Thursday, August 14, 2025

Syd Lawrence Orchestra - A Night At The Movies

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2011
Time: 60:53
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 141,4 MB
Art: Front

( 3:07) 1. Strike Up The Band
( 3:17) 2. Misty
( 1:57) 3. Hooray For Hollywood
( 3:45) 4. It's Magic
( 3:12) 5. With A Song In My Heart
( 3:58) 6. Laura
( 1:57) 7. Put On A Happy Face
( 5:10) 8. Marcel McTattie LeCoq
( 4:32) 9. It's Alright With Me
( 3:44) 10. Boulevard Of Broken Dreams
( 2:49) 11. Alexander’s Ragtime Band
( 3:13) 12. Tara’s Theme
( 3:05) 13. The Pink Panther
( 3:18) 14. Smile
(13:42) 15. James Bond Medley

Founded in 1967 by trumpeter and arranger Syd Lawrence, The fabulous Syd Lawrence Orchestra has been thrilling audiences in Concert Halls, Theatres, TV Shows and Music Festivals all over Great Britain and Continental Europe for over 50 years.

Renowned for it’s exciting blend of high octane Big Band Swing and Classic Dance Music, the Orchestra’s repertoire ranges from the wartime million sellers of the legendary Glenn Miller through the era of the great Count Basie Orchestra to the hit songs of Frank Sinatra and Ella Fitzgerald. Count Basie himself described the Syd Lawrence Orchestra as “So good it should be Banned!”.
https://syd-lawrence-orchestra.com/

A Night At The Movies

Suzanne Pittson - Emerge Dancing

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2024
File: MP3@128K/s
Time: 65:50
Size: 61,6 MB

(3:52) 1. Blackbird
(3:42) 2. Everything I Love
(7:37) 3. The Secret Life of Plants
(4:45) 4. It All Goes 'Round and 'Round
(3:56) 5. Blues and the Abstract Truth
(6:06) 6. You've Got a Friend
(6:07) 7. I Get Sentimental Over Nothing
(6:06) 8. Never Never Land
(5:00) 9. Without a Song
(5:42) 10. Love's the Thing
(5:22) 11. Something More
(7:29) 12. What Can I Do?

Emerge Dancing is a fascinatingly intriguing album from New York vocalist (and pianist/composer) Suzanne Pittson and her husband, pianist Jeff Pittson. Primarily a duo album, the pair is joined on a trio of tracks by their son, violist Evan Pittson. Team Pittson has delivered a buffet of jazz, pop, rare-find and well-known standard fare that emerges as 24k performance and production gold.

The frequently-recorded John Lennon and Paul McCartney gem "Blackbird" opens this session with the duo exploring its textures and lyric nuances. Suzanne Pittson delivers the tune with just enough drama and engagement with the lyric to give it a new sheen. Jeff elaborates beautifully, both in accompaniment and in a fine solo. The upbeat "Everything I Love," from the Cole Porter songbook, has Pittson handily delivering a swinging portrait with some sizzling scat, prancing over and alternating with Jeff's comps and keyed responses. The Pittsons deliver a rather dramatic take on Stevie Wonder's documentary film score piece, "The Secret Life of Plants." Suzanne lithely bounces the intervallic structure of Wonder's melody and delivers the tune's poetry with fervor. This track was powerful in its original presentation and is here, as well.

Suzanne Pittson has a uniquely intriguing vocal instrument. She is upbeat, on-point with her pitch and diction and effervescently hip, both in terms of her interpretation and her scatting. Plus, she's a fun listen. Jeff is equally up to the musical tasks and, whether soloing or backing, has the piano firmly in his creative grasp. Savvy listeners will notice that the pair has a combined positive vibe that harkens back to the joyously swinging Jackie Cain and Roy Kral.

"It All Goes 'Round and 'Round" is a beautiful ballad take wherein Pittson sing-speaks the lyrics, accompanied by Jeff's overdubbed Toots Thielemans-like harmonica responses and lush piano. Oliver Nelson's classic "Blues and the Abstract Truth," here a family affair, gets off with a fierce Vince Guaraldi-ish ostinato before Suzanne and son Evan's viola-doubled melody and lyric burn; and there is no letup in sight. A fine viola solo erupts, including Evan copping a lick trumpeter Freddie Hubbard played on the original recording. A spectacularly hip track. The rarely recorded ballad "I Get Sentimental Over Nothing" written by Suzanne's aunt, Minette Allton, and Nat King Cole, has the Pittsons delivering a beautiful take on the tune. A brilliant production selection this. "Without a Song" is presented up-tempo and joyously swinging, with an energized scat from Pittson.

Jeff Pittson picks up on the bouncing joy with an equally hip ride. The pair reach back to the '50s again for "Love Is the Thing," with Slide Hampton's melody and Mike Holober's modern applied lyrics. Instrumentally known as "Frame for the Blues," the tune was a brassy 1958 hit for the Maynard Ferguson band. The Pittsons deliver it in a noir smoky-bar blue. Suzanne is red-lipstick-seductively swinging. Catch Jeff's last few tinkles up where the cigarette burns are. The very hopeful "What Can I Do?" ends the session on a slower, reflective note with Evan's overdubbed viola adding a splendid touch.

Whether one dances, cuts in or sits out listening, Emerge Dancing is a supremely well-performed presentation all around. By Nicholas F.Mondello
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/emerge-dancing-suzanne-pittson-vineland-records

Personnel: Suzanne Pittson: voice, piano (8); Jeff Pittson: piano, chromatic harmonica (4); Evan Pittson: viola (5, 11, 12)
Emerge Dancing

Tok Tok Tök - This Can't Be Love

Styles: Jazz/Rock/Pop
Year: 1998
Time: 27:46
File: MP3 @ 128K/s
Size: 25,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:32) 1. Moonglow
(2:49) 2. Doodlin'
(4:57) 3. Invitation
(1:19) 4. Ma Nah Ma Nah
(3:52) 5. Moon Dance
(2:53) 6. Love For Sale
(2:05) 7. I Want To Be Happy
(3:50) 8. Song For My Father
(1:29) 9. Octopuss's Garden
(1:55) 10. This Can't Be Love

Before founding Tok Tok Tok in 1998, Tokunbo Akinro (lyrics) and Morten Klein (composition and arrangement), the creative and organizing heart of the band, worked together in various other projects. Their musical search for melodic beauty associated with groove and soul led them to find their completing parts in each other. They played concerts all over the world from Paris, Berlin, Madrid and The Hague to Kyiv, Tel Aviv and São Paulo. In 2013, after 15 years of working together, Morten Klein and Tokunbo Akinro decided to have a break and to concentrate on solo projects.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tok_Tok_Tok

This Can't Be Love

John McLaughlin - Live at Montreux Jazz Festival 2022

Styles: Jazz Fusion
Year: 2025
Time: 90:50
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 208,6 MB
Art: Front

( 9:00) 1. Kiki (Live at Montreux Jazz Festival 2022)
( 6:26) 2. Lock Down Blues (Live at Montreux Jazz Festival 2022)
( 8:01) 3. The Creator Has a Master Plan (Live at Montreux Jazz Festival 2022)
( 7:41) 4. Hijacked (Live at Montreux Jazz Festival 2022)
( 5:34) 5. Gaza City (Live at Montreux Jazz Festival 2022)
( 5:05) 6. Mr. Dc (Live)
( 5:22) 7. Abbaji (Live at Montreux Jazz Festival 2022)
( 5:13) 8. New Blues Old Bruise (Live)
( 6:29) 9. Here Comes the Jiis (Live)
(10:46) 10. The Light at the Edge of the World (Live)
(13:36) 11. Echoes from Then (Live)
( 7:33) 12. El Hombre Que Sabia (Live)

One of Rolling Stone's Top 100 Guitarists of All Time, John McLaughlin returns in peak form with Live at Montreux Jazz Festival 2022, a stunning performance captured at one of the world's most iconic musical stages.

A trailblazer who reshaped jazz fusion through his work with Miles Davis, the Mahavishnu Orchestra, and Shakti, McLaughlin brings over five decades of innovation to this electrifying 90-minute set. Backed by his longtime band The 4th Dimension and featuring award-winning Cuban pianist Jany McPherson as special guest, this release is a masterclass in genre-defying musicianship.

The setlist draws from every corner of McLaughlin's expansive musical journey, including fan favorites like "New Blues Old Bruise" and "El Hombre Que Sabia" a heartfelt tribute to friend and flamenco legend Paco De Lucia. The band also delivers inspired renditions of Pharoah Sanders' spiritual jazz epic "The Creator Has a Master Plan" and Piero Piccioni's cinematic gem "The Light at the Edge of the World."

Recorded with cutting-edge mobile technology and mixed by George Murphy (Shakti, Mumford & Sons, Ellie Goulding) at Eastcote Studios in London, Live at Montreux Jazz Festival 2022 is more than a concert it's an immersive experience that captures the soul, skill, and spontaneity of a guitar legend hailed by Jeff Beck as "the greatest living guitarist."
https://elusivedisc.com/john-mclaughlin-the-4th-dimension-montreux-jazz-festival-2022-2lp/?srsltid=AfmBOorbXBlQK7yhDfFBBz3jZY_6oeaKHyEHSDZJIG15wVXfwsmGF09i

Live at Montreux Jazz Festival 2022

Tuesday, August 12, 2025

The Brian Lynch/Eddie Palmieri Project - Simpático

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:43
Size: 153,9 MB
Art: Front

(7:54)  1. The Palmieri Effect
(5:25)  2. Que Seria La Vida
(8:52)  3. Guajira Dubois
(6:03)  4. Jazz Impromptu
(8:39)  5. Paginas De Mujer
(8:18)  6. Slippery
(8:24)  7. Jazzucar
(6:15)  8. Tema Para Marissa
(6:50)  9. Freehands

Two decades of working as a highly accomplished trumpeter in Eddie Palmieri's Latin jazz band has culminated for Brian Lynch with this completely ravishing recording alongside his musical mentor. While the name of the group might raise the question of "who's on first?", rest assured that this is an inspired collaboration with the less-celebrated Lynch firmly at the helm. Most of the tunes are his, and the versions of Palmieri's pieces are marked by Lynch's hand. In fact, this album marshals some playing from Palmieri, particularly on the tumbling "The Palmieri Effect," which opens the album with a roar from Palmieri's piano, that I've missed from some recent discs under Palmieri's leadership. While the program of Simpatico is clearly Latin jazz and Palmieri's salsified McCoy Tynerisms are resplendently prominent throughout, there are lovely selections that wouldn't be expected on a Palmieri album. One example is the Lynch original "Jazz Impromptu," which has a sound you'd expect from a hard-blowing Blue Note session from decades ago. The bop roots in Lynch's original compositions are even evident in a guajira-chacha like "Guajira Dubois," where guest alto saxophonist Phil Woods, hardly a supreme Latin jazzman, brings an interesting bop sensibility to the proceedings.

The seventeen musicians (in addition to the superstar Palmieri) are all playing at the top of their game, bringing out an acute brilliance in Lynch's playing that I've never heard so thrillingly projected. But the biggest surprise among this crowd of talent is the Mexican-American diva Lila Downs. Her vocals have a dusky sensuality and subtle understatement that compels re-visioning just how extroverted a great Latin jazz vocalist need be. Lynch may have revolutionized the already rising career of Downs by showcasing her in a context so far removed from her own recordings, which are deeply rooted in traditional Mexican song.  


There's a move afoot in the jazz world to expand the parameters of Latin jazz, with Hilary Noble, Rebecca Cline and Dafnis Prieto among the prime instigators. In his own sweet way, in spite of being less radical conceptually in breaking out of a traditional Latin jazz style than those three musicians, Lynch is triumphantly pushing Latin jazz boundaries. This is a magnificent recording, whatever label you pin on it, and it makes you hope for more Lynch collaborations with his mentor in the near future. ~ Norman Weinstein https://www.allaboutjazz.com/simpatico-eddie-palmieri-artistshare-review-by-norman-weinstein.php

Personnel: Brian Lynch: trumpet; Eddie Palmieri: piano; Lila Downs: vocals; Phil Woods: alto saxophone; Donald Harrison: alto saxophone; Conrad Herwig: trombone; Giovanni Hidalgo: congas; Dafnis Prieto: drums; other players including Gregory Tardy, Mario Rivera, Boris Kozlov, Ruben Rodriguez, Luques Curtis, Robby Ameen, Pedro Martinez, Johnny Rivero, Edsel Gomez, Marvin Diz, Pete Rodriguez.

Simpático

Sunday, August 10, 2025

Miriam Aida - Pieces

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Size: 98,9 MB
Time: 41:55
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2023
Art: Front

1. Freedom (4:19)
2. Four Women (4:25)
3. Angelitos Negros (3:15)
4. Fight For You (4:07)
5. Big Brother (4:36)
6. Ojalá (4:49)
7. En La Orilla Del Mundo (3:26)
8. It's Your World (3:57)
9. Echoes (4:50)
10. Papoula (4:07)

The Swedish-Moroccan singer Miriam Aïda has released nine albums under her own name, toured Scandinavia, Europe, Brazil and Japan, appeared regularly on TV and radio, received prizes and awards and also received the honor of interviewing Polar Prize winner Wayne Shorter on PolarPrize/PolarTalks.

In the spring of 2023, Miriam released the album “Pieces” where Miriam Aïda and her band dive into the different expressions of Afro music, which in the meeting and clash with the New World in the wake of the slave trade, took different directions in the Caribbean, the USA and South America. Here are, among other things, a. Beyoncé’s “Freedom” and Nina Simone’s “Four Women” from 1966, which was then a reaction to a series of events during the Civil Rights Movement. Miriam’s version was released as a single on February 24, 2023 as a contribution to commemorate Black History Month.

“Miriam Aïda’s strongest album to date”, writes Swedish newspaper Sydsvenskan. Pieces was received by a unanimous body of critics with praises and awarded high marks. Miriam has a background in both Sweden and Morocco, and from the stage she builds bridges to her audience that transcend nationality, culture, language, color, gender and religion. Intimate, honest and always groovy!
https://www.fasching.se/en/miriam-aida/

Personnel: Miriam Aïda – vocals; Mats Andersson – guitar; Rubem Farias – bass; Finn Björnulfson – percussion; Ola Bothzen – percussion

Pieces

Janet Klein & Her Parlor Boys - It's the Girl

Styles: Vocal, Jazz, Retro Swing
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:05
Size: 149,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:39)  1. Sing to Me
(2:39)  2. Doin' the Uptown Lowdown
(3:23)  3. In a Little Garden
(3:09)  4. It's the Girl
(5:43)  5. Close Your Eyes
(3:39)  6. Old Man of the Mountain
(3:20)  7. East St. Louis Toodle-Oo
(3:38)  8. I Double Dare You
(2:45)  9. I'm Gonna Meet My Sweetie Now
(1:44) 10. Let's Don't and Say We Did
(3:25) 11. Look What You've Done to Me
(5:30) 12. Willow Weep for Me
(3:55) 13. You Learn About Love Everyday
(4:17) 14. Left Bank Medley: Bad Boys of Belleville / La Route Bleu
(2:40) 15. Shiny Shoes
(2:49) 16. The World Is Waiting for the Sunrise
(3:00) 17. Music Makes Me
(5:40) 18. Moonglow

The long awaited 8th CD by Janet Klein & Her Parlor Boys is OUT! Entitled “It’s the Girl!” the disc is jam packed with delicious delights. All the sensational titillation and panache of pre-code era music-making is here in this ensemble’s latest 2015 tour de force. Well worth the wait (last release “Whoopee Hey Hey!” 2010), this is surely the band’s most ambitious project to date. With band arrangements that certainly would have delighted Hal Roach, the group is at the top of its game. Eleven of the eighteen songs are culled from old films, including Wheeler and Woolsey comedies, and Vitaphone Vaudeville performance shorts. With top-notch ensemble musicianship on par with a studio orchestra of the 1930s, the group here has added original newly composed sections that seamlessly interweave with the old to make a final product even more thrilling than the original. Two transcending examples to note are the effervescent mid-sections of “I Double Dare You” and the dark sexy tango interlude in “Close Your Eyes”. Rare archeological treasures abound on Janet’s CDs and this latest is no exception. In the hands of these early jazz hunters, better known song selections like “Moonglow” and “Willow Weep for Me”, shine like new as the band has gone the extra mile to unearth little known and rarely performed verse sections. Leaving no stone unturned, Janet and the band bring to life hot jazz, tin pan alley and ballads from early twentieth century radio, film, dance halls, nightclubs, Vaudeville and even conjure some cartoon music of the time.

To support the immersive adventure, together with cartoonist, Thom Foolery, the group built and painted a full-scale cartoon set, ala 1920’s Felix the Cat and early Disney’s Little Alice silent cartoons. The set was constructed as an interactive space for Janet’s black and white clad band to mug and frolic for imaginative CD packaging photos and a music video: YouTube - “Sing To Me”. The original inspiration of live action actors mixing it up in a cartoon environment is drawn from Max Fleischer’s office antics with animated characters Koko the Clown, Bosko and Betty Boop leaping off the animation cells and the little living girl - Alice walking into 2 dimensional black and white 1920’s cartoonland in Disney’s earliest achievements. The tune “Old Man of the Mountain” sung by band member John Reynolds is originally from a Cab Calloway/Betty Boop cartoon, a live action mash up fantasy of that same title. For the photos, Janet designed two costumes for herself; one made to resemble a 1920s Max Sennett bathing beauty checkered and rolled stocking get-up and another satin ensemble ala 1930’s Ruby Keeler tapdance outfit that includes two handmade charming, unique and kooky hats, with parts hunted down from the last standing millinery supply house in LA. Janet & Her Parlor Boys (produced by Robert Loveless) have never sounded so good. The sweet and melodic tunes’ rich tapestry has an immediate sound quality that draws the listener into the inspired performances. As a whole this CD emotes the love the musicians feel for this genre and a playful authentic charm that will appeal to a modern ear.

Janet has been performing early music since 1996 and released her first CD in 1998 - “Come Into My Parlor”. She and the band currently live and perform around Los Angeles and have played in many old music halls and theatres in the US and around the world. The CD includes two original songs by Ian Whitcomb; an English Yiddish novelty number written about Janet plus the fanciful instrumental “Left Bank Medley” featuring the amazing accordion playing of Josh Kaufman from Petrovich Blasting Co. Recently (2014-5) Janet’s voice was featured in the Cartoon Network’s “Adventure Time” and “Over the Garden Wall”. She has a hit song (200,000+ views) on YouTube from her most recent characterization as the lovelorn school teacher (Miss Langtree) for forest animals in the exquisitely beautiful cartoon “Over The Garden Wall” Her song “Langtree’s Lament” can be seen and heard - see below “Videos and Clips” https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/janetkleinherparlorboys1

Personnel:  Janet Klein – Vocal & Ukulele;  Benny Brydern –Violin;  Corey Gemme – Cornet, T-Bone & Percussion;  Marquis Howell – Stand Up Bass;  Josh Kaufman – Accordion;  Dan Levinson – Clarinet, C-Melody Sax & Tenor Sax;  Geoff Nudell – Alto Sax, Bass Clarinet & Clarinet;  John Reynolds – National Steel Tricone Guitar, Banjo, Vocals;  Jonathan Stout – Drums;  Ian Whitcomb – Vocal;  Randy Woltz – Piano, Celeste & Vibraphone

It's the Girl

Jan Garbarek, Egberto Gismonti, Charlie Haden - Magico - Carta de Amor Disc 1 And Disc 2

Album: Magico - Carta de Amor  Disc 1

Styles: Saxophone, Guitar And Piano Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:18 + 42:40
Size: 153,8 MB + 105,4 MB
Art: Front

( 7:25)  1. Carta de Amor
(16:26)  2. La Pasionaria
( 9:51)  3. Cego Aderaido
( 8:10)  4. Folk Song
( 8:25)  5. Don Quixote
(14:01)  6. Spor

Album: Magico - Carta de Amor  Disc 2

( 7:37)  1. Branquinho
(15:35)  2. All That Is Beautiful
( 9:12)  3. Palhaco
( 3:39)  4. Two Folk Songs
( 7:35)  5. Carta de Amor - var

It's sure been a banner year for fans of the ECM label, with a slew of fine new releases from artists including guitarist John Abercrombie (Within a Song), bassist Arild Andersen (Celebration), pianist Tord Gustavsen (The Well), and saxophonist Tim Berne (Snakeoil). Previously out-of- print or never-before-in-print studio recordings from saxophonist Jan Garbarek (Dansere) and pianist Jon Balke (Magnetic Works: 1993-2001 ) are now back in circulation. And, for the first time since bassist Charlie Haden's duet record with pianist/guitarist Egberto Gismonti (2001's In Montreal, from a 1989 concert), the label has dug back into the past, with Terje Rypdal's Odyssey: In Studio & In Concert coupling the guitarist's 1975 classic, Odyssey finally on CD in its full, two-disc glory  with a previously unreleased Swedish radio performance, Unfinished Highballs, and Sleeper: Tokyo, April 16, 1979 debuting a full concert from Keith Jarrett's influential European Quartet. The year's not over by a long shot, but Magico: Carta de Amor may ultimately emerge as ECM's most significant archival release to date, trumping the Jarrett if only because, as superb as it is, Sleeper is not the pianist's first live recording with this group to see the light of day. Culled from live performances by a relatively short-lived trio that, with Magico (1980) and Folk Songs (1981), already stood as one of label head Manfred Eicher's most inspired collaborative suggestions, Carta de Amor liberally expands on material from both studio dates, but also adds plenty of music that, if familiar to fans of Garbarek, Gismonti and Haden individually, has not been heard performed by this vibrant chamber trio before and, in the case of Haden's uplifting "All That is Beautiful," appears on record for the first time.

The record demonstrates just how far this trio had come by the time of its April, 1981 performances at Munich's Amerika Haus no surprise, given the established reputations of all three members, and that it had been almost 18 months since Folk Songs was recorded, just a scant five months after the Magico sessions. Gismonti's characteristically lyrical yet emotionally ambiguous "Palhaço" was a tremendous closer to Magico and a highlight of the Brazilian's more heavily produced Circense (Carmo, 1980), but here Garbarek soars even higher in a version nearly double both studio counterparts' length and, taken at a brighter tempo, indicative of this trio's profound interconnectivity, as all three players transcend mere soloing to interact at a near-mitochondrial level. If, as a pianist, Gismonti has always felt a little more schooled without suggesting either predictability or an inability to stretch boundaries his more rough- hewn guitar work is the fulcrum on which both Garbarek and Haden balance on the bassist's Spanish-tinged "La Pasionaria," which he had yet to record at this point, and which would ultimately swing far harder and brighter on his Liberation Music Orchestra's Ballad of the Fallen (ECM, 1983). But if Gismonti provides the initial context, it's Haden who ultimately assumes role of both anchor and animator/instigator, in a free middle section that, despite form reasserting itself nearly ten minutes in to reiterate the theme, opens up once again for a closing bass solo that, in its muscular avoidance of grandstanding, is an early standout of Carta de Amor's 108-minute set. Beyond Garbarek's arrangement of traditional folk songs ("Folk Songs," "Two Folk Songs"), the saxophonist's "Spor" first heard on Magico, but reinterpreted, three years later, in more electrified form on Wayfarer (ECM, 1983) is another example of this trio's remarkable connection, another piece that breaks down into the kind of collective free play that's only hinted at on the studio recordings. As ever, Garbarek's attention to purity of tone is a marker, here matched by Haden, who has always favored tone, texture and the right note over pyrotechnic displays and whose rare use of a bow here is another distinguishing point in a set filled with highlights. Carta de Amor is a reminder of how a particular point in time, when the pan-cultural and cross-genre interests of three artists from vastly different backgrounds and musical upbringings, could come together in rare synchronicity. 

That such confluence couldn't have occurred before nor could it likely have happened again is only bolstered by Haden and Gismonti's subsequent In Montreal. A fine disc, to be sure, but without Garbarek, lacking that certain spark that clearly ignites throughout Magico: Carta de Amor, a set defined by selfless interplay, unrestrained yet ever-purposeful exploration, and the kind of power made all the more dramatic for Garbarek, Gismonti and Haden's ability to instantly change directions, as one, with the subtlest of gestures. In Galacian, "magico" means "magical" and "Carta de Amor" means "love letter," and in its decision to unveil Magico: Carta de Amor thirty years after the fact, ECM has delivered just that. The press sheet refers to the many recordings apparently made at Amerika Haus as "an artistic treasure trove awaiting further investigation." It sounds like the magic has just begun. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/jan-garbarek-egberto-gismonti-charlie-haden-magico-carta-de-amor-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Jan Garbarek: tenor and soprano saxophones; Egberto Gismonti: guitars, piano; Charlie Haden: double bass.

Magico - Carta de Amor Disc 1 And Disc 2

Thursday, August 7, 2025

Melody Gardot - The Essential Melody Gardot

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 110:13
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 253,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:32) 1. Baby I'm A Fool
(2:50) 2. If The Stars Were Mine
(4:52) 3. C’est Magnifique
(5:05) 4. Morning Sun
(3:21) 5. Sweet Memory
(4:12) 6. Mira
(4:34) 7. Over The Rainbow
(4:21) 8. Worrisome Heart
(5:29) 9. Our Love Is Easy
(5:25) 10. Love Song
(5:42) 11. La chanson des vieux amants
(3:20) 12. Les étoiles (Live)
(5:16) 13. La Vie En Rose
(4:43) 14. First Song
(3:59) 15. This Foolish Heart Could Love You (The Paris Sessions)
(4:46) 16. Once I Was Loved
(5:06) 17. Ain't No Sunshine (Live In Paris / Edit)
(3:48) 18. Moon River
(2:43) 19. Your Heart Is As Black As Night
(3:36) 20. If I Tell You I Love You
(4:57) 21. Who Will Comfort Me
(5:31) 22. Love Me Like A River Does (Live In Paris / Edit)
(6:25) 23. Bad News (Live)
(6:24) 24. La Llorona (Live)

The Essential is a testament to Melody Gardot's enduring artistry. This collection spans 14 years of her career and includes 25 tracks that showcase the breadth of her musical abilities. Featuring selections from her six studio albums, remixes, live recordings and previously unreleased tracks, the album captures the essence of Gardot's talent. Highlights include her multilingual performances, emotive renditions of classics like Elton John's "Love Song," and live recordings that convey the raw honesty of her concerts.

Each track offers a glimpse into the diverse emotional landscapes Gardot can traverse, making The Essential a rich and compelling portrait of an artist whose music speaks for itself. Digipak 2 CD set. By Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Essential-2-CD-Melody-Gardot/dp/B0D82G1566

The Essential Melody Gardot

Diana Panton - Soft Winds and Roses

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 57:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 133,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:34) 1. Your Song
(3:48) 2. (They Long to Be) Close to You
(3:18) 3. Secret Heart
(3:54) 4. Sweet Happy Life
(3:46) 5. A Wish (Valentine)
(3:43) 6. How Deep Is Your Love
(3:55) 7. Pussywillows Cat-Tails
(3:37) 8. Here, There And Everywhere
(3:58) 9. You and I (Voce E Eu)
(5:13) 10. And I Love You So
(5:12) 11. Until It's Time For You To Go
(4:19) 12. Hey, That's No Way To Say Goodbye
(2:47) 13. Snow
(5:39) 14. Both Sides Now

Diana Panton has long been an artist of quiet yet undeniable depth, uniquely transforming melodies into deeply personal narratives. On Soft Winds and Roses, she focuses on modern classics from the 1960s onward, drawing from the songbooks of Elton John, Burt Bacharach, Gordon Lightfoot, Lennon and McCartney, Leonard Cohen, and Joni Mitchell, among many others. In doing so, she creates an album that is both a journey through timeless compositions and a meditation on love's delicate arc, marked by hesitant beginnings, profound connections, and inevitable farewells.

Panton collaborates with two of Canada's most sensitive and intuitive instrumentalists: Don Thompson, whose multifaceted presence on piano, vibraphone, and bass brings nuanced grace to the album, and Reg Schwager, whose guitar lines embody understated elegance. The trio's minimalist approach allows each phrase and silence to resonate with genuine emotion.

From the opening notes of Thompson's subtle piano on Elton John's "Your Song," Panton's singular weightless delivery embodies the tentative blush of new love. In Bacharach and David's " They Long to be Close to You," she offers an invitation wrapped in silk, accentuating its Latin undercurrent with Thompson's vibraphone voicing. The Bee Gee's popular hit "How Deep is Your Love" is filled with emotive modulation beautifully enhanced by Thompson's light- fingered touch. Canada's folk troubadour Gordon Lightfoot wrote "Pussywillows, Cat-Tails," which may be one of his lesser- known songs. Panton gives a heartfelt reading made all the more so by the in-the-moment support from Schwager and Thompson.

The album's middle section finds Panton at her most affecting. Lennon & McCartney's "Here, There, and Everywhere." The number is delivered with aching sincerity, and the simplicity of her phrasing makes the lyrics glow anew. Schwager has a solo that matches his singular reputation. Canadian singer, songwriter, poet and novelist Leonard Cohen wrote" Hey, That's No Way to Say Goodbye," perhaps the album's most poignant moment. Panton's voice is imbued with a hushed resignation that lingers long after the final note fades. Schwager's probing guitar captures the heartbreak of the moment.

Another internationally acclaimed singer-songwriter is Canadian Joni Mitchell. Her composition "Both Sides Now" carries the weight of wisdom earned. When Panton sings of clouds, love, and life's illusions, she does so with the kind of clarity that only a master interpreter can provide. The album is filled with quiet revelations, where the space between the words holds as much meaning as the words themselves.By Pierre Giroux
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/soft-winds-and-roses-diana-panton-self-produced

Personnel: Diana Panton - vocals; Reg Schwager - guitar; Don Thompson - bass

Soft Winds and Roses

Hadda Brooks - Anytime, Anyplace, Anywhere

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 1994
Time: 58:30
File: MP3 @ 128K/s
Size: 53,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:49) 1. Anytime, Anyplace, Anywhere
(4:18) 2. That's My Desire
(4:37) 3. Don't Go To Strangers
(3:36) 4. Don't You Think I Ought To Know
(4:37) 5. The Man With The Horn
(3:10) 6. But Not For Me
(3:17) 7. Rain, Sometimes
(4:14) 8. Heart Of A Clown
(3:21) 9. Ol'Man River
(4:31) 10. Dream
(2:34) 11. A Foggy Day
(4:18) 12. Trust In Me
(5:00) 13. Please, Be Kind-Am I Blue
(3:55) 14. Stolen Love
(3:06) 15. All Of Me

In the mid- to late '40s, Black popular music began to mutate from swing jazz and boogie woogie into the sort of rhythm & blues that helped lay the foundation for rock & roll. Singer and pianist Hadda Brooks was one of the many figures who was significant in aiding that transition, although she's largely forgotten today. While her torch song delivery was rooted in the big-band era, her boogie woogie piano looked forward to jump blues and R&B. Ironically, the same qualities that made her briefly successful -- her elegant vocals and jazzy arrangements left her ill-equipped to compete when harder-driving forms of rhythm & blues, and then early rock & roll, began to dominate the marketplace in the early '50s.

Brooks got a recording deal through a chance meeting with jukebox operator Jules Bihari, who was looking to record some boogie woogie. The Los Angeles-based Bihari, along with his brother Joe, would become major players in early R&B with their Modern label, which issued sides by B.B. King, John Lee Hooker, Etta James, Jesse Belvin, and other stars. Brooks actually preferred ballads to boogie woogie, but worked up her style by listening to Pete Johnson, Albert Ammons, and Meade "Lux" Lewis records. Her first record, the pounding "Swingin' the Boogie," was a sizable regional hit in 1945. Joe Bihari would later tell author Arnold Shaw that the single was instrumental in establishing the Biharis in the record business.

Brooks' first records were instrumental, but by 1946 she was singing as well. She had a fair amount of success for Modern in the late '40s, reaching the R&B Top Ten with "Out of the Blue" and her most famous song, "That's My Desire" (which was covered for a big pop hit by Frankie Laine). Her success on record led to some roles in films, most notably in a scene from In a Lonely Place, which starred Humphrey Bogart.

Brooks briefly left Modern for an unsuccessful stint with major-label London in 1950. After a similarly unrewarding return to Modern in the early '50s and a brief stay at OKeh, she largely withdrew from recording and worked the nightclub circuit. For most of the '60s, in fact, she was based in Australia, where she hosted her own TV show. Her profile was boosted in the mid-'90s by her induction into the Rhythm & Blues Foundation Hall of Fame, and by the inclusion of her recording of "Anytime, Anyplace, Anywhere" in the film The Crossing Guard. A new album on Point Blank, Time Was When, was released in early 1996.By Richie Unterberger
https://www.allmusic.com/artist/hadda-brooks-mn0000548103#biography

Personnel: Piano, Vocals – Hadda Brooks; Bass – "Senator" Eugene Wright; Guitar – Al Viola; Trumpet – Jack Sheldon

Anytime, Anyplace, Anywhere

The Billy Bauer Quartets - Let's Have a Session (2 LP on 1 CD)

Styles: Cool Jazz
Year: 2011
Time: 61:35
File: Flac
Size: 143,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:38) 1. Somebody Loves Me
(2:57) 2. September In The Rain
(3:06) 3. A Ghost Of A Chance
(2:27) 4. 'S Wonderful
(2:52) 5. Easy Walkin' Blues
(2:42) 6. Out Of Nowhere
(3:14) 7. These Foolish Things
(2:23) 8. (Back Home In) Indiana
(4:11) 9. It's A Blue World
(2:33) 10. Maybe I Love You Too Much
(4:05) 11. Lincoln Tunnel
(4:46) 12. Night Cruise
(3:01) 13. Too Marvellous
(3:40) 14. Lady Estelle's Dream
(3:14) 15. You'd Be So Nice
(3:46) 16. When It's Sleepy Time Down South
(3:40) 17. The Way You Look Tonight
(4:00) 18. Lullaby Of The Leaves
(2:11) 19. Moon Mist

Billy Bauer was the most celebrated guitarist in early modern jazz, winning more awards than any other on the instrument and establishing an enviable reputation as a member of the Woody Herman rhythm section. As a longtime sideman for Lennie Tristano and Lee Konitz, he made some brilliant recordings showcasing his magisterial authority with contrapuntal lines.

Despite his long career as a sideman, he did only two recording dates as a leader, both quartet sessions, compiled in this CD. In them he managed at all times to extract the greatest tenderness from his instrument. Playing with soul, swinging subtly, straight ahead or lightly as the need arose, he accomplished the rare and difficult feat of combining good jazz with accessibility.

Personnel: Billy Bauer (g), Tony Aless, Andrew Ackers (p), Arnold Fishkin, Milt Hinton (b), Don Lamond, Osie Johnson (d) Sources: Tracks #1-8, from the 10" album "Let's Have a Session" (Audio Lab AAL-5501) Tracks #9-19, from the 12" album "Billy Bauer, Plectrist" (Norgran MGN-1082) Personnel on "Let's Have a Session": Billy Bauer (guitar), Tony Aless (piano), Arnold Fishkin (bass), Don Lamond (drums). Recorded in New York City, April 1955 Personnel on "Plectrist": Billy Bauer (guitar), Andrew Ackers (piano), Milt Hinton (bass), Osie Johnson (drums). Recorded in New York City, May 1956

Let's Have a Session

Monday, August 4, 2025

Francesca Tandoi - Bop Web

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 37:48
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 87,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:07) 1. Bop Web
(5:59) 2. You and the Lake and the Moon
(3:23) 3. Agua De Beber
(4:39) 4. Overjoyed
(4:57) 5. Ninaom
(5:00) 6. Lethargy
(4:09) 7. Right On
(5:32) 8. Pink Walker

Italian pianist and vocalist Francesca Tandoi shines brightly on the international jazz scene, hailed by critics and audiences alike as a musician of rare note. Energetic, agile and elegant at the same time, with her warm jazz vocals and terrific swing lines à la Oscar Peterson - virtuoso almost takes on a new meaning when Tandoi sits behind the piano.

She has already toured the USA, Asia and all over Europe, and recorded seven albums with her own trio - and now she is finally coming to Trondheim for the first time!

This is jazz that is guaranteed to swing you off your chair.
https://www.jazzfest.no/en/arrangement/2024/francesca-tandoi-bop-web

Personnel: Francesca Tandoi - piano; Stefano Senni - bass; Giovanni Campanella - drums

Bop Web

Art Pepper/Chet Baker - Playboys

Styles: Saxophone And Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 40:41
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 93,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:04) 1. For Minors Only
(6:46) 2. Minor Yours
(5:45) 3. Resonant Emotions
(5:35) 4. Tynan Tyme
(6:48) 5. Picture of Heath
(6:29) 6. For Miles and Miles
(5:12) 7. C.t.a.

These 1956 Pacific Jazz sides appeared in 1961 under the title Playboys. Myth and rumor persist that, under legal advice from the publisher of a similarly named magazine, the collection would have to be retitled. It was renamed Picture of Heath, as more than half of the tracks are Jimmy Heath compositions. Regardless, the music is the absolute same. These are the third sessions to feature the dynamic duo of Art Pepper (alto sax) and Chet Baker (trumpet).

Their other two meetings had produced unequivocal successes. The first was during a brief July 1956 session at the Forum Theater in L.A. Baker joined forces with Pepper's sextet, ultimately netting material for the Route LP. Exactly three months to the day later, Pepper and Baker reconvened to record tracks for the Chet Baker Big Band album. The quartet supporting Baker and Pepper on Playboys includes Curtis Counce (bass), Phil Urso (tenor sax), Carl Perkins (piano), and Larance Marable (drums).

Baker and Pepper have an instinctual rapport that yields outstanding interplay. The harmony constant throughout the practically inseparable lines that Baker weaves with Pepper drives the bop throughout the slinky "For Minors Only." The soloists take subtle cues directly from each other, with considerable contributions from Perkins, Counce, and Marable.

With the notorious track record both Baker and Pepper had regarding other decidedly less successful duets, it is unfortunate that more recordings do not exist that captured their special bond. These thoroughly enjoyable and often high-energy sides are perfect for bop connoisseurs as well as mainstream jazz listeners.By Lindsay Planer https://www.allmusic.com/album/playboys-mw0000196883#review

Playboys

Harry Allen, Randy Sandke - Turnstile: Music of the Trumpet Kings with the RIAS Big Band

Styles: Saxophone And Trumpet Jazz, Big Band
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:14
Size: 136,6 MB
Art: Front

(5:13)  1. I Love Louis
(5:21)  2. Cloudy
(4:22)  3. Echoes of Harlem
(3:28)  4. Little Jazz Boogie
(4:31)  5. I Can't Get Started
(3:43)  6. Melancholy Rhapsody
(2:31)  7. Randy's Rolls Royce
(5:28)  8. Shaw'Nuff
(6:12)  9. All Blues
(3:08) 10. Turnstile
(6:17) 11. Relaxin' At Clifford's
(4:07) 12. The Moontrane
(4:47) 13. Birdlike

Most of the recordings put out by the German Nagel Heyer label are pre-bop, ranging from Dixieland to mainstream. This outing stretches the boundaries a little, for trumpeter Randy Sandke (who is joined by tenor saxophonist Harry Allen and a big band led by Jiggs Whigham) pays tribute to a variety of great trumpeters ranging from Louis Armstrong to Woody Shaw ("The Moontrane") and Freddie Hubbard ("Bird Like"). Sandke contributed a pair of originals, arranged all 13 pieces, and helped bring a forgotten (and only partly composed) Bix Beiderbecke composition ("Cloudy") to life. In addition to those mentioned, Sandke pays tribute to Cootie Williams, Roy Eldridge, Bunny Berigan, Harry James, Buck Clayton, Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis, Chet Baker, and Clifford Brown. He hints at their styles without actually copying them, and has a flexible enough approach to sound comfortable in all of the idioms. Recommended. By Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-music-of-the-trumpet-kings-mw0000732284

Personnel: Randy Sandke - (trumpet), Harry Allen - (tenor sax) with the RIAS Big Band Berlin led by Jiggs Whigham

Turnstile: Music of the Trumpet Kings with the RIAS Big Band

Saturday, August 2, 2025

Betty Accorsi Quartet - The Cutty Sark Suite

Styles: Saxophone and Vocal
Year: 2020
Time: 31:18
File: MP3 @ 128K/s
Size: 29,2 MB
Art: Front

(8:55) 1. The Golden Wave
(8:08) 2. In Between
(6:35) 3. At The Edge of The Wave
(7:39) 4. All Things Are Quite Silent

Saxophonist and talented composer Betty Accorsi has released her debut album, The Cutty Sark Suite, inspired by the ship's journey travelling from China to London. The four tracks, averaging seven-and-a-half-minutes, were all recorded at Goldsmiths Music Studios, in affiliation with the university which Accorsi attended, studying for a master's degree in music. Prior to this, the Italian-born musician enrolled at the Conservatoire G. Verdi in Milan where she primarily focused on performing classical repertoire. She then moved to England to pursue her dream of studying jazz saxophone at Trinity Laban, and then subsequently arriving at Goldsmiths, University of London.

This suite is brought together and aims to navigate the listener on the Cutty Sark's return trip to London from China. The ship is now based in Greenwich where Accorsi spent a year studying, hence the inspiration for this album. In her liner notes, she says, "to me, it represented the sense of belonging to the greater, more diverse community that I found in London." Each movement represents a single country that the vessel encountered on her journey including China, Indonesia, South Africa and England. The compositions intend to portray a half real, half imaginary perception of the route.

The voyage begins in Shanghai and is titled "The Golden Wave." It draws inspiration from a Chinese instrument called an Erhu which is replicated at the beginning by Andy Hamill's double bass. The second half of the track turns into a hard-driven blues-esque melting pot of organised madness which eventually leads back to the original melody. The second stop, "In Between," pays homage to Indonesian Gamelan which later develops into a loose jazz ballad, in tribute to Jaco Pastorius. This piece also features an impressive drum solo by Scott MacDonald towards the end. Now halfway, we arrive in South Africa to the music of Zulu warrior dances and the sounds of local saxophonist Basil Coetzee with "At the Edge of the Wave." It draws influences from the country's rich Township jazz tradition. The album concludes with her mooring in England and is celebrated with an arrangement of "All Things Are Quite Silent." This traditional English folk song describes a woman whose man is forced to join the English Navy.

Although the album only lasts for a brief thirty-three minutes, its energy and enthusiasm seems to occur for far longer. With an excellent narrative and concise pathway, The Cutty Sark Suite demonstrates a dynamic display of chemistry between four exceptional musicians.By Thomas Fletcher https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-cutty-sark-suite-betty-accorsi-quartet-self-released

Personnel: Betty Accorsi (saxophone, vocals, composer); Finn Carter (piano), Andy Hamill (double and electric bass), Scott Macdonald (drums).

The Cutty Sark Suite

Jan Lundgren & Miriam Aida & Fredrik Kronkvist - Jan Lundgren Trio Presents Miriam Aida & Fredrik Kronkvist

Styles: Piano And Vocal Jazz
Year: 2002
Time: 57:57
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 132,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:18) 1. Ain't No Excuse
(3:51) 2. September In The Rain
(5:20) 3. The Good Life
(5:05) 4. On A Clear Day (You Can See Forever)
(5:13) 5. Sunny
(5:08) 6. Time On My Hands
(5:32) 7. Feeling Good
(4:38) 8. Melba's Tune
(4:36) 9. Right Here, Right Now
(4:25) 10. 'tis Autumn
(5:35) 11. Close Your Eyes
(4:10) 12. From This Moment On

A fine bop-based pianist, Jan Lundgren has visited the United States several times since the mid-'90s and been gradually gaining a very strong reputation. Even while undergoing extensive classical piano training, Lundgren was playing jazz locally and by the time he was 20, he had begun working with Arne Domnérus and Putte Wickman. Lundgren has picked up valuable experience accompanying many visiting Americans (including Herb Geller, Johnny Griffin, and Mark Murphy).

In 1994, he recorded his debut as a leader for the Four Leaf Clover label. Since then, Lundgren has recorded separate sets with Herb Geller and Bill Perkins for Fresh Sound and led further albums for Alfa and Four Leaf Clover.https://www.jazzmusicarchives.com/artist/jan-lundgren

Personnel: Saxophone, Flute – Fredrik Kronkvist; Bass – Mattias Svensson; Drums – Morten Lund (2); Piano – Jan Lundgren; Vocals – Miriam Aïda

Jan Lundgren Trio Presents Miriam Aida & Fredrik Kronkvist

Gladys Knight - Before Me

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2006
Time: 52:53
File: MP3 @ 192K/s
Size: 73,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:56) 1. Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me
(4:22) 2. The Man I Love
(4:25) 3. Good Morning Heartache
(3:51) 4. Since I Fell For You
(4:54) 5. God Bless The Child
(4:06) 6. This Bitter Earth
(4:24) 7. I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)
(4:54) 8. Someone To Watch Over Me
(4:00) 9. But Not For Me
(3:56) 10. I'll Be Seeing You
(4:26) 11. Stormy Weather
(5:34) 12. Come Sunday

At a time when most of her contemporaries are satisfied reliving their glory years to appreciative audiences in casinos and theaters, Gladys Knight continues her refusal to be pigeonholed as a soul singer. With 2000's At Last, she returned to the mainstream R&B circuit with a session of adult contemporary R&B that was equally accessible and refreshing, and with 2005's One Voice she collaborated with the Saints Unified Voices for a fiery gospel and praise record.

So this time around, Knight recruited legendary producer Phil Ramone and an impressive lineup of jazz musicians to record an album of jazz ballads and standards that influenced her during the formative years of her singing career. At first, the prospect of Knight's soulful, gritty vocal styles taking on some of jazz's greatest moments may be a questionable proposal for jazz purists, but all hesitation can be safely swept aside during the album's opening moments, a fantastic rendition of the Ellington classic "Do Nothing Till You Hear from Me." Gone are the grit and raspy nature of Knight's voice, and in their place is a smooth, sultry set of vocal cords safely in control of the delivery of the material.

Every single song here is already a bona fide hit, and Knight does them all justice in a way few soul singers could. Wonderfully relaxing, classy, and pleasantly void of vocal histrionics, Before Me is another important chapter and highlight in a career that is chock-full of them.By Rob Theakston https://www.allmusic.com/album/before-me-mw0000408605#review

Before Me

Jo Harrop - The Heart Wants

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2021
Time: 52:43
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 121,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:42) 1. The Heart Wants What The Heart Wants
(3:23) 2. All too soon
(3:24) 3. Everything's changing
(3:36) 4. I think you'd better go
(4:31) 5. Wise words
(3:38) 6. Red mary janes & a brand new hat
(4:04) 7. Hold on
(3:55) 8. Life inside
(3:01) 9. What if
(3:40) 10. If I knew
(2:59) 11. Rainbow sleeves
(7:41) 12. If I ever would leave you
(4:04) 13. Weather the storm

How many musicians vowed to use the sudden, blank silence of lockdown to plan and prepare the album they had long dreamed of making? And how many actually got round to doing it? Well, Jo Harrop certainly did, and the result is impressive and moving. It’s her second album, the first being last year’s Weathering the Storm, an exquisite miniature for her warm, intimate voice and Jamie McCredie’s guitar. This time, Harrop has 21 musicians (not all playing at once), including such notables as Christian McBride, Tony Kofi and Jason Rebello, and, for the first time, most of the songs are originals with her own lyrics.

Their themes do tend towards uncertainty, regret and making the best of things, although there’s also a wonderfully life-affirming number called Red Mary Janes and a Brand New Hat. Anyway, it’s how the words and music come together to tell a story that matters. Here, they combine with a rare mixture of delicacy and boldness, the arrangements understated but always ear-catching. As for musicianship, listen to the voice and double bass duet by Harrop and McBride in All Too Soon. Sheer perfection.https://www.theguardian.com/music/2021/oct/16/jo-harrop-the-heart-wants-review-christian-mcbride-tony-kofi-jason-rebello

The Heart Wants

Thursday, July 31, 2025

Sarah King & The Smoke Rings - ST

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2016
Time: 34:36
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 79,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:08) 1. It Don't Mean A Thing (Is It Ain't Got That Swing)
(3:07) 2. Tea For Two
(3:01) 3. Jersey Bounce
(2:19) 4. I Won't Dance
(3:38) 5. Smoke Rings
(5:30) 6. Caravan
(3:52) 7. Some Other Spring
(3:32) 8. Our Love Is Here To Stay
(2:46) 9. I Don't Know Why
(2:38) 10. Lazy River

What a fun and charming jump back to the Swing Era! Sarah King and the Smoke Rings have released a self-titled debut album with some of my absolute favorite songs from that glorious time and I enjoyed every second of the experience.

The Smoke Rings are Alex Levin on piano, Scott Ritchie on bass and Ben Cliness on drums and these cats swing hard. Fronting this exemplary group is Sarah King on vocals on ukulele. The guys play straight-up swing and Ms. King delivers an adorable approach to the lyrics. The song choices and track order are just what makes a swingster swoon.

The first song is the old Duke Ellington/Irving Mills chestnut It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing). The prelude is a deep-voiced groove before Sarah King joins in with her soprano sass. The vocalization is light-hearted, as it should be, and the musicians roll with her. Alex Levin plays the cool cat piano as Scott Ritchie bumps along with the bass. Ben Cliness gets a brief drum interlude and the whole groups carries the song to completion.

Vincent Youmans’ Tea for Two is a great representation of what the band presents in their weekly residence at the Boom Boom Room atop the Standard Hotel in New York City. The first half represents the trio as they were before Alex Levin decided to add a vocalist. The second half of the piece shows just how smart he was to ask her to come aboard.

The story must be told of how she joined The Smoke Rings. Levin was wanting to add a female vocalist to the trio. One day, he was in Prospect Park in Brooklyn and saw a young woman walking by with a ukulele in hand. Levin asked her to play a number for him and, instead of hammering him over the head with the cherished instrument, she obliged him. He said that her voice sounded like an old record. And so it does…in a good way.

That quality is nowhere more evident that on the Tiny Bradshaw/Eddie Johnson/Bobby Plater number Jersey Bounce. She has a brilliantly charming enunciation that over-emphasizes her Rs and rounds the OU diphthong as it disappears into the N. Listen to the album and you’ll see what I mean. Cute as can be.

I Won’t Dance is the Jerome Kern/Oscar Hammerstein II standard is given a new swing by Sarah King and Smoke Rings. Despite the title, the music compels exactly that. Scott Ritchie gets a smoking bass solo which he delivers with great swagger.

Gifford and Washington’s Smoke Rings follows. The piece is wistful and sweet and delivered wonderfully. I realized, as I listened to this track, that I had been smiling from the start of the album. It has not gone away.

What comes next is one of my favorite Jazz standards of all time. Duke Ellington’s famed Caravan co-written by Ellington, Juan Tizol and Irving Mills is perfect. Cliness opens the track with the throaty toms and brings the whole kit to bear as Ritchie swing s the bass alongside. Sarah King nails the vocal performance splendidly with a near-Ella Fitzgerald delivery. I was still thrilling to her over-hardened Rs.

Ritchie’s bass solo runs brightly and warmly andLevin’s piano is spot-on. Beautiful.

Some Other Spring by Arthur Herzog, Jr. is lovely and innocent and compelling. An andante swing casts the image of cool stroll as Levin’s piano creates the oh-so-right atmosphere Ms. King’s gorgeous vocals
.
Our Love is Here to Stay (George & Ira Gershwin) is introduced by Ms. King’s encouraging a cappella before kicking in gear with the trio. The Smoke Kings’ version pulls off a bigger swing and Cliness’ well-seated rim shots and snare rolls add a punch that is welcome indeed.

I Don’t Know Why (I Just Do) by Roy Turk and Fred Ahlert is a sweet lament that King presents with anguish and languish but without losing that delightful charm.

The album concludes with Hoagy Carmichael’s Up a Lazy River. The piece opens with vocals, ukulele and piano. A warm and lucid image of just what the title suggests. Then the listener hears the countback and a whole ‘nother thing breaks loose a ripping yarn of fun and merriment. The instrumental passage is catchy and gives all the artists a spin in the spotlight. The smile has remained undimmed.

Some have suggested that Sarah King’s voice is the center of attention and the “star of the show.” While there can be little doubt that she has enhanced what went before, the trio delivers with integrity and aplomb and creates the foundation upon which Ms. King builds. All four artists are integral to the finished sound.

Sarah King and The Smoke Rings are a treasure. Here's to the lucky New Yorkers who get to enjoy them weekly.https://travisrogersjr.weebly.com/music-reviews/sarah-king-and-the-smoke-rings-bring-back-the-swingand-the-fun

Sarah King & The Smoke Rings