baby Back Home
(3:50) 16. Mona Lisa - Too Young
(2:28) 17. Blue Gardenia
(3:17) 18. Straighten Up And Fly Right
(3:37) 19. Funny (Not Much)
(2:46) 20. Somewhere Along The Way
(2:16) 21. Nature Boy
(3:22) 22. Pretend
(3:52) 23. A Fool Was I
(3:20) 24. If Love Is Good To Me
(2:53) 25. I Am In Love
(2:40) 26. This Can't Be Love
(3:36) 27. Route 66

A great small club performance from Nat King Cole of the sort he never really recorded for Capitol Records, even though this set is right in the middle of his glory days on the label! In some ways, the set hearkens back to Nat's roots maybe no surprise, as he's back in Chicago and the combo here features John Collins on guitar, Charlie Harris on bass, and Lee Young on drums working with Cole to offer up some nicely lean versions of tunes you might know from his fuller, more polished studio versions.

The set's a great reminder that at the core, even during the big years, Nat was still a jazzman at heart as you'll hear on tunes that include "Funny", "Straighten Up & Fly Right", "Nature Boy", "Route 66", "This Can't Be Love", "Somewhere Along The Way", "Mona Lisa/Too Young", "Exactly Like You", "Sweet Lorraine", and "Calypso Blues".© 1996-2024, Dusty Groove, Inc.
https://www.dustygroove.com/item/171853/Nat-King-Cole:Live-At-The-Blue-Note-Chicago-2024-Record-Store-Day-Release

Live At The Blue Note Chicago

Thursday, May 30, 2024

Jack Walrath - Heavy Mirth

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:39
Size: 155,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:12)  1. Bassballs
(8:36)  2. Dark Star
(9:57)  3. It Must Be A Holiday, So Why Do I Have The Blues
(5:14)  4. Cloak And Dagger
(7:36)  5. Anthropoid Epiphany
(8:45) 6. A Long, Slow, Agonizing Descent Into The Depths Of Dispair
(8:17)  7. Road Kill
(6:02)  8. Drifting
(6:56)  9. Blood

Jack Walrath has long been heralded by astute writers who recognize his willingness to experiment in his writing and playing. This 2008 session pairs the veteran trumpeter (who served with Charles Mingus, Ornette Coleman, and as a member of Mingus Dynasty) with tenor saxophonist Abraham Burton, pianist Orrin Evans, Mingus Big Band bassist Boris Kozlov, and the in-demand drummer Jonathan Blake, interpreting nine stimulating originals by the leader. The rapid-fire, insistent theme of "Bassballs" proves immediately infectious.

A spirited Latin undercurrent adds a twist to "Cloak and Dagger," with Walrath's powerful solo as its centerpiece. The jaunty "Anthropod Epiphany" has a humorous flavor, while the breezy "Roadkill" showcases Kozlov's fleet solo and Burton's full-bodied tenor. The loopy "Blood" sounds like something that Charles Mingus might have written. The bluesy "A Long, Slow, Agonizing Descent into the Depth of Despair" features Evans' delicious gospel-inflected piano, with a fine improvised vocal and a bit of playful scatting by TC III. Highly recommended. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/heavy-mirth-mw0001983516

Personnel: Jack Walrath (trumpet); Abraham Burton (tenor saxophone); Orrin Evans (piano); Jonathan Blake (drums)

Heavy Mirth

Alina Bzhezhinska & HipHarpCollective - Reflections

Styles: Harp Jazz
Year: 2022
Time: 62:58
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 144,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:17) 1. Soul Vibration
(6:39) 2. For Carrol
(7:12) 3. Fire
(3:46) 4. Reflections
(5:28) 5. Afro Blue
(6:06) 6. Alabama
(5:01) 7. African Flower
(3:46) 8. Paris sur le toit (instrumental)
(5:40) 9. Sans End
(5:03) 10. Action Line
(3:47) 11. Paris sur le toit (feat. Sanity & Tom They/Them)
(6:08) 12. Meditation

In an inspired piece of programming, London's Barbican Centre presented the then virtually unknown harpist Alina Bzhezhinska and her quartet as one of the support bands on its November 18, 2017 one-nighter A Concert for Alice and John, a show headlined by Pharoah Sanders. It would be an exaggeration to say Bzhezhinska stole the show (see "Pharoah Sanders" above), but she was sensational, offering up fresh readings of Alice Coltrane tunes and a few originals, accompanied by Tony Kofi on saxophones, Larry Bartley on bass and Joel Prime on drums.

The Ukrainian-born, London-based Bzhezhinska went on to release an outstanding debut album, Inspiration (Ubuntu, 2018), made with the quartet which performed at the Barbican.

Reflections, recorded in autumn 2020 and summer 2021, is the follow-up. It follows the same trajectory as Inspiration but adds a few twists. The biggest of these are the expanded personnel and a splash of funk. Kofi and Prime are still on hand, in a collective lineup which also includes Jay Phelps on trumpet, Mikele Montolli on electric bass and double bass, Julie Walkington on double bass, Ying Xue on violin and viola, and Adam Teixeira drums. Vocals and a rap are also featured on two of the twelve tracks. Not everyone plays on every track. There are a couple of trios, a septet, and various points between.

On Inspiration, Bzhezhinska demonstrated that she had oodles of soul, a quality not usually associated with harpists, who can be a tad wafty. She plays to this strength on Reflections, in the manner of her playing, her choice of material and her arrangements. There are hip hop beats, funk beats and backbeats in general, and little straight four/four. The material itself, all of which places great store in melody, is a mixture of originals and tunes written by or associated with John Coltrane ("Alabama" and "Afro Blue"), Alice Coltrane ("Fire," co-written by Coltrane and Joe Henderson), and that other great American harpist, Dorothy Ashby ("Soul Vibration," heard on the YouTube clip below, and "Action Line"). Duke Ellington's "African Flower" is given an exquisite reading. Bzhezhinska produced the sessions, the engineer and mixer was Ben Lamdin, and the sound is clean, warm and uncluttered. Playing time is just over an hour and it flies by. By Chris May https://www.allaboutjazz.com/reflections-alina-bzhezhinska-bbe-records

Personnel: Alina Bzhezhinska: harp; Tony Kofi: tenor saxophone and soprano saxophones (3, 5, 6, 7); Jay Phelps: trumpet (2, 3, 5); Mikele Montolli: electric bass and double bass (1-3, 5, 7-9, 11, 12); Julie Walkington: double bass (4, 12); Ying Xue: violin and viola (1, 8, 11); Adam Teixeira: drums (1-5, 7-12); Joel Prime: percussion (1-3, 5-12); Vimala Rowe: vocal (5); Sanity: rap (11); Tom They: rap (11).

Reflections

Charles McPherson - Horizons

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1968
Time: 38:40
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 88,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:52) 1. Horizons
(8:08) 2. Lush Life
(5:22) 3. Ain't That Somethin'
(5:17) 4. Night Eyes
(6:42) 5. I Should Care
(7:17) 6. She Loves Me

Charles McPherson's fifth Prestige album (which was reissued in 1998 in the Original Jazz Classics series) differs from the first four in that McPherson contributed four of the six originals. Assisted by pianist Cedar Walton, the up-and-coming guitarist Pat Martino, bassist Walter Booker, drummer Billy Higgins and (on three of the songs) the obscure but fluent vibraphonist Nasir Hafiz, the altoist is in typically swinging and boppish form.

Best among his originals are the catchy "Ain't That Something" and "She Loves Me," while "Lush Life" is taken as an alto guitar duet. By playing bop-oriented music in 1968, Charles McPherson could have been considered behind the times, but he was never a fad chaser and he has long had a timeless style. This music still sounds viable and creative decades later.By Scott Yanow
https://www.allmusic.com/album/horizons-mw0000602135#review

Personnel: Charles McPherson - alto saxophone; Nasir Rashid Hafiz - vibraphone; Cedar Walton - piano; Pat Martino - guitar; Walter Booker - bass; Billy Higgins - drums

Horizons

Big Nick Nicholas - Big Nick

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1985
Time: 42:13
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 96,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:53) 1. Body And Soul
(4:54) 2. Somewhere
(5:25) 3. Big Nick
(5:42) 4. Down Home Blues
(4:52) 5. Reverend John Gensel
(4:20) 6. Two For The Road
(4:09) 7. A Flower Is A Lovesome Thing
(4:30) 8. I'm Pulling Through
(4:23) 9. Reincarnation Of Sonny Clark

Tenor saxophonist Big Nick Nicholas was active for more than 50 years without ever receiving consistent recognition or material rewards commensurate with his contribution to early modern jazz. He is usually remembered as the caloric soloist who improvised for 16 bars on Dizzy Gillespie's 1947 recording of "Manteca"; as the honoree of a warmly whimsical portrait recorded by John Coltrane with Duke Ellington in 1962, and as a weathered veteran who enjoyed a brief comeback during the 1980s. George Walker Nicholas was born in Lansing, MI on August 2, 1922 and studied clarinet, saxophone, and piano during the years 1933-1939. Sturdy and large-boned, he was already being called "Big Nick" at the age of ten.

Young George practiced blowing his horn out of doors, playing the same song in multiple key signatures, a tendency inherited from earlier jazz masters and solidly in step with where modern jazz was heading. His father, a saxophonist, mentored him while encouraging his son to sit in with various bands in the Detroit area throughout 1939 and 1940. During adolescence he performed in a group with Thad and Hank Jones, who hailed from nearby Pontiac. In 1942 he gigged with Kelly Martin at Club Congo in Detroit. Nick's primary influence was Coleman Hawkins, and by the time he moved to New York he had settled permanently upon the tenor sax. A regular participant in after-hours blowing sessions at Minton's Playhouse on West 118th Street, he worked with Earl "Fatha" Hines for three months in 1942 and gigged with Tiny Bradshaw for half a year in 1943.

After serving in the Second World War, Nick entered his busiest period, studying music theory and harmony at the Boston Conservatory from 1944-1946, appearing at the Savoy in Boston with pianist Sabby Lewis (who was soon to become that city's first African-American radio DJ), sitting in with the Claude Hopkins orchestra, and recording with vocalist Sarah Vaughan. He was featured on Lucky Millinder's Decca recording "The Spider and the Fly." On January 4, 1947 Nick's tenor anchored a group led by drummer J.C. Heard that backed comedian Dusty Fletcher on his famous recording of "Open the Door Richard"; three days later he recorded with Fats Navarro and Miles Davis in a 15-piece big band led by Illinois Jacquet. During that year, Nick began collaborating with singing trumpeter Hot Lips Page, who featured the saxophonist on "Take Your Shoes Off, Baby" and "La Danse"; they would continue to work together until Page's death in 1954.

Also during 1947, Nicholas joined the Dizzy Gillespie orchestra and was featured on "Manteca" and "Ool-ya-koo." John Coltrane caught Nicholas with Gillespie during this period and was greatly inspired by what he heard. In February 1948, Nick performed live in Paris with Gillespie's big band during a three-month European tour. In 1950 he recorded with pianist Una Mae Carlisle, and began leading jam sessions at Harlem's Paradise Club, where he developed a tendency to sing in what has accurately been termed a "joyous, booming" voice. On September 29, 1951 Big Nick locked horns with Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis on-stage at Birdland with the Miles Davis Sextet, a trailblazing unit that included Billy Taylor, Charles Mingus, and Art Blakey.

A few days later Blakey, Nick, and Lockjaw were in the studio with a sextet led by trombonist Bennie Green, recording the "Tenor Sax Shuffle" and five other titles for Prestige. In 1953, Nick worked with Jonah Jones backing vocalist Timmie Rogers, and in 1955 he collaborated with trumpeter Buck Clayton and vocalist Frankie Laine on the album Jazz Spectacular, taking memorable solos on "Baby Baby All the Time" and "Sposin'." During the mid- and late '50s Big Nick lived on 139th Street in Queens; he played the Club Harlem in Atlantic City, N.J. and was featured soloist with the Shorty Allen band at Elegante in Brooklyn. When Coltrane recorded "Big Nick" with Duke Ellington in 1962, he used the soprano saxophone to invoke the man's personality rather than employing the tenor to emulate his tonality.

While Trane's friendly tribute alerted large numbers of record-buying jazz fans to Nick's existence, his career was more or less on hold during much of the decade. In 1964 he participated in a benefit for the ailing Pee Wee Russell; unfortunately, the same alcoholism that did in the clarinetist in 1969 gradually took its toll on Big Nick. During the '70s he lived and taught in Charlottesville, VA, where in 1979 he held down a regular booking at a country club lounge. This was followed by a successful engagement in New York, a 1980 European tour with John Hicks, Walter Booker, and Jimmy Cobb, and a brief comeback following the release of his first album as a leader in 1984, forever preserving his wonderfully eccentric scat singing on a disarming version of "Corrine Corrina." Big and Warm was followed in 1985 by Big Nick. Neither of these India Navigation albums has received the attention they deserve. George Walker Nicholas passed away in Queens, NY on October 19, 1997.
.https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/big-nick-nicholas

Personnel: Big Nick Nicholas - Tenor Saxophone & Vocals; Billy Hart - Drums; Dave Jackson - Bass; John Miller - Piano.

Big Nick

Tuesday, May 28, 2024

Lisa Fox - Imagine

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2019
Time: 55:01
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 128,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:10) 1. Imagine
(3:14) 2. Route 66
(4:04) 3. Georgia on my mind
(3:58) 4. Autumn leaves
(3:50) 5. Lullaby of birdland
(5:14) 6. Somewhere over the rainbow
(3:31) 7. They can't take that away from me
(4:38) 8. Bewitched, bothered & bewildered
(4:09) 9. Girl from Ipanema
(6:10) 10. Summertime
(4:44) 11. Bye bye blackbird
(6:14) 12. Hallelujah

A spirited singer who covers the Jazz, classical, gospel, and folk genres with aplomb, Lisa Fox currently heads up the Lisa Fox Group based in Seattle.

Having studied classical music at Saint Mary’s College, Lisa then learned gospel from Cora Jackson, Jazz with Jay Clayton at Cornish College of the Arts and later she studied with internationally acclaimed jazz vocalist Greta Matassa. Lisa sang with the Shades of Praise Gospel Choir for many years, toured with them in China, as well as recorded three CDs with the group.

Over the years, Lisa has been under the tutelage of 10 vocal coaches who have each encouraged her to sing from the heart and to form her own style.

Her earliest memory was of singing in the back seat of her parents Plymouth into her pretend microphone, and seeing her parents looking at each other and smiling. It was from that experience with her first attentive audience that she knew she wanted to sing.

“When I perform, I lose myself in the experience. I love that! It is a magical feeling. Singing makes me feel alive and it feeds the soul.”

And after one listen, you’ll feel the same way. Such is the magnanimity of Lisa Fox’s voice.

Over the past decade, Lisa has released three albums including “Watch What Happens”, “Winter Wonder” and most recently “Imagine”. Her talent has afforded the opportunity to perform in many well-known jazz venues in the Seattle area including The Jazz Club, Tula’s, Triple Door, Eagan’s Jazz Jam House, and North City Bistro. Lisa has performed in many other venues, private parties, festivals, conferences and fundraisers. Lisa is a proud supporter of Seattle Women in Jazz and Music 4 Life supporting free instruments for kids in need.
https://lisafoxgroup.com/bio

Imagine

George Robert Jazztet - Remember The Sound

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2008
Time: 54:18
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 124,3 MB
Art: Front

(8:47) 1. Burn
(7:29) 2. Silver Spheres
(9:25) 3. In Step, Out Ahead
(5:48) 4. Bumps
(7:53) 5. Into Thy Hands
(8:10) 6. Hudson Funkshon
(6:45) 7. Remember The Sound

Working with a tentet similar to mid-size bands he's led on his own projects, composer/arranger Jim McNeely has fashioned a musical tribute to the late Michael Brecker that manages to conjure up aspects of the late saxophonist's music and musical personality, without resorting to overt mimicry or pastiche. Led by alto saxophonist George Robert, with faculty from the jazz program he heads at Switzerland's Lausanne Conservatory, the Jazztet negotiates the harmonic and counterpoint-rich music with esprit and élan.

The music references various periods and stylistic aspects of Brecker's career, beginning with the aptly titled "Burn," a flag waver the composer says is inspired by Brecker's many up-up-tempo quartet numbers. But "Burn" is no quartet piece; it's a full-fledged orchestral number with a theme that burgeons into counterpoint and fugue-like contrasts before giving way to Robert Bonisolo's inspired tenor sax and guest Randy Brecker's fiery trumpet solos over restlessly churning horns. "Silver Spheres" recalls Michael Brecker's tenure with Horace Silver, in an undulating tune that could have come from the pianist's book.

High and low horns provide an ongoing ensemble counterpoint on "In Step, Out Ahead," a salute to Brecker's time in Steps Ahead, while the rocking backbeat groove of "Hudson Funkshon" recalls the Brecker Brothers years, complete with a distorted guitar solo and a saxophones/flute soli emulating the sound of the EWI (electronic wind instrument) that Brecker played in that band. Brecker's more spiritual side is remembered in the ballad "Into Thy Hands," featuring Robert's alto and a coda from Mathieu Schneider's flute, and the title tune, a gospel-influenced number with Bonisolo's tenor in the lead interacting with the horns as choir.By George Kanzler https://www.allaboutjazz.com/remember-the-sound-homage-to-michael-brecker-george-robert-tcb-music-review-by-george-kanzler

Personnel: Jim McNeely: composer/arranger; George Robert: alto sax; Robert Bonisolo" tenor sax; Matthieu Michel: trumpet and flugelhorn; Rene Mosele: trombone; Mathieu Schneider: flute; Laurent Wolf: soprano, alto and baritone saxes; Vinz Vonlanthen: guitar; Emil Spanyi: piano and keyboards; Jean-Piere Schaller: electric bass; Marcel Papaux: drums; Randy Brecker: trumpet (1).

Remember The Sound

Ray Obiedo - Sweet Summer Days

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1997
Time: 55:15
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 127,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:39) 1. Casserra
(6:20) 2. Blue Cactus
(4:57) 3. Sweet summer days
(5:32) 4. Cha La Island
(5:47) 5. Juliet
(4:57) 6. Current state
(6:23) 7. Macondo
(6:03) 8. What in the world
(5:37) 9. Coco
(3:56) 10. One wish

It would be easy to peg Ray Obiedo's Sweet Summer Days in the lazy title category, but in this case, the Bay Area guitarist's easygoing approach applies perfectly. That's not to say he's dogging it; this is a tightly produced mix of memorable ballads and gentle, mid-tempo melodies, with subtle hints of the Latin fusion punch that is Obiedo's trademark. It's more like a well-planned vacation from the usual sense of polyrhythmic, Latin-meets-African busyness that previous efforts like Iguana had.

While his usual angle is breaking off the predictable melodic path towards odd metered explorations before returning, here he focuses on getting from A to B with minimal fuss. Less exotic and unique, sure, but the zip in his electric string style (which compares favorably to Steve Laury) is still center stage, and he still enjoys shading in the harmonies with splashes of Latin piano (Peter Horvath), trombone (Jeff Cressman) and sax, EWI and flute (the versatile Norbert Stachel). The title track, a foray into the smooth urban sound sung by Peabo Bryson, doesn't tax Obiedo's chops but is amiable enough. Which seems to be the point of the whole album.
By Jonathan Widran https://www.allmusic.com/album/sweet-summer-days-mw0000024082#review

Sweet Summer Days

Jack Walrath - Unsafe At Any Speed

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:40
Size: 166.3 MB
Styles: Trumpet jazz
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[ 8:53] 1. Happiness Really Is A Warm Puppy!
[ 8:46] 2. Religion
[ 8:06] 3. End The Beguine
[ 8:17] 4. Beauty Is A Dangerous Thing
[ 8:56] 5. Why Not
[ 7:05] 6. Bobby Timmons
[ 6:30] 7. Unsafe At Any Speed
[10:04] 8. What Would I Do Without Her
[ 5:58] 9. They Say His Head Might Have Been Fat, But His Heart Was Even Fatter

'Unsafe at Any Speed' is trumpeter Jack Walrath's sixth album as a leader for SteepleChase and every track is an original composition by the leader. In a stellar career dating back to the mid-60s Walrath's talents have been utilised by everyone from Charles Mingus, Ray Charles, Miles Davis and Quincy Jones to Elvis Costello and Motown records.

Jack Walrath shares his inner thoughts on music and society in his liner notes for 'Unsafe at Any Speed', which makes an interesting read in addition to yet another intriguing recording.

Unsafe At Any Speed

Monday, May 27, 2024

David Kikoski, Eric Alexander - Phoenix Rising

Styles: Piano And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:17
Size: 136,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:01)  1. Phoenix Rising
(5:21)  2. Kik It
(5:48)  3. Wichita Lineman
(7:57)  4. If I Were a Bell
(6:01)  5. Emily
(6:41)  6. Love for Sale
(6:33)  7. My One and Only Love
(7:26)  8. Lazy Bird
(7:25)  9. Willow Weep for Me

Pianist David Kikoski and tenor saxophonist Eric Alexander, among the brightest lights on New York City's jazz scene for more than two decades, have known each other for almost as many years but Phoenix Rising marks the first time they have recorded together. After listening, one observation springs immediately to mind: it's about time. A second premise is that the album swings and dazzles from start to finish but one would expect no less from such masters of the idiom, especially when the session benefits as well from the imposing presence of two more paragons, bassist Peter Washington and drummer Joe Farnsworth. That the level of musicianship is high throughout is also no surprise, as Kikoski and his colleagues have been honing their respective skills for many years as members of New York's elite and are unfazed and self-assured in the face of anything that threatens to impede their progress or disrupt their purpose. In their capable hands, excellence is not so much a goal as a given. After a brief aside, the quartet hastens briskly from the starting gate on "Phoenix Rising," co-written by Alexander and Kikoski, a theme that, in Alexander's words, is "all about Dave exploding back on the scene." Explode he does with a powerful two-fisted solo that precedes an equally emphatic statement by Alexander.

That's the first of no less than four burners on the menu. The others are Frank Loesser's "If I Were a Bell," Ann Ronell's "Willow Weep for Me" and John Coltrane's "Lazy Bird," on which Alexander's scorching solo would easily thaw an iceberg. The group is more laid-back but no less persuasive on the album's less heated numbers: Jimmy Webb's "Wichita Lineman," Johnny Mandel's "Emily" (on which Alexander sits out), Cole Porter's "Love for Sale" (set to a saucy Latin beat) and Guy Wood / Robert Mellin's "My One and Only Love." Alexander's nimble blues, "Kik It," rounds out the well-balanced program. Kikoski takes the first solo again, as he does on almost every number (well, it is his gig), and every solo is a model of tastefulness and technical brilliance. The last (and most lasting) impression is that these are four superior musicians, and that quartets simply can't blend together more seamlessly than this. Everyone listens carefully, responds apace, and enhances the group dynamic. Best of all, the music they have chosen to play is invariably bright and pleasing. Well done, gentlemen. ~ Jack Bowers https://delaware.allaboutjazz.com/phoenix-rising-david-kikoski-highnote-records-review-by-jack-bowers.php

Personnel: David Kikoski: piano; Eric Alexander: tenor saxophone (1-4, 6-9); Peter Washington: bass; Joe Farnsworth: drums.

Phoenix Rising

Kenny Dorham - Kenny Dorham Sings And Plays: This Is The Moment!

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:33
Size: 86,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:04)  1. Autumn Leaves
(2:55)  2. I Remember Clifford
(4:15)  3. Since I Fell For You
(4:11)  4. I Understand
(4:45)  5. From This Moment On
(2:37)  6. This Is The Moment
(5:26)  7. Angel Eyes
(4:29)  8. Where Are You?
(2:40)  9. Golden Earrings
(3:05) 10. Make Me A Present Of You


The release of this recording must have surprised most jazz listeners at the time, for trumpeter Kenny Dorham sings on all ten selections. He had never hinted at any desire to sing previously (although he had sung a blues regularly with Dizzy Gillespie & His Orchestra in the 1940s) and, as it turned out, this was his one and only vocal album; the sales were probably quite a bit less than Chet Baker's records of the period. Dorham had an OK voice, musical if not memorable, but the arrangements for these selections (which utilize his trumpet and Curtis Fuller's trombone, both of which are muted all the time) are inventive and pleasing. The supportive rhythm section is also an asset; pianist Cedar Walton made his recording debut on this album (released on CD via the Original Jazz Classics imprint), which is a historical curiosity. ~ Scott Yanow   
http://www.allmusic.com/album/kenny-dorham-sings-and-plays-this-is-the-moment!-mw0000118945

Personnel: Kenny Dorham - trumpet, vocals; Curtis Fuller – trombone; Cedar Walton – piano; Sam Jones – bass; G.T. Hogan – drums; Charlie Persip - drums

Kenny Dorham Sings And Plays: This Is The Moment!

Hilde Louise Asbjørnsen - A Swing of Its Own

Styles: Vocal, Swing, Jazz
Year: 2023
Time: 55:03
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 126,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:58) 1. Sound Your Horn
(4:21) 2. Desert Song
(5:12) 3. Call Back
(4:53) 4. The Fall
(5:25) 5. Don't Stay for Breakfast
(4:02) 6. My Best Pair
(5:19) 7. Song to a Bird
(3:54) 8. Make Some Shine
(6:28) 9. A Swing of Its Own
(6:16) 10. Birdie Blues
(4:12) 11. Smile

For singer and songwriter Hilde Louise Asbjørnsen, this album with one of Europe's most exciting Swing bands was an urge as natural as breathing. Recorded for a 2020 live gig, she dives headlong into hand-picked songs from her decades-spanning career. Gathering all the threads of inspiration through my years as a songwriter and jazz singer, this is the way they were always meant to be heard.

A Swing of its Own took Hilde Louise back to the beginning, to a time when she was falling in love with jazz and spinning her mother's old jazz records on a turntable. And yet, nostalgia is notably absent here. Rather, the album brings back to life the sheer energy and irresistible pull of this music which first swept the USA and then the rest of the world. Hilde Louise's career has been a long and winding journey, but now, she feels, she has finally come home. And to those willing to open up this music - your heart is sure to follow her to that place, too. By Editorial Reviews
https://www.amazon.com/Swing-Its-Hilde-Louise-Asbj%C3%B8rnsen/dp/B0C8R5RHCY

A Swing of Its Own

Saturday, May 25, 2024

David Kikoski & Eddie Gomez & Al Foster - Presage

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:52
Size: 121,5 MB
Art: Front

(8:12)  1. Hope
(8:34)  2. Blue TImes
(6:16)  3. In the Still of the Night
(5:58)  4. Presage
(8:34)  5. Dirty Dogs
(6:34)  6. I've Got you under my Skin
(4:37)  7. Doorways
(4:03)  8. A Nightingale Sang in Berkley Square

On this early effort, pianist David Kikoski is joined by bassist Eddie Gomez and drummer Al Foster. While Kikoski's use of synthesizers on several cuts dates the material to some degree, there's still some great playing and writing to be heard. There are also historical details worth mentioning: "Dirty Dogs" would later appear on Billy Hart's 1993 album Amethyst, and "Hope," the opening track, would later appear on Al Foster's 1997 album Brandyn (both of these later discs feature Kikoski himself).

In addition to these and three other solid originals, there are also swinging versions of two Cole Porter tunes, "In the Still of the Night" and "I've Got You Under My Skin," and a closing solo piano meditation on "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square." Even though this is far from Kikoski's most mature work, his harmonic wizardry and stunning chops are very much in evidence. ~ David R.Adler http://www.allmusic.com/album/presage-mw0000619575

Personnel: David Kikoski - Piano, Synthesizers;; Eddie Gomez – Bass; Al Foster - Drums

Presage

Stan Tracey Quartet - Under Milk Wood

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1965
Time: 40:47
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 93,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:52) 1. Cockle Row
(3:51) 2. Starless And Bible Black
(3:19) 3. I Lost My Step In Nantucket
(5:03) 4. No Good Boyo
(3:51) 5. Penpals
(4:55) 6. Llareggub
(6:03) 7. Under Milk Wood
(6:50) 8. A.M.Mayhem

The Sunday Times: January 2, 1966: “Three of the top 1965 LP’s which have given me most pleasure are home-produced with Stan Tracey’s Under Milk Wood likely to become a classic in anyone’s musical language”.

The Sunday Times: February 29, 1976: “I have unsurprisingly, always considered Dylan Thomas’ “Under Milk Wood” a minor masterpiece. The jazz suite which Stan Tracey wrote eleven years ago, inspired by Thomas’s work, has been likewise hailed. Put the two together, though, and you have a transcending experience of triumphant delight, both moving and joyous…… A superb production which deserves an album of its own”.

These extracts reflect the enthusiasm which I have always felt both for Stan Tracey’s music and Dylan Thomas’s words. The only surprise is that it took the best part of a decade to effect the marriage between music and words. Although BBC2 TV had first presented Donald Houston and the Tracey quartet in Under Milk Wood, it wasn’t until February 1976, when the show took to the road, that I enjoyed the “transcending experience” of hearing it at the New London Theatre and writing about it in The Sunday Times.

That experience is what’s now captured on this album, and to have played a part in ensuring that works of art one has believed in for so long should thereby be available to the widest possible audience is the most satisfying possible outcome for any music writer.

What’s so marvellous about it all? Well. the words of Dylan Thomas came first, of course. Under Milk Wood was written for radio, and although it reads beautifully on paper, only when the words are spoken can its full splendour be appreciated. As a portrait of characters, places and events, in a small Welsh seaside town, it is quite marvellous.

The rich language and imagery which were Dylan’s great gift are abundantly deployed. The quick vignettes of character are masterly. Pomposity is slyly debunked; goodness is gently appreciated; the follies, hopes, loves, desires, failings of the people he deals with are treated with warmest understanding. Dylan can be very funny and very witty indeed about Llareggub (this made-up town name, with its irreverant inversion, was typical of his impish nature) bur he can be so kind and moving too. he loved this place, and the love shines through.

Stan Tracey was in the midst of his long and distinguished sojourn (1960-1968) as the resident pianist at Ronnie Scott’s Club, undoubtedly the most famous jazz mecca in the world, when in 1963 he composed his Under Milk Wood suite to reflect his own feelings about Dylan’s splendid work. Suites of this kind are always suspect: can music ever fully convey the moods and nuances of words? Well Tracey’s certainly did. I Lost My Step In Nantucket, for instance, perfectly brought to life Dancing Williams, crew mate of the erratic old sea captain, Cat. Pen Pals mirrored the warmly comic romance of Miss Jones and Mog Edwards, the two middle aged shopkeepers. The title song, a jazz ballad, was as affectionate and beautiful as Thomas’s own overall vision of his Welsh landscape.

Dylan Thomas, I suppose, needs no advocacy from me to underline his honoured place in modern literature. He has, after all, been an examination subject for years. But Stan Tracey’s position is less acknowledged. It’s worth reminding ourselves that his career in music is now well into its fourth decade. Since he began at 16 as a piano accordionist, has has done so much in and for British music. The highlights have included his stay with the Ted Heath band (1957-1959); his eight years at Scott’s where he accompanied virtually every great jazz artist (and style) under the sun – Ben Webster, Roland Kirk, Sonny Rollins, Anita O’Day, Jimmy Witherspoon etc, etc: his big band, Ellington-influenced, of the late 1960’s.

But this is only part of it. He’s never stopped composing, and literature has often been the inspiration of his suites (Alice In Wonderland, for example, sparked off another). Above all, as he nears 50, Stan has never grown old in his attitudes to music. He continues to experiment, to progress, to attack new barriers, often at cost to himself, since some of his more advanced work has not appealed to those who enjoyed him in a more conventional jazz-trio, suite-composer context. He is one of the finest and most underrated musicians in the world.

This album should establish (or re-establish) his place once and for all in the mainstream of music which is of the highest quality and, at the same time, enjoyable and accessible to a very wide audience of diverse tastes. And his partnership with Donald Houston is a most happy one. Houston it was who originated the role of narrator in the first stage presentation of Under Milk Wood at the Edinburgh Festival, and later in the West End, on Broadway and on television. He is a marvellous actor, and I can think of no one in the world who could match his performance of Dylan’s work.

In this presentation of Under Milk Wood, words and music are perfectly complementary. Sometimes the emphasis is musical, with the playing of Art Themen and Tracey incredibly sympathetic. On other occasions music which is perfect in tone and volume enhances both the words and Houston’s musical voice. From time to time there are, rightly, only the words. And I guess that the finest moments of all are those when Houston’s sensitive readings explain, as it were, the shapes and colours of the music, and vice-versa. An example of this … “Eastern music undoes him in a Japanese minute” declares Houston, leading into the spiky melody of No Good Boyo.

As Tracey’s music and Dylan’s words are, separately, now acknowledged to be outstanding works of their separate kinds, so I believe this marriage of the two, performed with love and inspiration, will achieve that status in the future. It’s a whole world of enjoyment, revelation and entertainment.

© Derek Jewell, Jazz and Popular Music Critic, The Sunday Times of London Recorded in London at the Wigmore Hall May 22, 1976.
https://www.resteamed-records.com/product/under-milk-wood-re-issue-with-donald-houston-download/

Personnel: Stan Tracey (piano); Art Themen (tenor saxophone); Dave Green (double bass); Bryan Spring (drums)

Under Milk Wood

Eric Alexander - Timing Is Everything

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 56:59
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 130,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:32) 1. After the Rain
(7:40) 2. But Beautiful
(6:20) 3. Serenade To A Cuckoo
(4:57) 4. Big G’s Monk
(3:22) 5. Sasquatch
(9:23) 6. Misty
(8:43) 7. Timing Is Everything
(5:12) 8. Evergreen
(5:46) 9. Someone

Black Vinyl 180 GramAlthough Eric has made several appearances on my label: One For All - Invades Vancouver, Michael Weiss - Persistence, The Heavy Hitters, Xaver Hellmeier - X-Man in New York and my record O Sole Mio, he has never appeared as a leader until now. When I started Cellar Live in 2000, recording a musician the stature of Eric Alexander was a dream Eric enjoyed long stints with some pretty incredible record labels over the years and I wasn't ready to play in the BIG leagues at that point.

But many incredible things have happened at the label since that time. And now that the opportunity to record him has come up, I am able to jump at the chance. Timing Is Everything is an appropriate title for both this recording, but, as Eric explains, for life in general. When you're playing jazz music, he continues, you can play all the right notes, but if you don't time them correctly, it's nothing...and when you do time them correctly, it's everything.

Similarly, when talking about life, Eric states, one of the few things that a human being possesses is their time. You don't own your life. You don't own your car. You only own your time. In order to have a fulfilled life, you have to protect your time and your timing. Timing is Everything because you can't get time back.By Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Timing-Everything-Black-Vinyl-Alexander/dp/B0CR1HPK9J

Personnel: Eric Alexander - tenor saxophone, producer; Rick Germanson - piano; Alexander Claffy - bass; Jason Tiemann - drums

Timing Is Everything

Conrad Herwig - The Latin Side of McCoy Tyner

Styles: Trombone Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 59:40
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 138,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:52) 1. African Village
(5:29) 2. Passion Dance
(6:06) 3. Four by Five
(6:23) 4. Walk Spirit, Talk Spirit
(5:31) 5. Mellow Minor
(6:07) 6. Search for Peace
(5:44) 7. Peresina
(6:52) 8. Fly with the Wind
(5:56) 9. Blues on the Corner
(4:36) 10. Reaching Fourth

Trombonist Conrad Herwig has a great way of reworking older jazz tunes with a bold Latin Jazz vibe a project he's done with the music of Miles Davis, Wayne Shorter, and others and which here really explodes with a great soulful sensibility on the music of McCoy Tyner! Given the oft-modal, inherently rhythmic quality of most of Tyner's music, the match is a perfect one carried off here with a core group that's really wonderful Craig Handy on tenor and baritone, Alex Norris on trumpet, Bill O'Connell on piano, Ruben Rodriguez on bass, Robby Ameen on drums,and Camilo Molina on congas plus guest piano from Eddie Palmieri on just one track (despite his name being large on the cover!)

Conrad is the core throughout, and his trombone solos have a way of linking the modes of older Latin greats like Barry Rogers with the hardbop and spiritual jazz currents in the music. Titles include "Fly With The Wind", "Passion Dance", "Reaching Fourth", "Blues On The Corner", "Mellow Minor", and "Search For Peace".
© 1996-2024, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/175960/Conrad-Herwig:Latin-Side-Of-McCoy-Tyner

The Latin Side of McCoy Tyner

Friday, May 24, 2024

Bridget Maynes - In The Key Of Swing 1

Styles: Vocal Jazz, Swing
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:38
Size: 137,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:29)  1. Four
(3:47)  2. Come Fly with Me
(5:27)  3. I Was Telling Him About You
(3:15)  4. Lullaby Of Birdland
(5:08)  5. Stay Awhile
(3:20)  6. That Old Black Magic
(4:36)  7. Never Let Me Go
(4:04)  8. Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My B
(4:36)  9. Girl Talk
(5:05) 10. Falling In Love With Love
(3:46) 11. Almost Like Being In Love
(5:44) 12. My Dreams Of You
(3:52) 13. I Just Found Out About Love
(2:22) 14. The Song Is You

It's finally here. It has been 10 years since the release of "In The Key Of Swing" so we decided it was time for our newly released CD "In The Key Of Swing 2.". This CD is a dynamic blend of jazz & swing tunes.

Phoenix born & raised Bridget Maynes has finally released the long awaited CD "IN THE KEY OF SWING 2!" With her pianist/arranger Auggie Mendoza,they have created a newly released dynamic jazz/swing CD which includes such tunes as "You Hit The Spot", "I'll Remember April" & beautifully sung jazz ballads such as "Guess Who I Saw Today" & "If I Had You". https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/bridgetmaynes2?


Paul Desmond, Ed Bickert, Don Thompson, Jerry Fuller - Live At Bourbon Street

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1975
Time: 79:26
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 181,8 MB
Art: Front

( 7:18) 1. Wendy
(11:23) 2. Wave
( 8:59) 3. Things Ain't What They Used to Be
( 9:40) 4. Nancy
( 9:28) 5. Manha de Carnaval
( 7:18) 6. Here's That Rainy Day
(10:35) 7. My Funny Valentine
( 7:09) 8. Take Five
( 7:32) 9. Line for Lyons

When the Dave Brubeck Quartet broke up in 1967, Paul Desmond worked sporadically playing live dates, probably in part due to his substantial royalty income from his hit composition "Take Five." When Jim Hall was unavailable to play with Desmond in Canada, he recommended guitarist Ed Bickert who, like Hall, is a brilliant accompanist with the kind of musical E.S.P. that Desmond had with Brubeck.

Bassist Don Thompson (who is also a fine pianist and vibraphonist) and drummer Jerry Fuller round out this solid quartet, which worked off and with Desmond when he played in Canada during the remainder of his life. These sessions, drawn from several nights at Bourbon Street in Toronto during the fall of 1975, are intimate performances enjoyed by attentive audiences. The selections include songs that Desmond had recorded with Brubeck or Gerry Mulligan, along with tunes he had played on his own records.

Desmond's cool tone and witty quotes are a treat throughout the album. The toe-tapping blues "Things Ain't What They Used to Be" showcases Bickert's lyrical playing, along the subtly swinging work of Thompson. Desmond playful interpretation of "Nancy (With the Laughing Face)" is typical of his recorded work. The most surprising track is the unusual setting of "Take Five," which takes an exotic route near the beginning of the leader's solo, with a droning vamp underneath him.

First released as a two-LP set by Horizon/A&M in 1976, the album wasn't in print long due to the demise of Horizon, though frustrated collectors welcomed the 2000 Verve CD edition, which not only fit all of the music onto a single disc, but added a previously unissued take of Gerry Mulligan's "Line for Lyons" along with the original liner notes by Desmond and his good friend, journalist Doug Ramsey, plus extensive updated notes by Carl Woideck.

This is easily the cream of the crop of Paul Desmond's post-Brubeck recordings as a leader and rivals the studio albums he recorded with Jim Hall; it is unfortunate that Desmond was diagnosed with lung cancer around the time this recording was first issued in 1976, which cut short a brilliant career far too soon. By Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-paul-desmond-quartet-live-mw0000061025#review

Personnel: Paul Desmond, alto sax; Ed Bickert, guitar; Don Thompson, bass; Jerry Fuller, drums.

Live At Bourbon Street