Mostrando postagens com marcador Buster Williams. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Buster Williams. Mostrar todas as postagens

4.8.24

STEVE KUHN — Porgy (1989-1998) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Tracklist :
1    Shoutin' Out    6:07
 Horace Silver
2    Just Squeeze Me    8:13
 Duke Ellington / Lee Gaines
3    Tadd's Delight    4:49
 Tadd Dameron
4    I Loves You Porgy    6:43
 George Gershwin / Ira Gershwin / DuBose Heyward
5    Isotope    3:49
 Joe Henderson / Laura Anne Taylor
6    Where Do You Go?    3:25
 Arnold Sundgaard / Alec Wilder
7    Ladies In Mercedes    4:48
 Steve Swallow
8    Repetition    4:53
 Neal Hefti
9    On Stage    5:13
 Rudolph Stevenson
10    Lullaby    4:25
 Steve Kuhn / Laura Anne Taylor
11    A House Is Not A Home    2:34
 Burt Bacharach / Hal David
Credits :
Double Bass – Buster Williams, Eddie Gomez
Drums – Al Foster
Piano – Steve Kuhn
Vocals – Laura Ann Taylor (tracks: 5, 10)

1.8.24

STEVE KUHN — Love Walked In (1998-2003) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Pianist Steve Kuhn has played a wide variety of music throughout his career, including his own intriguing originals and collaborations with Sheila Jordan. This set, a straight-ahead swinger with bassist Buster Williams and drummer Bill Stewart, should greatly satisfy bop-oriented jazz fans, for it finds Kuhn coming up with consistently fresh ideas in a conventional but far from exhausted setting. Whether digging into Duke Jordan's "No Problem," "Love Walked In," a passionate version of "Autumn Leaves," or even "Sunny," Kuhn is heard throughout at the top of his game. The presence of Williams and Stewart in supporting but stimulating roles clearly inspired Steve Kuhn, making this an easily recommended date. Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1    No Problem 7:29
Composed By – Duke Jordan
2    Land Of The Living Dead 6:58
Composed By – Al Gafa
3    Sunny 6:08
Composed By – Bobby Hebb
4    Love Walked In 6:08
Composed By – George Gershwin
5    Saharan 5:15
Composed By – Steve Kuhn
6    Prelude To A Kiss 6:20
Composed By – Duke Ellington
7    All Alone 5:21
Composed By – Irving Berlin
8    Autumn Leaves 5:10
Composed By – Joseph Kosma
9    Lines 5:45
Composed By – Vigleik Storaas
10    You've Changed 7:36
Composed By – Cole Porter
Credits :
Bass – Buster Williams
Drums – Bill Stewart
Piano – Steve Kuhn

31.7.24

STEVE KUHN TRIO — Temptation (2001-2008) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless


Steve Kuhn mixes standards and forgotten gems in these 2001 studio sessions with bassist Buster Williams and drummer Billy Drummond. Beginning with a tantalizing take of "Temptation" that has a slight Latin undercurrent, Kuhn finds new directions in these timeless pieces. "Dark Eyes" is another gem that has long fallen out of favor, though Kuhn's intricate workout demonstrates that there is plenty of life left in this decades-old warhorse. His treatment of Michel Legrand's "The Summer Knows" (written as theme music for the early-'70s film Summer of '42) is a bit jagged rather than the usual setting as a straight, slow, bittersweet ballad. John Lewis' "Django" has long been a favorite of jazz musicians, and the trio's elegant setting opens with an imaginative improvisation, slowly working into its well-known theme. Kuhn's sole original, "A Likely Story," is a driving post-bop vehicle that never runs out of steam. It's hard to go wrong by purchasing any Steve Kuhn CD, and this is among his best dates. Ken Dryden
Tracklist :
1    Temptation    7:17
2    Dark Eyes    6:06
3    You Better Go Now    6:20
4    The Summer Knows    7:48
5    Love Is Here To Stay    6:40
6    Django    3:30
7    A Likely Story    9:17
8    I Can't Get Started    5:27
Credits :
Double Bass – Buster Williams
Drums – Billy Drummond
Piano – Steve Kuhn

30.7.24

STEVE KUHN TRIO — Plays Standards (2007) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless


Veteran jazz pianist Steve Kuhn has proved to be a popular artist in Japan, recording a series of CDs for the Japanese label Venus. On these 2006 sessions, Kuhn is joined by bassist Buster Williams and drummer Al Foster, two artists who also have extensive résumés. While the CD is titled Plays Standards, Kuhn doesn't stick exclusively to well-known works. In addition to Victor Young's widely recognized "Beautiful Love" (a favorite of pianist Bill Evans), the pianist offers a seductive take of the composer's "Golden Earrings" and a lighthearted, breezy setting of "Love Letters" as well. Kuhn's intense workout of "Alone Together" includes an amusing detour into Thelonious Monk's "Locomotive," while his revamping of "Softly, as in a Morning Sunrise" disguises the tune rather well. Kuhn also revisits his original "Oceans in the Sky," a brilliant piece evocative of a coming storm. Highly recommended. Ken Dryden
Tracklist :
1    Alone Together 7:16
Written-By – A. Schwartz
2    Golden Earrings 5:31

Written-By – V. Young
3    I Wish I Knew 5:59
Written-By – H. Warren
4    Left Alone 4:07
Written-By – M. Waldron
5    Blue Bossa 5:28
Written-By – K. Dorham
6    Nature Boy 6:34
Written-By – E. Ahbez
7    Softly As In A Morning Sunrise 6:32
Written-By – S. Romberg
8    You Leave Me Breathless 5:20
Written-By – F. Hollander
9    Oceans In The Sky 6:18
Written-By – S. Kuhn
10    I See Your Face Before Me 5:28
Written-By – A. Schwartz
11    Love Letters 6:50
Written-By – V. Young
12    Beautiful Love 4:35
Written-By – E.V. Alstyne, V. Young, W. King
Credits :
Bass – Buster Williams
Drums – Al Foster
Piano – Steve Kuhn

15.3.24

HEBIE HANCOCK — Fat Albert Rotunda (1969-2001) RM | Warner Bros. Masters Series | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

Centered around some soundtrack music that Herbie Hancock wrote for Bill Cosby's Fat Albert cartoon show, Fat Albert Rotunda was Hancock's first full-fledged venture into jazz-funk -- and his last until Head Hunters -- making it a prophetic release. At the same time, it was far different in sound from his later funk ventures, concentrating on a romping, late-'60s-vintage R&B-oriented sound. with frequent horn riffs and great rhythmic comping and complex solos from Hancock's Fender Rhodes electric piano. The syllables of the titles alone -- "Wiggle Waggle," "Fat Mama," "Oh! Oh! Here He Comes" -- have a rhythm and feeling that tell you exactly how this music saunters and swaggers along -- just like the jolly cartoon character. But there is more to this record than fatback funk. There is the haunting, harmonically sophisticated "Tell Me a Bedtime Story" (which ought to become a jazz standard), and the similarly relaxed "Jessica." The sextet on hand is a star-studded bunch, with Joe Henderson in funky and free moods on tenor sax, Johnny Coles on trumpet, Garnett Brown on trombone, Buster Williams on bass, and Albert "Tootie" Heath on drums. Only Williams would remain for Hancock's 1977 electric V.S.O.P.: The Quintet album to come. In addition, trumpeter Joe Newman, saxophonist Joe Farrell, guitarist Eric Gale, and drummer Bernard Purdie make guest appearances on two tracks. Richard S. Ginell  

Tracklist :
1 Wiggle-Waggle 5:51
Alto Saxophone [Uncredited], Tenor Saxophone [Uncredited] – Joe Farrell
Baritone Saxophone [Uncredited] – Arthur Clarke
Drums [Uncredited] – Bernard Purdie
Electric Bass [Uncredited] – Jerry Jemmott
French Horn [Uncredited] – Ray Alonge
Guitar [Uncredited] – Billy Butler, Eric Gale
Percussion [Uncredited] – George Devens
Trombone [Uncredited] – Benny Powell
Trumpet [Uncredited] – Ernie Royal, Joe Newman
2 Fat Mama 3:49
3 Tell Me A Bedtime Story 5:03
4 Oh! Oh! Here He Comes 4:08
5 Jessica 4:12
6 Fat Albert Rotunda 6:28
7 Lil' Brother 4:25
Alto Saxophone [Uncredited], Tenor Saxophone [Uncredited] – Joe Farrell
Baritone Saxophone [Uncredited] – Arthur Clarke
Drums [Uncredited] – Bernard Purdie
Electric Bass [Uncredited] – Jerry Jemmott
French Horn [Uncredited] – Ray Alonge
Guitar [Uncredited] – Billy Butler (3), Eric Gale
Percussion [Uncredited] – George Devens
Trombone [Uncredited] – Benny Powell
Trumpet [Uncredited] – Ernie Royal, Joe Newman
Credits :
Acoustic Bass, Electric Bass, Soloist – Buster Williams (tracks: 2, 3, 4, 5, 6)
Drums, Soloist – Tootie Heath (tracks: 2, 3, 4, 5, 6)
Engineer – Rudy Van Gelder
Flute [Alto], Tenor Saxophone, Soloist – Joe Henderson
Piano, Electric Piano, Producer, Written-By, Arranged By, Conductor, Soloist – Herbie Hancock
Trombone, Soloist – Garnet Brown
Trumpet, Flugelhorn [Fluegel Horn], Soloist – Johnny Coles

12.3.23

LEE KONITZ NONET - Yes, Yes, Nonet (1979-1986) 24bits-44.1Hz | FLAC (tracks), lossless

It was a tragedy that Lee Konitz's versatile nonet was not able to succeed commercially. Just like its leader, the group was able to stretch from swing standards, bop and cool jazz to freer improvisations and challenging originals. This SteepleChase release (featuring the nonet when it was comprised of such fine players as trumpeters Tom Harrell and John Eckert, trombonists Jimmy Knepper and Sam Burtis, baritonist Ronnie Cuber, pianist Harold Danko, bassist Buster Williams and drummer Billy Hart in addition to Konitz on alto and soprano) features the group at its best on such pieces as "Footprints," "Stardust," "My Buddy" and four songs by Jimmy Knepper. It's an excellent outing from a somewhat neglected group. Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1     Dearth of a Nation 6:05
Jimmy Knepper
2     Lanquid 6:13
Jimmy Knepper
3     Footprints 8:04
Wayne Shorter
4     Stardust 5:13
Hoagy Carmichael / Mitchell Parish
5     Primrose Path 6:32
Jimmy Knepper
6     Noche Triste 4:33
Jimmy Knepper
7     My Buddy 3:31
Walter Donaldson / Gus Kahn
Credits :    
Alto Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Lee Konitz
Baritone Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Ronnie Cuber
Bass – Buster Williams
Bass Trombone – Sam Burtis
Drums – Billy Hart
Piano – Harold Danko
Trombone – Jimmy Knepper
Trumpet, Flugelhorn – John Eckert, Tom Harrell

9.11.22

GARY BARTZ - Episode One- Children Of Harlem (1994) FLAC (tracks), lossless

Although the theme of this CD is ostensibly supposed to be nostalgia for Harlem, the music (which includes the "Amos N'Andy Theme") actually has little to do with the subject. However Bartz (who is heard on alto and soprano) is in fine form playing with a top-notch quartet that also includes pianist Larry Willis, bassist Buster Williams and drummer Ben Riley. The hard-bop oriented music includes a few standards (including "Tico Tico" and "Crazy She Calls me") and three originals by either Bartz or Willis. It's not essential but enjoyable. Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1     Amos N'Andy Theme One & Spoken Intro 3:08     
2     Tap Dancer 7:01
Gary Bartz    
3     Is This Isn't Love 10:39
Gary Bartz
4     Tico Tico 8:45
Gary Bartz
5     Ezekiel Saw the Wheel 8:53
Gary Bartz    
6     Children of Harlem 7:35
Larry Willis    
7     Crazy She Calls Me 12:55
Gary Bartz
8     Heavy Blue 5:12
Larry Willis    
9     Ruby Begonia & Amos N'Andy Theme Two 1:29
Credits :
Alto Saxophone – Gary Bartz
Bass – Buster Williams
Drums – Ben Riley
Engineer – Maureen Sickler, Rudy Van Gelder
Piano – Larry Willis

GARY BARTZ | SONNY FORTUNE - Alto Momories (1995) FLAC (tracks), lossless

Tracklist :
1    Stolen Moments    8:36
2    U.F.O    5:13
3    Jeannine    9:13
4    Minority    5:40
5    Billie's Bounce    3:49
6    Embraceable You    5:59
7    Capuchin Swing    6:11
8    Lonely Woman    9:50
9    When Lights Are Low    4:56
10    Warm Valley    7:32
Credits :
Alto Saxophone – Gary Bartz, Sonny Fortune
Double Bass – Buster Williams
Drums – Jack DeJohnette
Piano – Kenny Barron

28.10.22

CHARLES LLOYD - Acoustic Masters I (1994-2005) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Tracklist :
1    Blues For Bill    9:46
 Charles Lloyd
2    Clandestine    9:07
 Cedar Walton
3    Sweet Georgia Bright    5:51
 Charles Lloyd
4    Lady Day    7:11
 Charles Lloyd
5    Green Chimneys    5:50
 Thelonious Monk
6    Strivers Jewels    5:20
 Buster Williams
7    Hommage    10:03
 Charles Lloyd
8    To C.L.    6:06
 Billy Higgins
Credits :
Bass – Anders Jormin
Bass – Buster Williams
Drums – Billy Higgins
Piano – Cedar Walton
Producer – Lenny White
Tenor Saxophone – Charles Lloyd

27.10.21

EMILY REMLER - East to Wes (1988) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

The late guitarist's last CD to be released before her premature death is her finest effort. Emily Remler's fluid technique brightens such seldom-heard numbers as Clifford Brown's "Daahoud" and her simplified arrangement of Claude Thornhill's lovely "Snowfall," as well as more relaxed tunes like "Sweet Georgia Fame." The polished rhythm section includes the masterful pianist Hank Jones, bassist Buster Williams, and drummer Marvin "Smitty" Smith. Highly recommended. by Ken Dryden
Tracklist :
1     Daahoud 5:19
Clifford Brown
2     Snowfall 6:39
Claude Thornhill
3     Hot House 5:45
Tadd Dameron
4     Sweet Georgie Fame 5:38
Blossom Dearie / Sandra Harris
5     Ballad for a Music Box 7:25
Emily Remler
6     Blues for Herb 6:26
Emily Remler
7     Softly, as in a Morning Sunrise 8:14
Oscar Hammerstein II / Sigmund Romberg
8     East to Wes 6:12
Emily Remler
Credits :
Bass – Buster Williams
Drums – Marvin "Smitty" Smith
Guitar – Emily Remler
Piano – Hank Jones

11.10.21

BENNIE MAUPIN — The Jewel in the Lotus (1974-2019) Touchstones Series | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

Jazz -funk fans must have been taken aback when multi-instrumentalist and composer Bennie Maupin's Jewel in the Lotus was released by Manfred Eicher's ECM imprint in 1974. For starters, it sounded nothing like Herbie Hancock's Head Hunters recording, which had been released the year before to massive sales and of which Maupin had been such an integral part. Head Hunters has remained one of the most reliable sales entries in Columbia's jazz catalog into the 21st century. By contrast, Jewel in the Lotus sounded like an avant-garde jazz record, but it stood outside that hard-line camp, too, because of its open and purposeful melodies that favored composition and structured improvising over free blowing. Jazz after 1970 began to move in so many directions simultaneously it must have felt like it was tearing itself apart rather than giving birth to so many new and exciting musics. Considered carefully, however, Jewel in the Lotus was the perfect realization of the skills acquired by Maupin from the mid-'60s on, when he had played in bands led by Marion Brown, McCoy Tyner, and Pharoah Sanders. He'd even recorded an album under his own name in 1967 entitled Almanac. Maupin was first heard by the masses, however, when he played bass clarinet on the landmark Bitches Brew session by Miles Davis, and as a member of Herbie Hancock's Mwandishi and Sextant groups. He was the lone holdover when Hancock formed the Headhunters, who blasted their way onto FM radio and into the ears of fans who also dug Earth, Wind & Fire and P-Funk.
Maupin's band for this set contained close friends and musical allies encountered over the years. For starters, fellow Headhunter Bill Summers and Hancock himself are on this date, with drummer Billy Hart and versatile electric and acoustic bassist Buster Williams, who were both members of the earlier Hancock group. The other drummer on the set (there was one in the right and one in the left channel), the criminally under-recorded Frederick Waits, was a former skin man for Motown and John Lee Hooker who Maupin knew from his hometown in Detroit. Charles Sullivan, who plays trumpet on two cuts, was someone Maupin encountered in his travels in New York and jammed with. Jewel in the Lotus is not exactly a "lost" jazz classic. ECM kept it in print for many years on vinyl, but 2007 saw its first official CD release. That said, it has been traded widely on the Internet and vinyl copies of any edition command major dollars in record stores and in online auctions. There is good reason for this: it is a classic of 1970s spiritual jazz, and as much as any recording on Strata East or Black Jazz, Maupin's ECM offering is a wonder of arrangement and composition with gorgeous ensemble play, long yet sparse passages, space, and genuine strangeness. Maupin plays all of his reeds and flute in addition to glockenspiel here; Summers' percussion effects include a water-filled garbage can. The two drummers swirling around in different channels don't ever play the same thing, but counter and complement one another. And Hancock plays some of the most truly Spartan and lyrically modal piano in his career here.
From the six seconds of silence that introduce the percussive beginnings of "Ensenada," with Williams' acoustic bass on a pulse line, Waits' marimba inside a tight scale, Summers' bells, and Hancock's ghostly piano, you know you are on a journey. It doesn't matter whether that music is jazz, classical, or avant-garde. It's a journey into sound and silence. When Maupin on flute fronts the rest of the group as they enter with long-held notes and Hart begins flitting around the top with sticks playing the rims of his tom-toms, the magic is already transpiring. The music is somewhere in the twilight, perhaps better yet in the first emerging pink of a new day, where everything seems transparent because it is partially hidden from view. The ringing ostinato Hancock introduces about halfway through in the middle register is rhythmic, not melodic. The melody is so restrained it only engages one note at a time, held almost interminably but seductively. The beginning of "Mappo," by contrast, is almost startling: as both drummers move through and around the front line, Williams bows his bass at the lower end of its register, and Hancock begins to dramatically play his bottom register keys, Maupin's saxophone enters -- masculine, definitive, and pronounced -- before it gives way to space and his flute. Rhythms and themes shift and more notes are introduced, but they are still skeletally structured. Themes give way to the return of others, and everything becomes circular. The entire track -- regardless of the frenetic but taut percussion and the intense bowing of Williams -- remains in the realm of absolute crystalline beauty.
The elemental concerns of journey and transformation are paramount on the first half of the recording, all the way through the brief ostinato tune "Past + Present = Future." The primordial moment has been revisited; one listens in the moment and heads toward the sum of the two parts, which becomes almost uncomfortably clear with the introduction of electric piano sounds (think of the score from Tarkovsky's Solaris), slow deep modal lines from Williams, and Maupin's muscular tenor -- but these two give way to brave new sound worlds in the title track. The fact that the vibe remains on the border between light and dark (and nowhere more so than with the bass clarinet lines and flutes in "Winds of Change") doesn't make it a difficult record to listen to. Quite the opposite. Maupin's harmonic explorations may be unfamiliar, even downright strange at times, but they are inviting. The beckon gently; they never assault. Edges are rounded and seductive. "Song for Tracie Dixon Summers" is one of the most haunting and beautiful modal ballads ever written in the modernist jazz literature. The interplay between Williams, Summers, Maupin's saxophone, and Hancock is symbiotic. Sometimes these moments are so dramatic that what the listener hears is the sound of a new world opening up, so that by the time "Past Is Past" closes the set, with its contrapuntal piano and open-key melody, the listener has been taken completely out of the day-to-day, out of the moment and into a new one, where time is formless, free-floating, a stream. Coming back into everyday life with its business can be a bit jarring.
The true worth of Jewel in the Lotus is that perhaps no other bandleader at the time could bring together players from such different backgrounds and relationships to his own musical development and make them interact with one another with material that is scored so closely and whose dynamics and tensions are so pronounced and steady. Maupin was so utterly accomplished as a composer as well as a soloist by this time it comes as a shock that he hadn't been making records regularly -- and even more so that he has only recorded very sporadically as a leader since (only a handful of recordings bear his name on top but they are all as fine as they are different from one another). Jewel in the Lotus is a true jazz classic because only jazz was big enough in the early '70s to hold music like this, with all its seeming paradoxes, and recognize it as its own. This album sounds as timeless and adventurous in the present as the day it was released. Amen.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
1     Ensenada 8:15
Bennie Maupin
2     Mappo 8:30
Bennie Maupin
Trumpet – Charles Sullivan
3     Excursion 4:52
Bennie Maupin
Trumpet – Charles Sullivan

4     Past+Present=Future 1:52
Bennie Maupin
5     The Jewel in the Lotus 10:02
Bennie Maupin
6     Winds of Change 1:30
Bennie Maupin
7     Song for Tracie Dixon Summers 5:19
Bennie Maupin
8     Past Is Past 3:57
Bennie Maupin
Credits :
Bass – Buster Williams
Design – Sascha Kleis
Drums [Left Channel], Marimba [Left Channel] – Frederick Waits
Drums [Right Channel] – Billy Hart
Percussion, Percussion [Water-filled Garbage Can] – Bill Summers
Piano, Electric Piano – Herbie Hancock
Producer, Remastered By – Manfred Eicher
Reeds, Voice, Glockenspiel, Music By – Bennie Maupin

17.9.21

STAN GETZ PRESENTS JIMMIE ROWLES - The Peacocks (1977-1999) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Though Stan Getz is credited as the leader of The Peacocks, and his immediately identifiable tenor saxophone is well represented, this session is actually headed by pianist and vocalist Jimmy Rowles, with Getz as producer. It is essentially a series of laid-back duets between Rowles and Getz, or a small amount of quartet recordings complemented by bassist Buster Williams and drummer Elvin Jones. The range of emotion and dynamics presented offers a unique listening experience for anyone not particularly familiar with the veteran Los Angeles based Rowles, supported by a variety of players who fully understand his muse. Not without his own innate sense of style, rhythm, and energy, Rowles is the centerpiece in a stack of standards, music of Duke Ellington, modern jazz compositions, and one original. He has a dry vocal style cum Mose Allison or even Tony Bennett, most evident on "I'll Never Be the Same" or the reserved but heartfelt blues ballad/waltz "My Buddy." Without singing, Rowles and Getz sail through the stride flavored Ellington evergreen "What Am I Here For?" and the elegant "Serenade in Sweden," while the title track is the haute cuisine piece, a Rowles original that languishes in pensive, dark and midnight slow liquid colors. Of the ensemble pieces, Wayne Shorter's "Lester Left Town" brims with fermented bubbles, as Getz glides through the melody with a restrained Jones and perky piano from Rowles. A song of slow lingering and reflection on the passing of youth, "This Is All I Ask" is an old man's refrain, fondly remembering bygone glory with a request for one final chance. The stand-out track, completely set apart from the rest, is "The Chess Players," a devilish genius word play set to Wayne Shorter's instrumental melody by Jon Hendricks, featuring the lyricist, family members, wife Judith and daughter Michelle, and Getz's wife Beverly. It's a killer song, rousingly upbeat and wild, as the chorale threatens they're "coming to get you," "you better believe it," and they "must have your love." Rowles does a modified free solo piano adaptation of "Body & Soul," and an interesting medley of Cedar Walton's modal "Mosaic" affixed to a short snippet of "Would You Like to Take a Walk?" as an appropriate coda for this program. With few Jimmy Rowles recordings in the world, this has to rank as his best, clearly the most entertaining, and a project Getz was ever proud to bring to the jazz world. It is definitive, deserving of the Columbia Jazz Masterpieces tag, and a must-have item in your modern jazz collection. by Michael G. Nastos 
Tracklist :
1     I'll Never Be the Same 4:07
Gus Kahn / Matty Malneck / Frank Signorelli
Piano, Vocals – Jimmy Rowles
Tenor Saxophone – Stan Getz

2     Lester Left Town 5:53
Wayne Shorter
Bass – Buster Williams
Drums – Elvin Jones
Piano – Jimmy Rowles
Tenor Saxophone – Stan Getz

3     Body and Soul 5:51
Frank Eyton / Johnny Green / Edward Heyman / Robert Sour
Piano – Jimmy Rowles

4     What Am I Here For? 4:57
Duke Ellington / Frankie Laine
Piano – Jimmy Rowles
Tenor Saxophone – Stan Getz

5     Serenade to Sweden 5:39
Duke Ellington
Piano – Jimmy Rowles
Tenor Saxophone – Stan Getz

6     The Chess Players 5:43
Wayne Shorter
Bass – Buster Williams
Drums – Elvin Jones
Piano – Jimmy Rowles
Tenor Saxophone – Stan Getz
Vocals – Jon Hendricks, Judith Hendricks, Michelle Hendricks

7     The Peacocks 5:42
Jimmy Rowles
Piano – Jimmy Rowles
Tenor Saxophone – Stan Getz

8     My Buddy 4:26
Walter Donaldson / Gus Kahn
Bass – Buster Williams
Drums – Elvin Jones
Piano, Vocals – Jimmy Rowles
Tenor Saxophone – Stan Getz

9     The Hour of Parting 3:35
Gus Kahn / Mischa Spoliansky
Piano – Jimmy Rowles
Tenor Saxophone – Stan Getz

10     Rose Marie 2:54
Rudolf Friml / Otto Harbach / Oscar Hammerstein II / Herbert Stothart
Bass – Buster Williams
Drums – Elvin Jones
Piano, Vocals – Jimmy Rowles
Tenor Saxophone – Stan Getz

11     This Is All I Ask 4:23
Gordon Jenkins
Bass – Buster Williams
Drums – Elvin Jones
Piano, Vocals – Jimmy Rowles
Tenor Saxophone – Stan Getz

12     Skylark 4:01
Hoagy Carmichael / Johnny Mercer
Piano – Jimmy Rowles
Tenor Saxophone – Stan Getz

13     Mosaic/Would You Like to Take a Walk 1:33
Mort Dixon / Billy Rose / Cedar Walton / Harry Warren
Piano – Jimmy Rowles

24.8.21

Dr. LONNIE SMITH - The Turbanator (2000) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

These 1991 recordings went unreleased until 2000, and they're well-worth hearing. Smith begins with a ripping Hammond B3 reading of Duke Ellington's "Caravan," joined by guitarist Jimmy Ponder and drummer Buddy Williams. There are two more standards, "Someday My Prince Will Come" and "Cherokee," the latter surprisingly played as a ballad. But four blues-based originals fill the remainder of the program, three of which feature Smith on acoustic piano and Buster Williams on bass. Tenor saxophonist Houston Person also appears on two of the tracks. From burning swing to ballads to funk, Smith's touch on both organ and piano is highly individual and effective. For guitar fans, the presence of the underappreciated Jimmy Ponder is an added value. by David R. Adler
Tracklist :
1     Caravan 7:41
Duke Ellington / Irving Mills / Juan Tizol
2     Night Song 8:40
Dr. Lonnie Smith
3     Someday My Prince Will Come 5:39
Frank Churchill / Larry Morey
4     River Walk 9:48
Dr. Lonnie Smith
5     Monk Could Swing 9:17
Dr. Lonnie Smith
6     Cherokee 6:53
Ray Noble
7     Brushin' It 12:01
Dr. Lonnie Smith
Credits :
Bass – Buster Williams
Drums – Buddy Williams
Engineer – Rudy Van Gelder
Guitar – Jimmy Ponder
Organ – Dr. Lonnie Smith
Producer, Tenor Saxophone – Houston Person

4.7.21

SHIRLEY HORN - You Won't Forget Me (1991) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

With 1991's You Won't Forget Me, Shirley Horn's star continued to rise. While mostly ballads, this recording also includes swinging takes on "I Just Found Out About Love" and "Foolin' Myself." Toots Thielemans stars with his distinctive harmonica sound on "Beautiful Love" and "Soothe Me," and the unmistakable trumpet of Miles Davis weaves around Horn's vocal on the title track. The opening medley moves from the almost-whispered ballad "The Music That Makes Me Dance," to a funkily midtempo "Come Dance with Me." "Don't Let the Sun Catch You Crying" is absolutely gorgeous, with Wynton Marsalis stepping in to trade phrases with Horn's voice. The music here is mostly taken at a very leisurely tempo, and the spare arrangements allow plenty of room for the music to breathe, proving that less is often more. The only complaint is that such spaciousness generates is a certain sameness to the material, but this is leavened by the guest appearances of Thielemans, Davis, the brothers Marsalis, and tenorman Buck Hill. by Jim Newsom
Tracklist :
1     The Music That Makes Me Dance 6:32
Bob Merrill / Jule Styne
2     Come Dance with Me 2:47
Sammy Cahn / James Van Heusen
3     Don't Let the Sun Catch You Crying 5:58
Joe Greene
Trumpet – Wynton Marsalis

4     Beautiful Love 3:38
Haven Gillespie / Wayne King / Egbert VanAlstyne / Victor Young
Harmonica, Guitar – Toots Thielemans

5     Come Back to Me 3:43
Burton Lane / Alan Jay Lerner
6     Too Late Now 6:00
Burton Lane / Alan Jay Lerner
7     I Just Found Out About Love 2:24
Harold Adamson / Jimmy McHugh
8     It Had to Be You 6:49
Isham Jones / Gus Kahn
Saxophone [Tenor] – Branford Marsalis
9     Soothe Me 3:31
Joe Greene
Harmonica, Guitar – Toots Thielemans

10     Foolin' Myself 2:46
Jack Lawrence / Peter Tinturin
11     If You Go 8:57
Michel Emer / Geoffrey Parsons
12     You Stepped Out of a Dream 3:44
Nacio Herb Brown / Gus Kahn
Guitar – Charles Ables

13     You Won't Forget Me 7:12
Kermit Goell / Fred Spielman
Trumpet – Miles Davis

14     All My Tomorrows 6:22
Sammy Cahn / James Van Heusen
Credits :
Bass – Buster Williams (faixas: 5, 10, 12), Charles Ables (faixas: 1 to 3, 6 to 8, 11, 13, 14)
Drums – Billy Hart (faixas: 5, 10, 12), Steve Williams (faixas: 1 to 3, 6 to 8, 11, 13, 14)
Piano, Vocals, Arranged By – Shirley Horn
   

12.3.20

HERBIE HANCOCK - Crossings (1972-2014) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

With the frenzied knocking of what sounds like a clock shop gone berserk, Crossings takes the Herbie Hancock Sextet even further into the electric avant-garde, creating its own idiom. Now, however, the sextet has become a septet with the addition of Dr. Patrick Gleeson on Moog synthesizer, whose electronic decorations, pitchless and not, give the band an even spacier edge. Again, there are only three tracks -- the centerpiece being Hancock's multi-faceted, open-structured suite in five parts called "Sleeping Giant." Nearly 25 minutes long yet amazingly cohesive, "Sleeping Giant" gathers a lot of its strength from a series of funky grooves -- the most potent of which explodes at the tail-end of Part Two -- and Hancock's on-edge Fender Rhodes electric piano solos anticipate his funk adventures later in the '70s. Bennie Maupin's "Quasar" pushes the session into extraterrestrial territory, dominated by Gleeson's wild Moog effects and trumpeter Eddie Henderson's patented fluttering air trumpet. Even stranger is Maupin's "Water Torture," which saunters along freely with splashes of color from Hancock's spooky Mellotron and fuzz-wah-pedaled Fender Rhodes piano, Gleeson's electronics, and a quintet of voices. Still a challenging sonic experience, this music (which can be heard on Warners' Mwandishi two-CD set) has yet to find its audience, though the electronica-minded youth ought to find it dazzling. by Richard S. Ginell  
Tracklist:
1. Sleeping Giant (24:48)
2. Quasar (7:25)
3. Water Torture (13:54)
Total Time 46:21
Credits:
Herbie Hancock - Piano, Electric Piano, Mellotron, Percussion
Eddie Henderson - Trumpet, Flugelhorn, Percussion
Billy Hart - Drums, Percussion
Julian Priester - Bass, Tenor and Alto Trombone, Percussion
Buster Williams - Electric Bass, Bass, Percussion
Bennie Maupin - Soprano Saxophone, Alto Flute, Bass Clarinet, Piccolo, Percussion
Patrick Gleeson - Moog Synthesizer
Victor Pontoja - Congas
Voices - Candy Love, Sandra Stevens, Della Horne, Victoria Domagalski, Scott Breach

HERBIE HANCOCK - Sextant (1973-1998) APE (image+.cue), lossless

When Herbie Hancock left Warner Bros. in 1971 after releasing three musically sound but critically and commercially underappreciated albums -- The Crossing, Mwandishi, and Fat Albert's Groove -- he was struggling. At odds with a jazz establishment that longed for his return to his Blue Note sound and a fierce consciousness struggle with free music and the full-on embrace of electricity since his tenure with Miles Davis, Hancock was clearly looking for a voice. Before diving into the commercial waters that would become Headhunters in 1973, Hancock and his tough group (including Billy Hart, Julian Priester, Dr. Eddie Henderson, Bennie Maupin, and Buster Williams) cut this gem for their new label, Columbia. Like its Warner predecessors, the album features a kind of post-modal, free impressionism while gracing the edges of funk. The three long tracks are exploratory investigations into the nature of how mode and interval can be boiled down into a minimal stew and then extrapolated upon for soloing and "riffing." In fact, in many cases, the interval becomes the riff, as is evidenced by "Rain Dance." The piece that revealed the true funk direction, however, was "Hidden Shadows," with its choppy basslines and heavy percussion -- aided by the inclusion of Dr. Patrick Gleeson and Buck Clarke. Dave Rubinson's production brought Hancock's piano more into line with the rhythm section, allowing for a unified front in the more abstract sections of these tunes. The true masterpiece on the album, though, is "Hornets," an eclectic, electric ride through both the dark modal ambience of Miles' In a Silent Way and post-Coltrane harmonic aesthetics. The groove is in place, but it gets turned inside out by Priester and Maupin on more than one occasion and Hancock just bleats with the synth in sections. Over 19 minutes in length, it can be brutally intense, but is more often than not stunningly beautiful. It provides a glimpse into the music that became Headhunters, but doesn't fully explain it, making this disc, like its Warner predecessors, true and welcome mysteries in Hancock's long career. by Thom Jurek
Tracklist:
1 Rain Dance 9:16
2 Hidden Shadows 10:11
3 Hornets 19:35
Credits:
Bass Trombone, Tenor Trombone, Trombone [Alto Trombone], Cowbell – Pepo
Composed By – Herbie Hancock
Congas, Bongos – Buck Clarke
Drums – Jabali
Effects [Random Resonator] – Fundi
Electric Bass [Fender Electric With Wah-wah And Fuzz], Acoustic Bass – Mchezaji
Electric Piano [Fender Rhodes], Clavinet [Hohner D-6 With Fender Fuzz-wah And Echoplex], Mellotron, Piano [Steinway], Handclaps – Mwandishi
Soprano Saxophone, Bass Clarinet, Piccolo Flute, Afoxé [Afuche], Kazoo [Hum-a-zoo] – Mwile
Synthesizer [Arp 2600] – Dr. Patrick Gleeson
Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Mganga

24.6.19

HERBIE HANCOCK - Mwandishi (1971-2007) RM / FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

It is one of Hancock's first departures from the traditional idioms of jazz as well as the onset of a new, creative and original style which produced an appeal to a wider audience, before his 1973 album, Head Hunters. In addition, Mwandishi was Hancock's attempt at continuing the musical principles and styles he began playing with Miles Davis on In A Silent Way. Hancock's previous attempts at jazz-rock fusion included Fat Albert Rotunda, an album conceived solely for Bill Cosby's Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids.
Mwandishi was recorded at Wally Heider Recording Studios, in San Francisco, California in December 1970. It was originally recorded by the Mwandishi Sextet that was built around Herbie Hancock and progressive notions of funk, jazz, and rock during this time period.
The tracks on Mwandishi are "Ostinato," the time signature of which is 15/8, "You'll Know When You Get There", and "Wandering Spirit Song". "Wandering Spirit Song" features Hancock's extensive use of tension and release, whereby he builds the tension of the song by increasing the amount of musical voices and increasing crescendos, only to release the tension with long held out chords on his synthesizer.
Mwandishi is a Swahili name Hancock adopted during the late 1960s and early 1970s. The members of the Sextet each adopted a Swahili name: Mchezaji/Buster Williams, Jabali/Billy Hart, Mganga/Eddie Henderson, Mwile/Bennie Maupin, Pepo Mtoto/Julian Priester, and Ndugu/Leon Chancler.

With the formation of his great electric sextet, Herbie Hancock's music took off into outer and inner space, starting with the landmark Mwandishi album recorded in a single session on New Year's Eve. Ever the gadgeteer, Herbie plays with electronic effects devices -- reverb units, stereo tremelo, and Echoplex -- which all lead his music into spacier, open-ended directions very much influenced by Miles Davis' electric experiments, rendering it from post-bop conventions. There are just three tracks: the insistent 15/4-meter Afro-electric-funk workout "Ostinato (Suite for Angela)," the inquisitive "You'll Know When You Get There" with its ethereal Hancock voicings, and trombonist Julian Priester's "Silent Way"-influenced "Wandering Spirit Song," which eventually dips into tumultuous free form. Eddie Henderson emerges as a major trumpet soloist here, probing, jabbing, soliloquizing; Bennie Maupin comes over from Lee Morgan's group to add his ominous bass clarinet and thoughtful alto flute; and Buster Williams' bass and Billy Hart's flexible drums propel the rhythm section. Santana's José Chepitó Areas and Leon "Ndugu" Chancler also add funky percussive reinforcement to "Ostinato," along with guitarist Ron Montrose. The group's collective empathy is remarkable, and Hancock had only begun to probe the outer limits with this extraordinary music. by Richard S. Ginell

Tracklist:
1. Ostinato (Suite For Angela)
2. You'll Know When You Get There
3. Wandering Spirit Song
4. Ostinato (Suite for Angela) [promo edit]
5. You'll Know When You Get There [promo edit]
Personnel:
Mwandishi / Herbie Hancock – Fender Rhodes piano
Mchezaji / Buster Williams – Bass
Jabali / Billy Hart – Drums
Mganga / Eddie Henderson – Trumpet, flugelhorn
Mwile / Bennie Maupin – Bass clarinet, alto flute, piccolo
Pepo Mtoto / Julian Priester – tenor trombone, bass trombone
Ronnie Montrose – Guitar on "Ostinato (Suite For Angela)"
Leon "Ndugu" Chancler – drums and percussion
Chepito / Jose Areas – congas and Timbales on "Ostinato (Suite For Angela)"

TAMPA RED — Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order ★ Volume 9 • 1938-1939 | DOCD-5209 (1993) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

One of the greatest slide guitarists of the early blues era, and a man with an odd fascination with the kazoo, Tampa Red also fancied himsel...