Saturday, June 15, 2024

Gerry Mulligan Quartet & Bob Brookmeyer - Paris

Styles: Saxophone And Trombone Jazz
Year: 1954
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:58
Size: 142,3 MB
Scans:

(3:38) 1. The Lady Is a Tramp
(4:58) 2. I May Be Wrong
(6:25) 3. Gold Rush
(3:35) 4. Makin' Whoopee
(4:16) 5. Laura
(4:25) 6. Soft Shoes
(4:36) 7. The Nearness of You
(6:04) 8. Bark for Barksdale
(4:18) 9. Bernie's Tune
(4:31) 10. Five Brothers
(3:14) 11. Lullaby of the Leaves
(4:50) 12. Limelight
(3:45) 13. Come out Wherever You Are
(3:16) 14. Moonlight in Vermont


Personnel: Baritone Saxophone – Gerry Mulligan; Bass – Red Mitchell; Drums – Frank Isola; Trombone – Bob Brookmeyer

Dianne Reeves - The Grand Encounter

Styles: Vocal Jazz 
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:26
Size: 116,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:01)  1. Old Country
(3:23)  2. Cherokee
(8:12)  3. Besame Mucho
(3:46)  4. Let Me Love You
(4:54)  5. Tenderly
(6:06)  6. After Hours
(3:27)  7. Ha!
(5:24)  8. Some Other Spring
(5:08)  9. Side By Side
(4:59) 10. I'm Okay

This CD could have been titled Finally! Dianne Reeves has long had the potential to be the top female jazz singer, but so many of her previous recordings were erratic as she skipped back and forth between idioms without committing herself. However, after years of flirting with jazz and being seemingly undecided whether she would rather be a pop star, she at last came out with a full jazz album in 1996, and it is a gem. The supporting cast on the ten selections (which feature different personnel on each cut) is remarkable and everyone gets a chance to play: trumpeters Clark Terry and Harry "Sweets" Edison, altoists Phil Woods and Bobby Watson, tenorman James Moody, trombonist Al Grey, harmonica great Toots Thielemans (on "Besame Mucho"), pianist Kenny Barron, bassist Rodney Whitaker, and drummer Herlin Riley.

In addition, Joe Williams shares the vocal spotlight on "Let Me Love You" and a touching version of "Tenderly," Germaine Bazzle sings along with Reeves on "Side by Side," and a rendition of Charlie Ventura's "Ha!" has a vocal group consisting of Reeves, Bazzle, Terry, Moody, and the young Kimberley Longstreth. Other highlights include Nat Adderley's "Old Country," "Some Other Spring," and "Cherokee." Despite the heavy "competition," the leader emerges as the star of the set due to her beautiful voice and highly expressive singing. This highly recommended CD is the Dianne Reeves release to get. By Scott Yanow
https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-grand-encounter-mw0000081516

Personnel: Vocals – Dianne Reeves, Germaine Bazzle, Joe Williams , Kimberley Longstreth; Vocals, Tenor Saxophone – James Moody; Vocals, Trumpet – Clark Terry ; Alto Saxophone – Bobby Watson , Phil Woods; Bass – Rodney Whitaker; Drums – Herlin Riley; Harmonica – Toots Thielemans; Piano – Kenny Barron; Trombone – Al Grey ; Trumpet – Harry "Sweets" Edison

The Grand Encounter

Spike Robinson - Spike Robinson Plays Harry Warren

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 79:02
Size: 180.9 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz, Mainstream jazz
Year: 2005
Art: Front

[5:46] 1. This Heart Of Mine
[7:44] 2. At Last
[8:41] 3. The Boulevard Of Broken Dreams
[5:27] 4. There Will Never Be Another You
[7:12] 5. I Had The Craziest Dream
[4:01] 6. Shadow Waltz
[6:20] 7. Serenade In Blue
[4:55] 8. This Is Always
[5:20] 9. The More I See You
[3:25] 10. Chattanooga Choo Choo
[4:32] 11. Cheerful Little Earful
[6:11] 12. I Only Have Eyes For You
[4:22] 13. Lulu's Back In Town
[4:59] 14. I Wish I Knew

This CD reissues tenor saxophonist Spike Robinson's 1981 Discovery LP of the same name and adds six additional selections recorded in 1993. The Discovery date was recorded when Robinson was already 51 and found him returning to jazz after a 30-year absence from full-time activity. The cool-toned tenor (heard with pianist Victor Feldman, bassist Ray Brown, and drummer John Guerin) proved to be very much in his prime, a new type of Young Lion who brought back the Four Brothers' sound.

The 1993 selections with pianist Pete Jolly, bassist John Leitham, and drummer Paul Kreibich are on the same high level. Since the underrated Harry Warren was one of the top songwriters of the 1930s and '40s, Robinson had plenty to choose from on this tribute set. His high-quality repertoire includes "This Heart of Mine," "There Will Never Be Another You," "Serenade in Blue," "Lulu's Back in Town," and even "Chattanooga Choo Choo." A highly recommended and swinging program.By Scott Yanow

Spike Robinson Plays Harry Warren

Carol Albert - Fly Away Butterfly

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2017
Time: 43:33
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 100,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:09) 1. Fly Away Butterfly
(4:09) 2. Awakening
(4:23) 3. On My Way
(4:20) 4. Across The Sky
(4:28) 5. One Way
(3:59) 6. Mas Que Nada
(4:23) 7. Chasing Waterfalls
(5:24) 8. Never Thought It Would Be This Way
(4:09) 9. Transition
(4:09) 10. Fly Away Butterfly (Reprise)

Every so often, an artist comes along that makes you reimagine the possibilities of music. With Fly Away Butterfly
 Album, Carol Albert delivers a seminal and sizzling contribution to the artistic sphere, blending lively melodies with thoughtful and refined arrangements. Every song presents not just different sounds but soundscapes in which Carol invites us to inhabit and explore.

But this album is also one of healing, as Carol lost her husband in 2014, and she turned back to composing music after some years off from her Recording Career. After her “Christmas Mystique” production, she started on this work, tackling the personal issues she has faced and this time, head on. Throughout the opus, we hear, quite beautifully, about Carol’s stages of recovery and healing. And by so doing, she has given us something for each one of us to hold onto.

The title track “Fly Away Butterfly” evokes an ambient groove enlivened by joyful, even mirthful flutes, the soundtrack to a butterfly flying away, from this place to that. Indeed, the track is symbolic, as Carol’s voice is intimate and distant, the delicate balance of love and loss that we all must face during life. “Awakening” flows and builds with an ostinato groove, lilting flutes, and well-placed piano touches. The song is wrought with anticipation and playful exchanges that resolve to the tonic chord, a brilliant display of compositional prowess and acumen. In fact, an encounter with a Blue Morph butterfly in Costa Rica prompted her to write the tune. Perhaps unwittingly, Carol’s has given us a track for our times, to be “awakened” to the tension-and-release, call-and-response of life. That after the very worst times comes recovery and healing. And Carol’s album, listened from start to finish, can be part of a veritable music healing, enriching your soul with creative and artistic ferment.

“On My Way” is even more explicit, an anthem for our times. It’s a song of new beginnings. Her lyrics “On My Way/To a better day/I’ll spread my wings and fly away…” connote not just escapism but realism. In truth, sometimes you need an army of one to get the job done. You have to take things into your own hands. At least with Carol’s horn-drenched tune, you’ll have a musical accompaniment as you face towards the future. “Across the Sky” begins with a Coltrane-like incandescent solo with dreamy, even distant vocals. With her vocal performance, Carol has her audience hanging on every note with anticipation. “One Way” is a song about love and combines some of her favorite elements such as acoustic piano, nylon string guitar, and a hint of Latin percussion. The original version of “One Way” appears on Al Jarreau’s 1988 hit album Heart’s Horizon. “I have always loved the song and thought creating and performing a new arrangement of it would be the perfect celebration of his artistry and life”

In “Mas Que Nada,” the Latin rhythms pulse with fervor and give a stylistic panache to this track, as if you were listening at a dark-lit club with fire-red dancing. What’s more, Carol’s voice displays a richness and versatility of the highest order, with beautiful incantations and vocalizations. As an admirer of Latin music, Carol had me taken with this song. In a word, stunning.

“Waterfalls are all about that instant change in forward momentum, and can be powerful metaphors,” said Carol when describing the track “Chasing Waterfalls.” Her rolling piano propels the momentum of the song back-and-forth, ultimately advancing it without compunction so that we’re immersed, maybe even drenched in a sonic landscape of groove in the province of jam! “Never Thought It Would Be This Way” is a personal introspection into life when things turn out differently than expected. And ain’t that the truth.

The lyrics however aren’t bitter but bittersweet, informed by a life of love and loss. “Transition” brings us back into the ambient world with watercolor harmonies and kaleidoscopic timbres cascading throughout the number. It’s about moving into new realms. And with the last track “Fly Away Reprise,” Carol sends the message that there must be a final letting go. 

In this album, we hear it all, and we are better for it. Carol Albert has given us a musical testimonial borne out of the crucible of loss. We hear both resilience and grace in her music. By giving so much of herself in this music, we not only hear her, but she creates a space for us to join her on the road ahead. By Kabir Sehgal https://www.allaboutjazz.com/news/fly-away-butterfly-new-album-by-carol-albert/

Fly Away Butterfly

Friday, June 14, 2024

Lauren Henderson - La Bruja

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2022
Time: 37:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 88,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:15) 1. Perfidia
(2:55) 2. Veinte años
(2:40) 3. La bruja
(2:54) 4. Fría
(5:24) 5. Así
(2:55) 6. Febrero hums
(3:07) 7. La sitiera
(5:37) 8. Amistad
(3:24) 9. Deseo
(2:56) 10. Veinte años ii
(2:42) 11. Silencio

There may be many singers more famous even lionised than Lauren Henderson. But not a single one in recent memory can beguile the senses with the emotional seduction of her vocals, delivered almost continuously sotto voce. In fact it’s almost as if she doesn’t sing as much as she casts a spell on the hapless listener with her voice. How appropriate therefore, that her album should be entitled La Bruja.

Miss Henderson plays the role of la bruja to the hilt. But she turns her “inner-witch” into a good-spellbinding one. The thematic centrepiece [of sorts] of her proverbial witchcraft, then, is of her interpretations of the iconic song by María Teresa Vera – Veinte Años – which is interpreted three times with three different singularly metaphorical ways bringing the meaning of the original lyric written by the celebrated Miss Vera into the modern-day ethos which is characterised by the newly sinister discrimination and objectifying of women in the developed world.

Vocally Miss Henderson is in luxuriant form on this, her ninth album; her dark-tinted contralto is as edible as pure, bitter chocolate in all its luxury assortments. This is an enormous mitigation for the commonality in the lyrics that accompany the songs, making the continuous heartache and the profound density of the [lyrics and meanings of the] repertoire bearable, something that would otherwise be hard to endure for a half-hour-plus album.

Miss Henderson has also written four of these songs and what is most remarkable about this fact is not so much that they are made to fit the overall emotional ethos of [the rest of] the album, but that they, in fact, have an uncannily symbiotic relationship emotionally – indeed artistically with the rest of the repertoire, as if they are cut from the same proverbial cloth itself. This is a stroke of genius, one that belongs to Miss Henderson alone and to one else.

The recording features a superb instrumental cast – many of the names relatively unfamiliar to those outside the absolute inner circle of musicians haunting the studios and clubs of New York City [and other music hubs of the USA]. But some names do stand out: Joel Ross, who contributes the radiance [in sound and style] and pliant virtuosity of the vibraphone to La Bruja, Fría and Amistad, and John Chin, a pianist who has been woefully underrecognised for his ability to transform the songfulness of everything he plays on this album.

No matter the various degrees of the relative obscurity of the cast of musicians each proves himself to be completely attuned to the vision and ingenious artistry of Miss Henderson. Each more than pays his own [proverbial] way in this music. Indeed musician contributes to bringing a gleaming triumphant lustre to the elementally pained lyricism of this unforgettable album by the prodigiously-gifted Lauren Henderson.
https://latinjazznet.com/reviews/albums/featured-albums/lauren-henderson-la-bruja/

Musicians – Lauren Henderson: vocals; Joel Ross: vibraphone [featured – 3, 4, 8]; Nick Tannura: guitar [featured – 1, 2, 5-7, 10]; Gabe Schneider: guitar [featured 9, 11]; Sean Mason: piano [featured – 3, 4, 8]; John Chin: piano [featured – 1, 5, 7, 9, 11]; Eric Wheeler: bass [featured – 1, 3-5, 7-9, 11]; Joe Dyson: drums [featured 1, 3-5, 7-9, 11]

La bruja

Spike Robinson - A Real Corker

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:20
Size: 135.8 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1995
Art: Front

[ 7:15] 1. This Love Of Mine
[ 5:11] 2. That Old Devil Called Love
[ 5:34] 3. It Seems To Me I've Heard That Song Before
[ 6:19] 4. I Remember You
[ 6:39] 5. Under A Blanket Of Blue
[ 6:15] 6. Fools Rush In
[ 6:32] 7. I Don't Want To Walk Without You
[10:31] 8. The Nearness Of You
[ 5:00] 9. I'm Just Breezin' Along With The Breeze

Tenor saxophonist Spike Robinson has been quite consistent throughout his career. Influenced by Stan Getz and Zoot Sims, Robinson is virtually the last of the "Four Brothers" tenor stylists. For his typically joyful and swinging session, the veteran tenor is accompanied by guitarist Louis Stewart (who contributes a complementary second solo voice), bassist Red Mitchell and drummer Martin Drew. Although all nine songs are standards, most are not played all that often, and the treatments are fresh and enthusiastic. Highlights include "This Love of Mine," "I Remember You," a lengthy version of "Nearness of You," and "Breezin' Along With the Breeze." Well worth searching for.By Scott Yanow

A Real Corker

Rebirth Brass Band - Do Watcha Wanna

Styles: Jazz Funk
Year: 2008
Time: 53:35
File: MP3 @ 128K/s
Size: 54,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:35) 1. I Feel Like Funkin' It Up (Extended Mix)
(3:14) 2. All Blues
(4:41) 3. Shotgun Joe
(5:01) 4. My Song
(6:25) 5. When the Saints Go Marchin' In
(4:02) 6. Four Leaf Clover
(4:20) 7. Bye and Bye
(3:43) 8. Back Home Again In Indiana
(4:02) 9. All of Me
(4:04) 10. You Can't Fly If You're Too High
(8:21) 11. Do Whatcha Wanna

Another recent release by the fine contemporary marching ensemble The Rebirth Brass Band. This one has a little more funk and R&B influence, but still has plenty of undiluted, classic New Orleans numbers.By Ron Wynn https://www.allmusic.com/album/do-whatcha-wanna-mw0000678328

Do Watcha Wanna

Troy Roberts - Green Lights

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 71:57
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 165,2 MB
Art: Front

( 8:06) 1. Green Lights
( 7:13) 2. The Question
( 5:56) 3. By Your Side
( 6:52) 4. Solar Panels
(10:07) 5. Harry Brown
( 9:21) 6. Jive Dumpling
( 9:04) 7. Up to No Good
( 6:31) 8. The Scotsman's Ballad
( 8:13) 9. Stretch Armstrong
( 0:30) 10. Soundcheckin'

There is an abundance of listenable music on Green Lights, the album from New York-based tenor saxophonist Troy Roberts his sixteenth as leader in sixteen years. Clearly, he must be doing something right.

That "something" includes playing graceful and eloquent tenor, mustering admirable sidemen for this quartet date, and focusing on largely agreeable music (Roberts wrote all of the album's ten generally likable songs). The sidemen in question are guitarist Paul Bollenback, bassist John Patitucci and drummer Jimmy Macbride. No guest artists, simply Roberts and rhythm, which is all that is needed to carry the day.

As leader and composer, much of the album's allure rests on Roberts' shoulders. While there is no questioning his competence at either task, neither is there sufficient cause based on what is presented here to raise him above a crowded field of contemporaries who have similar goals in mind. Comparisons aside, Roberts is simply quite good at what he does and that should be good enough to please most listeners.

The leader's comrades are exceptionally talented and responsive, lending the quartet a tight and synchronous vibe. Paticucci is metronomic, as always, while MacBride blends power and sensitivity to get the job done. Bollenback, meanwhile, coaxes several esoteric sounds from his guitar, none of which is unseemly or out of place. And to ice the cake, each of them is an accomplished soloist.

Roberts'themes are for the most part soft-flowing and sober, with an emphasis on burnished and tasteful sound. No flag-wavers here, with the possible exceptions of "Solar Panels" and "Stretch Armstrong," which turn up the heat while allowing Roberts and the others to flex their impressive chops. Another outlier is the chimerical "Harry Brown," on which the group veers off the beaten path for a few moments of more exploratory blowing before returning safely home. After "Stretch," the session ends with thirty seconds of light-hearted "Soundcheckin.'"

In sum, Green Lights is another very good recording by the talented Troy Roberts and his dexterous teammates, and well worth one's time.By Jack Bowers
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/green-lights-troy-roberts-self-produced/

Personnel: Troy Roberts - tenor saxophone, compositions; Paul Bollenback - guitar; John Patitucci - acoustic bass; Jimmy Macbride - drums

Green Lights

Wednesday, June 12, 2024

Lyn Stanley - Interludes

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2015
Time: 58:41
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 136,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:03) 1. How Long Has This Been Going On
(3:33) 2. Just One Of Those Things
(4:37) 3. Black Velvet
(4:23) 4. More Thank You Know
(4:31) 5. Boulevard Of Broken Dreams
(5:26) 6. Whole Lotta Love
(3:28) 7. Last Tango In Paris
(5:09) 8. Don't Explain
(2:58) 9. Nice 'n Easy
(5:13) 10. The Island
(3:53) 11. It's Crazy
(4:47) 12. In A Sentimental Mood
(3:15) 13. I Was A Little Too Lonely
(3:18) 14. I'm A Fool To Want You

Vocalist/producer Lyn Stanley has established herself as a foremost stylist of the Great American Songbook. That is no mean feat. The sheer amount of vocal music made each year around the Songbook is impressive. It is too bad that the quality of a great many of those recordings is not equally impressive. Stanley's two previous recordings, Lost in Romance (A.T. Music, LLC, 2013) and Potions: From the '50s (A.T. Music, LLC, 2014), have been an evolving prelude to the present. "How Long has This Been Going On," the opener for Interludes demonstrates Stanley's command of the standard.

But it is not the jazz standard that is special about Interludes. Stanley addresses two more recent compositions: "Black Velvet," released by Alannah Myles in 1989 and Led Zeppelin's "Whole Lotta Love," from Led Zeppelin II (Atlantic, 1969).

Lyn Stanley takes on the most white-hot anthem of the carnality of youth. She does so unflinchingly. There is little to be nostalgic about young love once you've learned what you are doing. And that is Stanley's point with covering this song. Arranged by guitarist John Chiodini the nominal blues-rock monolith becomes a steamy rumba propelled by bassist Chuck Berghofer and drummer Paul Kreibich, whose deft tom-tom work amps up the performance's already heady sensuality. Then, there is Stanley, who produced this recording, ensuring that a proper mixture of Bobby Gentry's "Ode to Billy Joe," Peggy Lee's "Fever," and Dusty Springfield's "Son of a Preacher Man" are admixed into one grown up vision of love, sex, and the whole shooting match.

Think if George Gershwin had composed "Summertime" with J.J. Cale and you may begin to get the idea. Stanley must be applauded for taking this gigantic artistic chance. So many "jazz" covers of contemporary material end so badly. In this case, not so. This is a special release in every way. By C. Michael Bailey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/interludes-lyn-stanley-at-music-llc-review-by-c-michael-bailey

Personnel: Lyn Stanley: vocals; Mike Garson, Bill Cunliffe: piano; Chuck Berghofer: bass; Ray Brinker, Paul Kreibich: drums; John Chiodini: guitar; Cecilia Tsan: cello; Brad Dutz: percussion; Bob McChesney: trombone; Hendrik Meurkens: harmonica; Steve Rawlins: finger snaps.

Interludes

Eliane Elias - Dance Of Time

Styles: Vocal, Brazilian Jazz
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:20
Size: 129,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:17)  1. O Pato
(3:50)  2. You're Getting To Be A Habit With Me
(5:20)  3. Copacabana
(4:59)  4. Coisa Feita
(5:15)  5. By Hand (Em Maos)
(3:48)  6. Sambou Sambou
(4:59)  7. Little Paradise
(6:33)  8. Speak Low
(3:20)  9. Samba De Orly
(5:38) 10. Na Batucada Da Vida
(4:22) 11. An Up Dawn
(3:55) 12. Not To Cry (Pra Nao Chorar)

Way back in 1991, Brazilian-born pianist Eliane Elias opened Illusions, her debut solo album, with a tune called "Choro." It offered a swinging distillation of the musical form that has been at the heart of her life-long study of samba. Since then, she's revisited her musical heritage over and over again, wedding modern jazz to post-1960 Brazilian jazz and MPB. In the process, she's developed an instantly identifiable sound as a pianist. Dance of Time follows 2015's fine Made in Brasil, a set that relied most heavily on bossa nova. Teaming again with collaborative producers Steve Rodby and husband Marc Johnson, Elias is accompanied by a stellar rhythm section: bassist Marcelo Mariano, guitarist Marcus Teixeira, drummer Edu Ribeiro, and percussionists Marivaldo dos Santos and Gustavo di Dalva on most of this set. Recorded in Brazil and New York, the date also includes a wonderful guest list that includes Take 6's Mark Kibble, Randy Brecker, Mike Manieri, Joao Bosco who adds his voice and guitar to a lovely reading of his own "Coisa Feita" and Toquinho.

The program contains readings of killer sambas such as "O Pato," Joao Donato's eternal "Sambou Sambou," the wonderful "Samba de Orly" (co-composed by Toquinho, who also sings on it, Vinicius De Moraes and Chico Buarque), and Ary Barroso's "Na Batacuda da Vida." Each of these numbers remains faithful to the originals, but Elias' arrangements, pianism, and breezy, syncopated vocals graft them so thoroughly onto swinging, straight-ahead, modern post-bop, it's difficult to accept they weren't always in the jazz fakebook. But she goes further. She injects Harry Warren's slippery pop blues "You're Getting to Be a Habit with Me," with a slow choro backbeat. She also transforms Kurt Weill's and Ogden Nash's sultry "Speak Low" into simmering, polished modern jazz with a fantastic multi-tracked backing vocal by Kibble and great soloing from Brecker.

The best tunes here, however, are her own. "By Hand ("Em Maos") offers another backing vocal from Kibble, as Elias stitches samba onto bossa in a lithe, sensual groove. "An Up Dawn" is a vehicle for her intricate, syncopated chord voicings on her instrument's middle and lower registers, which create an interlocking dance of samba, tango, and bluesy ragtime. "Not to Cry (Pra Nao Chorar)" is a co-write with Toquinho who lends his guitar and weathered yet effective vocal in a duet. He began the tune in 1978 as a vehicle (for Elias) with the working title "Eliane." He completed it for this album with participation from the tune's muse. Their singing voices are an elegant yet earthy study in contrasts, while his lilting guitar chords pace her keyboard embellishments. Its tenderness sends the set off with a sweet whisper. Dance of Time is inspired, deftly musical, and truly accessible to a wide range of listeners from jazz to pop to Brazilian music. It's virtually flawless.By Thom Jurek http://www.allmusic.com/album/dance-of-time-mw0003020224

Personnel: Eliane Elias (vocals, piano).

Dance Of Time

Dmitry Baevsky - The Composers

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:07
Size: 122,9 MB
Art: Front


(6:30) 1. Ojos de Rojo
(6:12) 2. Gaslight
(5:52) 3. Mister Chairman
(5:29) 4. To Whom it May Concern
(7:37) 5. Self Portrait (of the Bean)
(6:15) 6. Swift As the Wind
(4:17) 7. Smoke Signal
(6:02) 8. Three Wishes
(4:49) 9. Tears Inside

Personnel: Dmitry Baevsky: alto saxophone; Peter Bernstein: guitar; David Hazeltine: piano; John Webber: bass; Jason Brown: drums.

The Composers

Spike Robinson - Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:26
Size: 142.9 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1986
Art: Front

[5:12] 1. Love Walked In
[7:20] 2. Talk Of Thw Town
[5:32] 3. Some Time Ago
[5:27] 4. For You, For Me, For Evermore
[8:56] 5. Lover Come Back To Me
[8:03] 6. Ghost Of A Chance
[7:51] 7. Shadow Of Your Smile
[4:58] 8. April Showers
[9:03] 9. Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most

Spike Robinson's sessions are usually pleasant, casually swinging, and musically proficient, and this quartet outing isn't any different. Robinson explores ballads, mid-tempo standards, and originals with a steady, big tone and full sound. He doesn't try anything too intricate, sticking close to the melody and then adding some embellishments and slight alterations. The backing group featuring Ted Beament, Peter Ind, and Bill Eyden follow the same formula. ~Ron Wynn

Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most

Tuesday, June 11, 2024

Lauren Henderson - Conjuring

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2023
Time: 44:50
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 102,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:51) 1. Spells
(5:12) 2. That Old Black Magic
(3:36) 3. Conjuring
(4:18) 4. Es Magia
(4:04) 5. Coercion
(5:21) 6. Day Dream
(5:40) 7. Potions
(3:34) 8. Amuleto
(5:05) 9. It's Magic
(3:05) 10. I Wish You Love

It is not really a stretch to discern the fact that Lauren Henderson with her smoky, dark vibrato is in the process of revealing a shapeshifting musical persona, inadvertantly positioning herself in the steamy spotlight as the Empress of Noir. And as Miss Henderson continues to be propelled on the upward arc of a spectacular parabolic artistic trajectory she draws [justifiably, in my view] parallel [close enough really] to no less a legend than Marlene Dietrich, the Queen of Noir from another era.

However, on the album she calls Conjuring, Miss Henderson has carved a niche of sorts for herself. She plumbs the depths of her Pan African-Caribbean-American heritage. [For the record, Miss Dietrich plumbed the dark side of wartime Germany of the late-30’s and 40’s]. Miss Henderson also draws strength from the spirit world and makes music as if pulling spells out of the burning cauldron of her dark and spellbinding voice, to seduce you into her world of love-potions.

Miss Henderson’s voice is monotonal and tremulous, which is unlike Miss Dietrich’s, which is almost monotonal and flat, sans tremolo. Both vocalists are, however, highly seductive [in their own way], and when she [Miss Henderson] holds notes interminably, with her teary vibrato she turns herself into a rare songbird, and quite irresistible.

Magic may be the theme and the overall metaphor and because of her distinctive vocal style, Miss Henderson turns these songs [a judicious mix of originals and standards] quite literally, into mystical essays in the art of musical theatre. Her voice is like an acoustic blooms in the dark. It brings every song to flower, often redolent of the golden radiance of the vibraphone on which Joel Ross performs to perfection. Everything here is luminescent and even as the rumbling contrabass of Eric Wheeler, which coaxes fat, round and dark but iridescent notes from his magnificent instrument.

Miss Henderson sings songs such as Spells, Coerción, Daydream and I Wish You Love with aching luminosity as Miss Henderson sings them with fine legato and just enough to the words to make you fall prey to their bittersweetness. Every aspect of thematic sadness is amplified, to brings characters to life and bring you to tears. As spellbindingly dark and shadowy as Miss Henderson wants you to imagine her world, by breathing her wispy spirit into the songs she frees you from their sadness with exquisitely classical pathos.

While the songs speak to Miss Henderson in an incredibly special way, it is remarkable that she can share perhaps even impose her mystical worldview on ‘love’ and ‘loss’ with every member of her musical entourage. As a result, each of the musicians, having imbibed the singer’s artistic vision and interiorized the music, perform with sensitive and idiomatic brilliance.
https://thatcanadianmagazine.com/reviews/albums/lauren-henderson-conjuring/

Musicians – Lauren Henderson: vocals; Joel Ross: vibraphone; Eric Wheeler: contrabass; Joe Dyson: drums; Gabe Schneider: guitar [4, 5]; Nick Tanura: guitar [7, 9]; Sean Mason: piano [1 – 3, 6, 8, 10]; John Chin: piano [4, 5, 9].

Conjuring

Kool&klean - Volume XI

Styles: Smooth Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 41:10
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 96,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:51) 1. I Know That Look
(3:37) 2. Ride Like the Wind
(3:58) 3. Spellbound
(4:05) 4. One of a Kind
(3:43) 5. Flow with Me
(3:39) 6. Beyond the Dreams
(3:32) 7. Breathless Without You
(3:29) 8. Bask in the Pacific
(3:45) 9. Temptation
(3:57) 10. Time Will Tell
(3:28) 11. Every Now & Then

Multi-instrumentalist and producer Konstantin Klashtorni is one of the most popular musicians in the field of smooth jazz. Browsing the list of top sellers you will certainly find most of his albums there. He is known by his projects Kool&Klean, Chillaxing Jazz Kollektion, Love Suggestions, eJazz Artistry and Smooth Jazz. Furthermore he has released three compilations packed with the best pieces in his opinion: Best Of Chill Jazz I, II and III (2019). An overwhelming creative force. Now he has announced the release of Kool&Klean Volume XI
https://smoothjazzdaily.wordpress.com/2024/05/20/koolklean-volume-xi/

Volume XI

Shorty Rogers - The Swingin' Nutcracker

Styles: Swing
Year: 1960
Time: 39:19
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 90,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:34) 1. Like Nutty Overture (Finale)
(2:13) 2. China Where? (Tea Dance)
(4:05) 3. Overture For Shorty (Overture In Miniature)
(3:34) 4. A Nutty Marche (Marche)
(5:30) 5. Blue Reeds (Reed Flute Blues)
(3:02) 6. The Swingin' Plum Fairy (Dance Of The Sugar Plum Fairy)
(3:06) 7. Snowball (Waltz Of The Snowflakes)
(2:47) 8. Six Pack (Trepak)
(3:30) 9. Flowers For The Cats (Waltz Of The Flowers)
(2:59) 10. Dance Expresso (Coffee)
(2:54) 11. Pass The Duke (Pas De Deux)

Once again, it's that time of year to announce my choice for induction into the JazzWax Vintage Holiday Album Hall of Fame. This year marks the Hall's 15th season and one of JazzWax's oldest traditions.

This year, let's welcome Shorty Rogers's The Swingin' Nutcracker, a hip and happening original interpretation of Tchaikovsky's music. You'll find the album here.

The Nutcracker Suite was first performed in 1892 as a two-act ballet choreographed by Marius Petipa and Lev Ivanov. George Balanchine updated The Nutcracker in 1953, which had its premiere by the New York City Ballet on February 2, 1954, at Manhattan's City Center of Music and Drama.

CBS first televised Balanchine's Nutcracker, on Christmas Day of 1958. In 1959, the first stereo LP album set of the complete ballet, with Ernest Ansermet conducting the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, appeared on Decca Records in the U.K. and London Records in the U.S. The New York City Ballet moved to the New York State Theater at Lincoln Center when it opened in April 1964 and performed its first Nutcracker there on December 11, 1964.

Four years earlier, two major jazz bands recorded jazz versions of the Nutcracker. Why not, since by then Broadway musicals such as My Fair Lady, West Side Story and South Pacific were being given the jazz and big band treatment. On May 3, 1960 Shorty Rogers began recording his Nutcracker interpretation in Los Angeles for RCA. On May 26, Duke Ellington began recording his version for Columbia in New York. Billy Strayhorn wrote six of the arrangements and Ellington penned three. It's unclear whether Columbia had been tipped off about what Rogers was doing or whether the two labels' A&R chiefs had the same idea at the same time.

Either way, both albums were released during the holiday season of 1960. Ellington's version became the bestseller while Rogers's languished and disappeared for decades. I've always preferred Rogers's version. His interpretive score is inventive, daring and packs lots of swinging punch. Ellington's, by contrast, is pretty, but for me, it's wooden and plods along. The only delights come from the soloists. Rogers's rendition, by contrast, engages and has a strong passing gear. [Photo above of Shorty Rogers] By Marc Myers
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/news/shorty-rogers-the-swingin-nutcracker/

The Swingin' Nutcracker

Scott Hamilton, Ken Peplowski & Spike Robinson - Groovin' High

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1992
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:13
Size: 150,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:52)  1. Blues Up And Down
(5:06)  2. You Brought A New Kind Of Love To Me
(7:31)  3. That Ole Devil Called Love
(5:08)  4. Shine
(7:30)  5. The Goof And I
(7:00)  6. What's New
(7:14)  7. I'll See You In My Dreams
(8:27)  8. Groovin' High
(5:42)  9. Body And Soul
(6:37) 10. The Jeep Is Jumpin'

Fans of jam sessions and tenor battles will definitely want this CD. Tenors Scott Hamilton, Ken Peplowski and Spike Robinson (constantly pushed by the brilliant rhythm section of pianist Gerry Wiggins, guitarist Howard Alden, bassist Dave Stone and drummer Jake Hanna) take turns raising the temperature on such viable devices as "Blues Up and Down," "Shine," "I'll See You In My Dreams" and "The Jeep Is Jumpin'." Robinson (easily the oldest of the trio of tenors) gets a slight edge and generates the most heat, but the saxophonists actually complement each other quite well. A consistently exciting set.
By Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/groovin-high-mw0000077010

Personnel: Scott Hamilton (tenor saxophone); Ken Peplowski (tenor saxophone); Spike Robinson (tenor saxophone); Howard Alden (guitar); Gerald Wiggins, Gerry Wiggins (piano); Jake Hanna (drums).

Groovin' High

Sunday, June 9, 2024

Glenn Zottola, Chick Corea - The Legend & I

Styles: Trumpet And Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:21
Size: 125,0 MB
Art: Front

( 9:50) 1. But Not For Me
( 3:57) 2. Crystal Silence
( 5:14) 3. Autumn Leaves
( 3:46) 4. Z-Mother Test Project
( 5:33) 5. Skylark
( 5:38) 6. Moog 1 Arp Project
( 2:32) 7. You Go To My Head
(12:01) 8. Gliden Not Haydn
( 5:46) 9. Bonus Track - Crystal Silence

There have been several musical tributes to the late great Armando Anthony "Chick" Corea since his untimely passing in February, 2021, mostly from fellow musicians. However, The Legend and I is an intimate musical portrait from LA multi-instrumentalist Glenn Zottola who just happened to be one of Corea's best long-time personal friends. As Zottola affirms "He was my best friend and is dearly missed, but I know he will continue to create as that was his relentless purpose in life." The album features nine previously unreleased tracks of music in which both Corea and Zottola collaborate in laying down fresh new interpretations of familiar standards, four Corea originals and two versions of Corea's classic electronic "Crystal Silence."

Zottola plays the trumpet, his preferred instrument, on five of the nine tracks on the album, while performing on tenor and alto saxophones on the balance of the tunes. The pianist documents his talents on the piano, keyboards, marimba, bass, programming and even drums on "Autumn Leaves." Other musicians gracing this tribute include bassist Avishai Cohen and drummer Adam Cruz. There is one particular track in which the legend does not appear, and that is on the second version (bonus track) of "Crystal Silence," arranged by guitarist Romero Lubambo who plays the guitar and is accompanied by Pamela Driggs on vocals, singing the lyrics penned in 1972 by Neville Potter, another close friend of Corea.

Though he is gone but not forgotten, Corea's music now lives on forever and this homage, while including a somewhat personal touch, actually affirms that his incredible music now belongs to us all. Zottola's warm trumpet and saxophone voice is a perfect vehicle for expressing Corea's music. Zottola also stated that, in his opinion, Corea was the "greatest artist of the 20th century." Well, I believe that Corea would have argued with that conclusion; after all, he was around for 20 years in the 21st century.By Edward Blanco https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-legend-and-i-glenn-zottola-and-chick-corea-self-produced

Personnel: Glenn Zottola: trumpet; Chick Corea: piano; Avishai Cohen: bass; Adam Cruz: drums; Romero Lubambo: guitar; Pamela Driggs: voice / vocals.

Additional Instrumentation: Glenn Zottola: tenor saxophone, alto saxophone; Chick Corea: keyboards, programming, marimba, bass, drums; Romero Lubambo: programming.

The Legend & I

John Law's Re-Creations - Many Moons

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2023
Time: 73:07
File: MP3 @ 128K/s
Size: 67,5 MB
Art: Front

( 6:50) 1. Clair de Lune
( 7:16) 2. Smoke on the Water
( 2:22) 3. Cavatina, solo piano intro
(10:48) 4. Cavatina (theme from The Deerhunter)
(10:38) 5. Fly Me to the Moon
( 5:11) 6. U Can't Touch This
( 7:29) 7. Falling in Love Again
( 6:49) 8. Moondance
( 4:56) 9. All You Need is Love
( 4:10) 10. Blowin in the Wind
( 2:54) 11. Moon River, solo piano intro
( 3:37) 12. Moon River

John Law started classical piano aged four and performed first in public at six. After winning an Open Scholarship he studied piano and composition at the Royal Academy of Music, London, where he won prizes for piano playing. Despite then winning an Austrian government scholarship to study in Vienna with the pianist Badura-Skoda, and receiving encouragement from an early classical influence, pianist Alfred Brendel, he turned to jazz in 1986, forming his first group ATLAS, a mainly freely-improvising trio with Paul Rogers, bass and Mark Sanders, drums.

From 1986 to 1996 John concentrated more on the experimental end of jazz, particularly in his association with the South African drummer Louis Moholo, with the Jon Lloyd Quartet and with his own quartet. The John Law/Louis Moholo Duo recorded the acclaimed CD em>The Boat Is Sinking, Apartheid Is Sinking (Impetus 19322), appeared on British radio and toured extensively in the UK, Germany, Holland, Belgium, France and Canada, appearing at many major festivals. The Jon Lloyd Quartet appeared on British radio, made three acclaimed CDs, the last for Hat Hut called By Confusion, and played at festivals, including the 1995 FMP Festival, Berlin. With his own small groups John recorded and toured in the UK, Germany, Holland, Belgium, Austria, Italy, Russia, Lithuania and Belarus, including many festivals. A later quartet, formed 1993, with Paul Dunmall (saxophones), Barry Guy (double-bass) and Louis Moholo, called Extremely Quartet, toured the UK and appeared to great acclaim at the 1998 Nickelsdorf Festival, Austria. They released the CD Extremely Quartet (Hat Hut CD6199) in 1997. John was also involved occasionally during this period with the Evan Parker Quartet. One-off collaborations also included the Dedication Orchestra, a duo performance with the pianist Keith Tippett and a London Festival concert in a septet with David Murray and Chico Freeman.

While John Law was exploring the more radical and freely improvised areas of jazz he also began a series of solo CDs which were to lead him back to an exploration of his classical roots. The four-CD series Chants (Cornucopia, 1993), Talitha Cumi (FMR, 1994), Pentecost (FMR, 1996) and The Hours (FMR, 1997) Thanatos (FMR, 1997) was based on plainchant and, as well as jazz, explored the history and techniques associated with classical piano as well as introducing certain harmonic elements derived from early and mediaeval music. The CDs received outstanding reviews around the world. Concentrating on this music, John gave concerts in the UK in concert halls, churches and universities, and appeared at major festivals in London, Le Mans and Clusone.

From 1996, moving away from the freer end of jazz, John Law began to be more involved with straighter jazz and composition. He formed the trio with Tim Wells (bass) and Paul Clarvis (drums, percussion). This group recorded four critically-acclaimed CDs, one of them, The Onliest, exploring the music of Thelonious Monk. They toured the UK and appeared at festivals in England and France. Later, the drummer Dave Wickins came into the trio and this group gave concerts in the UK and Germany.

In 2000 John created the project Abacus, featuring US drummer Gerry Hemingway and, with Jon Lloyd and Tim Wells also included, this group became the continuation of the Jon Lloyd Quartet, performing both John Law's more radical compositions as well as material by Jon Lloyd. This quartet recorded the acclaimed CD Abacus (hatOLOGY) which received two awards from the French magazine Jazzman, one awarded for the year 2001. The group toured the UK in 2000, appearing at the Bath International Festival.

In 2001, continuing to develop his own approach to the jazz language, John Law formed The Moment Band with his trio and featuring the British saxophonist Tim Garland. The quartet recorded the outstandingly acclaimed CD The Moment (FMR) and toured the UK in 2001. With his trio (with Dave Wickins and now Alec Dankworth on bass) and with featured soloists (Julian Siegel, Martin Speake, Julian Nicholas) John Law undertook, in 2002, the Monk 'n' Junk Tour in the UK, contrasting the compositions of Thelonious Monk with the standard repertoire. A CD of this material appeared on the label ASC in 2006.

2002/3 saw John working in two completely different areas. Returning to more radical, open music, John started a collaboration with the German drummer Klaus Kugel, appearing together at the International Vilnius Festival with the Lithuanian soprano saxophonist Petras Vysniauskas in a triumphant concert to a packed Vilnius Philharmonic Hall and later touring the UK with him in a European quintet including Jon Lloyd and the bass clarinetist Michel Pilz, as well as appearing with him in a quartet at the Portuguese festival in Coimbra. At the same time, moving in the opposite direction into more accessible territory, John worked in two new duos: Songs, with the alto saxophonist Martin Speake, exploring some of their favorite compositions by other people, including arrangements of classical pieces by Ravel, Tchaikovsky and Mahler and in a two piano duo with the pianist Jason Rebello, opening their concerts with Bach and closing with Ravel's Bolero.

2004 started with John performing Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue (the jazz band plus strings version) to a sellout audience at the Wiltshire Music Centre and performing in Vienna with the Austrian vibraphone player and composer Flip Philipp. In June John performed, in a trio with Jon Lloyd, Law's large composed and improvised piece South, to accompany a Frome Festival performance of the epic 1914 black and white silent film of the same name. Later that year saw two major projects: John Law's European Quartet UK tour In Extremis, with Tim Wells and featuring, from France, François Corneloup (baritone and soprano saxophones) and Eric Échampard (drums), including a performance at the Bath Festival and for Radio Three and, in the Autumn, the culmination of several years' work and planning: the 12-piece large ensemble classical/jazz crossover project Out Of The Darkness. This UK tour, funded by a major Arts Council Touring Grant, featured a quartet of John, Andy Sheppard (saxophones), Chris Laurence (bass) and Paul Clarvis (drums/percussion) within a classical ensemble of eight instrumentalists, including some from the London Sinfonietta and the tour featured new works by John Law, including a major new work: Out Of The Darkness. Music from this tour appeared in 2006 on the label Slam.

In 2005, following on from their Vienna concert in 2004, John organized the UK tour Monk And Beyond for an Anglo Austrian quartet with Flip Philipp, the Austrian drummer Christian Salfellner and the British bass player Dave Goodier. The music contrasted Monk-inspired compositions by Flip and John with performances of classic Monk tunes.

At the end of 2005 John Law and Jon Lloyd began the duo project Mimesis, recording the CD Mimesis - 10 Choreographies for Soprano Saxophone and Piano, which appeared on ASC in 2006. John also completed, in December 2005, his classical performance diploma in piano, gaining distinction.

February 2006 saw the start of an important new project: the John Law/Sam Burgess/Asaf Sirkis Trio. John began working with Asaf (drums) and Sam (bass) in 2005. In 2006 the trio recorded, at the Italian studio Artesuono, their first album: The Art Of Sound Volume 1, which appeared in May 2007 on 33 Records. This trio (also with Yuri Goloubev on bass) worked in the UK and Europe, playing at clubs and festivals, to brilliant acclaim.

In November 2007 John was commissioned to compose and perform a large-scale work to accompany the silent film classic The Last Laugh by F.W. Murnau, for the Bath Film Festival. John Law has appeared at over fifty different festivals worldwide and produced 25 CDs. In 2000 he founded the CD label Cornucopia Recordings and Distribution.
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/john-law/

Many Moons

Tatiana Eva-Marie - Djangology

Styles: Vocal, Gypsy Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 60:03
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 139,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:04) 1. Douce Ambiance
(5:18) 2. Nuages
(5:29) 3. Swing 39
(3:03) 4. Dinette
(5:21) 5. Rêverie
(5:33) 6. Caravan
(3:28) 7. Troublant Boléro
(4:08) 8. Porto Cabello
(3:15) 9. Swing 42
(5:06) 10. Insensiblement
(4:39) 11. Sweet Chorus
(3:31) 12. Lady Be Good
(5:02) 13. Fleur D'ennui
(1:59) 14. Brick Top

Tatiana Eva-Marie Returns with a New Project Celebrating Guitarist Django Reinhardt, the Inventor of Gypsy Jazz.

Tatiana Eva-Marie emanates creativity her vintage flair, tousled locks and enchanting vocals are evidence enough. The Swiss-born singer grew up surrounded by creatives from musicians to painters and poets. Her career is wonderfully rich in color – and the self-professed ‘6-hour sleeper’ has certainly been busy. Four album releases, performances including the Lincoln Center, Birdland and New Orleans Jazz Festival, librettist for the composer, Gérard Massini’s opera, editor-in-chief for Shrine and Vents Magazine… and that’s only skimming the surface. We’re chatting about the new and upcoming projects swirling in the energetic and eclectic world of Tatiana Eva-Marie.

Aptly nicknamed the ‘The Gypsy-jazz Warbler’, by The New York Times no less, Tatiana is most recently celebrating her gypsy jazz origins with the new music release, ‘Djangology’. The song pays homage to the legendary music of Django Reinhardt, the jazz pioneering Romani-French guitarist and composer. Inspired by Django’s musical legacy but uncertain of how she fit in as a singer amidst a sea of jazz guitarists, Tatiana boldly decided “to write (her) own lyrics, tell (her) own stories and reinvent his music in (her) own image.” The project sees Tatiana share insights into her nomadic life with humor and poetic authenticity. Alongside her band, ‘The Avalon Jazz Band’, Tatiana explores Gypsy jazz through original lyrics and musical arrangements and Djangology is only the beginning. The creative spark is set to evolve into an album and series of tours in 2023 and beyond so keep an eye out!

Tatiana’s adoration for jazz music and the Parisian art scene era was an unmistakable match made in heaven for another of her recent creative collaborations - Gérome Barry’s film, ‘Swing Rendez-Vous’. Set for release in January 2023, Swing Rendez-Vous weaves a tale of love, music and community infused with the quintessential blues and swing of jazz music. Tatiana fittingly served as inspiration for the story and plays the leading female role in the film. The feel-good musical comedy is the ideal start to what is sure to be a jazz-packed year ahead for Tatiana.
https://www.culturedfocusmagazine.com/single-post/tatiana-eva-marie-reignites-gypsy-jazz-with-new-music-djangology

Djangology

Charlie Haden - Heart Play

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:27
Size: 114,7 MB
Art: Front

( 3:55)  1. Anna
( 3:01)  2. If...
( 8:18)  3. La Pasionaria
( 6:01)  4. Snow
( 6:18)  5. Silence
( 8:02)  6. Child's Song
( 2:33)  7. Nocturne
(11:15)  8. For Turiya

Though Italian guitarist and composer Antonio Forcione has been hailed as "the Jimi Hendrix of the acoustic guitar" and has been favorably compared to the brilliantly versatile Tommy Emmanuel, his work on this low-key, intimate dual date is for the most part more thoughtful, reflective and subdued. That's not to say it's not inspired. It's simply not designed to overwhelm. His opening compositions "Anna" and "If..." are sweet, soulful, and gracefully romantic, with legendary bassist Charlie Haden providing sensual accompaniment. Haden's three compositions range from the more rhythmic and lively "La Pasionaria" (on which the bassist all but dares Forcione to keep up via an increasingly inventive, swaying melody) to the moody "Silence" and the haunting, experimental "For Turiya," which features lengthy bass soloing that runs from subtle to thunderous. The lone outside tune is Fred Hersch's wistful "Child's Play," on which the tandem play an interesting, point-counterpoint melody-rhythm line. While well played and intricately performed, this type of date, focused more on craft than any sustainable energy, is best enjoyed by die-hard fans of the two artists.By Jonathan Widran https://www.allmusic.com/album/heartplay-mw0001482784

Personnel:Charlie Haden — bass; Antonio Forcione — guitar

Heart Play