Whether or not the four individual albums packaged with in Aces Back to Back are among Rahsaan Roland Kirk's finest is of no consequence. The fact that they have been assembled in a package that offers the listener a sense of Kirk's development and continuity is the issue here. And in this way, Aces Back to Back is a supreme collection. The four albums included -- Left & Right, Rahsaan Rahsaan, Prepare Thyself to Deal With a Miracle, and Other Folks Music -- date from 1969 to 1976 and chart dimensional growth of Kirk's completely original music. There's the outsider wizardry of Left & Right that melds the innovations of John Coltrane and Scott Joplin across an entire range of highly experimental yet wonderfully human music. Guests included Roy Haynes, Alice Coltrane, Julius Watkins, and many others in a band that ranged from a quartet to a full orchestra. Then there are the nine musicians who appear on Rahsaan Rahsaan, among them avant violinist Leroy Jenkins. Here, from the margins comes Kirk's preaching and poetry and also yielded the classics "The Seeker" and "Baby Let Me Shake Your Tree." The fact that they open and close the album, respectively, reveals not only Kirk's diversity, but also his commitment to a universal black music. Prepare Thyself to Deal With a Miracle is Kirk's meditation on orchestral music juxtaposed against folk and R&B forms. Form the opening "Salvation and Reminiscing," where the string section carries a monadic theme into microtonal territory, Kirk uses the "ugliness" to achieve great beauty which is fully realized when he combines a revved-up version of "Balm in Gilead" with a section of Ralph Vaughn Williams' Pastoral Symphony on "Seasons." Finally, with the issue of Others Folks Music, Kirk contributes only one composition, a beautiful meditation entitled "Water for Robeson and Williams." The rest is made up of the music of Charlie Parker ("Donna Lee"), Kirk's then pianist Hilton Ruiz ("Arrival"), Frank Foster ("Simone"), and others. This is a loose, roughneck record where Kirk uses the harmonics of others to transform his own into something that would make the music itself larger than any of its individual parts. In all for the price tag, this is a solid buy, revealing the most misunderstood innovator in the history of jazz.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
All Tracks & Credits :
8.7.24
RAHSAAN ROLAND KIRK — Aces Back To Back (1998) 4CD BOX-SET | APE (image+.cue), lossless
16.6.24
ROY AYERS UBIQUITY — Virgo Red (1973-2009) RM | Serie Verve Originals | FLAC (tracks+.cue) lossless
Despite contributions from an abundance of soul-jazz greats including Dee Dee Bridgewater, Jimmy Owens, and Garnett Brown, Virgo Red is the most stripped-down and nuanced of Roy Ayers' Ubiquity LPs. Its sinuous funk grooves are first and foremost a showcase for the intuitive interplay of Ayers and electric keyboardist Harry Whitaker, whose Fender Rhodes' fills orbit Ayers' vibes' solos like a planet circling the sun. The material is a crazy quilt of righteously soulful originals and deeply funky covers spanning Leroy Hutson's soul classic "Giving Love" to Stories' soft pop smash "Brother Louie" to absolute treacle like The Poseidon Adventure's "The Morning After" -- by all rights it shouldn't work, but as the astrological overtones winding through Virgo Red attest, sometimes the stars align. Jason Ankeny
Tracklist :
1 Brother Louie 6:08
Composed By – E. Brown, T. Wilson
2 Virgo Red 2:58
Composed By – C. Clay, R. Ayers
3 I Am Your Mind 6:13
Composed By – C. Clay, R. Ayers
4 The Morning After 4:37
Composed By – A. Kasha, J. Hirschhorn
5 Love From The Sun 2:43
Composed By – C. Clay, R. Clay, W. Garfield
6 It's So Sweet 4:23
Composed By – R. Alderson, W. Salter
7 Giving Love 4:26
Composed By – J. Reaves, L. Hutson
8 Des Nude Soul 4:49
Composed By – R. Ayers
Credits
Arranged By [Vocals] – Bert DeCoteaux
Artwork – Haruo Miyauchi
Baritone Vocals – Argerie Ayers, Arthur Clark, D.D Bridgewater, Leslie Carter, Seldon Powell, Willie Michael
Bass – David Johnson, Gordon Edwards
Congas, Bongos, Vocals – Chano O'Ferral
Drums, Percussion – Dennis Davis
Guitar – Dennis Heaven, Will Hawes
Percussion – Adrian Dey, Stephen Sadiz Shbazzberrios
Piano, Electric Piano, Organ – Harry Whitaker
Sitar [Electric Sitar] – Jerry Friedman
Trombone – Garnett Brown
Trumpet – Cecil Bridgewater, Jimmie Owens
Vibraphone, Organ, Vocals, Percussion, Arranged By [Vocals] – Roy Ayers
7.4.24
DEE DEE BRIDGEWATER — Eleanora Fagan (1915-1959) : To Billie with Love from Dee Dee Bridgewater (2010) WV (image+.cue), lossless
It shouldn't come as much of a surprise that Dee Dee Bridgewater chose
to record a tribute album to Billie Holiday. In quick succession
beginning in the mid-'90s Bridgewater cut tribute albums to Ella
Fitzgerald, Horace Silver, and Kurt Weill, and prior to that, in the
late '80s, she was nominated for an award for her one-woman star turn in
a European theater production of Lady Day, the Holiday story. That
Bridgewater would eventually turn to Holiday (whose given name of
Eleanora Fagan explains the title) for an album-length exploration was
almost a given -- it was just a question of when. It's one of her
grandest efforts, too. With arrangements by Edsel Gomez (who also
provides piano) and a stellar cast of participants including bassist
Christian McBride, saxophonist/flutist/bass clarinetist James Carter,
and drummer Lewis Nash, Bridgewater doesn't attempt to mimic Holiday's
mannerisms or inflections but, as one would expect of such a gifted
artist, to absorb and reframe Holiday -- this is pure Bridgewater, not
another performance of Lady Day. Gomez, for his part, quite often pulls
the arrangements squarely away from Holiday territory to reinvent these
classic songs for a modern audience. The opening "Lady Sings the Blues"
is both instantly recognizable yet freshly reconceived as something of
an uptempo blues packed with polyrhythmic punch. "All of Me," which
follows, is taken at near-breakneck speed, Bridgewater jumping ahead of
the beat, following Carter's thrilling soprano sax solo with a raging
scat that's more Ella than Billie. Not everything is meant to redefine,
though: "God Bless the Child" is mostly true to the original, though
Carter's soprano solo again brings the tune into the new century, and
"Lover Man," though livelier than Holiday's take, is offered in a
somewhat timeless and straightforward manner. As one might expect,
there's no way a singer with Bridgewater's commitment to jazz history
could release a Holiday tribute without tackling "Strange Fruit," the
controversial anti-lynching landmark that remains Holiday's most daring
moment, and it's saved for last here. It's an eerie, ominous
interpretation, Bridgewater's raw vocal up front and fraught with
emotion. Carter's brooding bass clarinet and McBride's bass lend a
foreboding quality to the take, Nash relies heavily on his cymbals to
dramatic effect, and Gomez's piano is subtle, allowing the nakedness of
Bridgewater's voice -- at times unaccompanied -- to retell this story
that can never be told enough. It's a stunning finale to one of the
finest Billie Holiday homages ever recorded. Jeff Tamarkin
Tracklist :
1 Lady Sings The Blues 3:30
Written-By – Billie Holiday, Herbie Nichols
2 All Of Me 2:58
Written-By – Gerald Marks, Seymour B. Simons
3 Good Morning Heartache 5:10
Written-By – Dan Fisher, Ervin M. DRake, Irene Higginbotham
4 Lover Man 4:43
Written-By – James Edward Davis, James Sherman, Roger J. Ramirez
5 You've Changed 5:10
Written-By – William "Bill" Carey, Carl Fischer
6 Miss Brown To You 2:12
Written-By – Leo Robin, Ralph Rainger, Richard A. Whiting
7 Don't Explain 6:14
Written-By – Arthur Herzog Jr., Billie Holiday
8 Fine And Mellow 4:54
Written-By – Billie Holiday
9 Mother's Son-In-Law 2:46
Written-By – Alberta Nichols, Mann Holiner
10 God Bless The Child 5:13
Written-By – Arthur Herzog Jr., Billie Holiday
11 Foggy Day 4:33
Written-By – George Gershwin, Ira Gershwin
12 Strange Fruit 4:16
Written-By – Lewis Allan
Credits :
Bass – Christian McBride
Bass Clarinet – James Carter (pistas: 3, 12)
Drums – Lewis Nash
Flute [Alto] – James Carter (pistas: 7)
Arranged By, Piano – Edsel Gomez
Soprano Saxophone – James Carter (pistas: 2, 4, 10)
Tenor Saxophone – James Carter (pistas: 1, 5, 6, 8, 9)
Vocals – Dee Dee Bridgewater
31.12.23
RAY BROWN TRIO — Some of My Best Friends Are ... Singers (1998) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
What does a bass player do when he's recording an album as a leader? Surely not an hour's worth of bass solos! Ray Brown solved the bass player's dilemma with a series of recordings under the Some of My Best Friends Are... heading. This 1998 release is the third in the series, following the earlier Some of My Best Friends Are...Piano Players and Some of My Best Friends Are...Sax Players, and it's a gem. Featuring a sextet of fine vocalists, ranging from the well-established to the unknown, this CD is a class act from beginning to end. The rising jazz vocal superstar of the late '90s, Diana Krall, is showcased to great effect on "I Thought About You" and "Little Boy." Well-established female vocal veterans Etta Jones, Dee Dee Bridgewater, and Marlena Shaw deliver superb performances, soulfully giving master lessons in the art of singing. The lone male singer spotlighted here, Kevin Mahogany, wraps his smooth baritone around the ballad "Skylark," and swings gently on "The Party's Over."
The one unknown in this collection is Oregonian Nancy King. This veteran of the San Francisco and Pacific Northwest scenes shows she has a fine way with a ballad on "But Beautiful," and scats her way across the upbeat Brown original "The Perfect Blues," that closes this set. Both of these songs also feature Antonio Hart's alto saxophone. In addition to Brown's trio mates Geoff Keezer and Gregory Hutchinson, musical support includes guitarist Russell Malone on two tracks and tenor saxman Ralph Moore cooking alongside Bridgewater on "Cherokee." Jim Newsom Tracklist & Credits :
25.11.22
RAHSAAN ROLAND KIRK - Prepare Thyself To Deal With a Miracle (1973-2002) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Recorded in 1973, this is yet another criminally underappreciated Rahsaan Roland Kirk recording from the last phase of a remarkable career. This is perhaps Kirk's most experimental recording in that it involves his most involved performing on multiple horns and flutes -- including his infamous and wonderful nose flute -- and working with drones on a more surface level. Given Kirk's system of playing three horns at once, the drone horn was always a part of his sonic architecture. The difference here is that the melodic and improvisational lines take a back seat on tunes such as the opening "Salvation and Reminiscing," where he makes fantastic use of a baby E-flat saxophone, and on "Celestial Bliss," on which he is accompanied on his "black mystery pipes" only by percussion. On the medley "Seasons: One Mind Winter/Summer/Ninth Ghost," Kirk begins with the nose flutes, playing a part of "Balm in Gilead," before bringing in a six-piece string orchestra to play behind him as he improvises on all the melodies and modes. And this improvisation is not just a series of out arpeggios playing legato and running through and over the changes, but intricately nuanced, gentle, and architecturally sophisticated wanderings. Despite the beauty of the album's first three tracks, it is on the closer, the 21-and-a-half-minute "Saxophone Concerto," where Kirk most leaves his mark as a composer and innovator on the jazz world. Kirk comes out blowing literally like a train and weaves in, with vocalists Jeanne Lee and Dee Dee Bridgewater, a series of muted horn lines and rhythm figures. The band is 16 pieces total, and the concerto is structured in movements from an intro in which the purpose is stated: "time for America to discover some of its true Black miracles," wherein bebop and hard bop shimmy up against free modes and articulations by the rhythm section and the other horns. Kirk may solo on top with his tenor, but he holds close to the rhythm section's articulation of mutated blues. From here, Latin and faux classical chromatics are shaded into the whole as the pace becomes more and more frenetic, and just as the piece becomes perhaps circus-like, Kirk and company strip it all back and out, into a free universe washed by improvising vocalists, crashing cymbals, droning brass, and rumbling tom-toms before it's all a hush of unidentifiable sounds except for those of breaking glass. There are numerous metaphors and metonyms here, but they will not come to the listener until later, when she or he regains the conscious notion of breathing.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
1 Salvation And Reminiscing 5:14
Backing Vocals – Dee Dee Bridgewater, Jeanne Lee
Clarinet – Rahsaan Roland Kirk
Conductor – Dick Griffin
Seasons (10:32)
Nose Flute, Flute – Rahsaan Roland Kirk
2a One Mind Winter/Summer
2b Ninth Ghost
3 Celestial Bliss 5:47
Backing Vocals – Dee Dee Bridgewater, Jeanne Lee
Performer [Black Mystery Pipes], Saxophone [Baby E Flat] – Rahsaan Roland Kirk
Saxophone Concerto (21:31)
Backing Vocals – Jeanne Lee
Tenor Saxophone – Rahsaan Roland Kirk
4a Saxophone Miracle
4b One Breath Beyond
4c Dance Of Revolution
Credits :
Arranged By [Strings] – Rahsaan Roland Kirk
Bass – Henry Pearson
Cello – Kermit Moore
Drums – Robert Shy
English Horn, Oboe – Harry Smiles
Percussion – Ralph MacDonald, Sonny Brown
Piano – Ron Burton
Trombone – Dick Griffin
Trumpet – Charles McGhee
Viola – Al Brown
Violin – Gayle Dixon, Julien Barber, Sanford Allen, Selwart Clarke
Written-By – Rahsaan Roland Kirk
8.7.21
DEE DEE BRIDGEWATER - Memphis ... Yes, I'm Ready (2017) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
There's no question that Dee Dee Bridgewater is one of America's great jazz vocalists, but that's hardly the only thing she can do. Bridgewater was born in Memphis, Tennessee, and while her family pulled up stakes for Flint, Michigan when she was only three, she still feels a spiritual connection with the city and its music, and on 2017's Memphis...Yes, I'm Ready, she puts her love of vintage soul and blues front and center. Bridgewater recorded Memphis...Yes, I'm Ready at Royal Recorders, the Bluff City studio where producer Willie Mitchell cut a string of hits with Al Green in the '70s, and Willie's son Lawrence "Boo" Mitchell co-produced the sessions along with Dee Dee and her daughter Tulani Bridgewater. Mitchell pulled together a splendid studio band for this album, including a few members of the old Hi Rhythm Section, and they deliver a superb set of soulful grooves, at once swampy and emphatic, with John Stoddart's electric piano, Jackie Clark's bass, and James "Bishop" Sexton's drums generating just the right amount of funk. With a top-shelf soul band cooking behind her, Dee Dee Bridgewater steps up as a top-shelf soul singer, smooth when she should be, good and gritty when she wants to be, and sounding tough, passionate, and firmly in command at all times. That Bridgewater delivers on soul classics such as "Yes, I'm Ready," "Try a Little Tenderness," and "B.A.B.Y." is not a great surprise, but her transformation of B.B. King's blues perennial "The Thrill Is Gone" into a smoky late-night groove is both unexpected and welcome, and she works an impressive transformation on two numbers associated with Elvis Presley, "Don't Be Cruel" and "Hound Dog," finding a tough R&B center inside them. "The Sweeter He Is" gives Dee Dee a chance to open up her soul and tell us some home truths about cheating men, and the closing performance of the gospel standard "(Take My Hand) Precious Lord" is glorious. Dee Dee Bridgewater strips off some of the polish from her style on Memphis...Yes, I'm Ready without betraying her talent or best musical instincts, and this detour into Soul City is a treat that should please her fans, as well as anyone who digs Southern soul. by Mark Deming
Tracklist :
1 Yes, I'm Ready 4:57
Barbara Mason
2 Giving Up 4:55
Van McCoy
3 I Can't Get Next to You 5:16
Barrett Strong / Norman Whitfield
4 Going Down Slow 4:45
St. Louis Jimmy Oden
5 Why (Am I Treated So Bad) 4:36
Roebuck "Pops" Staples
6 B.A.B.Y. 4:04
Isaac Hayes / David Porter
7 The Thrill Is Gone 5:38
Rick Ravon Darnell / Roy Hawkins
8 The Sweeter He Is 6:45
Isaac Hayes / David Porter
9 I Can't Stand the Rain 3:06
Donald Maurice Bryant / Bernard Miller / Ann Peebles
10 Don't Be Cruel 4:40
Otis Blackwell / Elvis Presley
11 Hound Dog 3:38
Jerry Leiber / Mike Stoller
12 Try a Little Tenderness 5:25
James Campbell / Reginald Connelly / Harry Woods
13 (Take My Hand) Precious Lord 4:18
Rev. Thomas A. Dorsey / Sobie Frank Frazier / Jeff Majors
Credits :
Backing Vocals [Backup Vocals] – Candise Rayborn-Marshall, Stax Music Academy
Bass – Jackie Clark
Co-producer, Arranged By [Horns], Tenor Saxophone, Baritone Saxophone – Kirk Whalum
Drums – James 'Bishop' Sexton
Electric Organ [Hammond Organ] – Charles Hodges
Guitar – Garry Goin
Producer [Associate], Arranged By [Vocals], Keyboards – John Stoddart
Producer, Engineer, Electronic Drums [Electric Bongo], Cymbal [Sizzle Cymbal], Tambourine – Lawrence 'Boo' Mitchell
Producer, Vocals – Dee Dee Bridgewater
Tenor Saxophone – Kirk Smothers
Trombone – Kameron Whalum
2.3.20
STANLEY CLARKE - Children Of Forever (1973-2007) RM / FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Stanley Clarke's debut solo effort was issued when he was already a seasoned jazz veteran, and a member of Chick Corea's Return to Forever, which at the time of this recording also included Joe Farrell on soprano sax and flute, and the Brazilian team of vocalist Flora Purim and drummer/percussionist Airto Moreira. Produced by Corea, who plays Rhodes, clavinet, and acoustic piano on Children of Forever, the band included flutist Art Webb, then-new RtF drummer Lenny White, guitarist Pat Martino, and a vocal pairing between the inimitable Andy Bey and Dee Dee Bridgewater on three of the five cuts -- Bey appears on four. Clarke plays both electric and acoustic bass on the set; and while it would be easy to simply look at this recording as an early fusion date, that would be a tragic mistake. If anything, Children of Forever is a true cousin to Norman Connors' classic Dance of Magic and Dark of Light albums, which were also released in 1973; Clarke played bass on both. This is basically funky, spiritual jazz in the best sense. Yes, jazz. That wonderfully mercurial, indefinable force that brings into itself the whole of music, from popular to classical and folk forms, and makes something new out of them. The long title track with its killer vocal interplay between Bridgewater and Bey is seductive from the jump. Add Clarke's big fat bassline, which is mellow and meaty at the beginning, but after the long piano and guitar breaks in the middle becomes dirty, fuzzy, and spacy by the end as the cut leans into souled-out funk.
The "message" tunes that make up this music balance the dawning of the future as the logical place of Black consciousness -- where a new day was indeed emerging from the struggles of the '50s and '60s. Add to this the cosmic looking cover, and its weighed electric and acoustic underpinnings, and you have the makings of a timeless classic. Indeed, no matter how one feels about Clarke's later work, which aimed for the harder and funkier realms of disco and urban soul as well as keeping his jazz chops intact, this disc in every sense is forward-looking and memorable. Bridgewater's lead vocal interaction with Webb's flute on "Unexpected Days," with Bey helping on the bridge and refrain, is awe-inspiring. The ensemble is focused on "song." Corea's has rarely sounded so naturally funky as he does here and his production is free of the hard, sometimes brittle sound he would employ with the Al DiMeola-Lenny White version of RtF. The centerpiece of the disc is a vehicle for Clarke, called "Bass Folk Song." At nearly eight minutes, Clarke plays both upright and electric bass, sometimes employing a wah wah pedal on the former. It shows his virtuosity; he could literally make either instrument sing. Corea is fantastic in his supporting role, playing fills and vamps behind the bassist and Martino -- who also has never sounded so nasty as he does here on electric guitar and 12-string acoustic -- they're full of innovative rhythms and eclectic harmonics. And White is simply a powerhouse, breaking beats and taking Clarke for a real ride in almost unconscious rhythmic interplay.
The last half of the set is equally wonderful with the ballad "Butterfly Dreams" that launches into something wholly other by its midpoint, and never loses sight of its melody, lush harmonics, and very real sense of abstract swing. Clarke propels the ensemble from the bass chair, and allows everyone the room to blend into that big wood sound he gets on his upright. Bey's vocal performance on the cut is one of his best on record. The set closes with Corea's "Sea Journey," the longest track here, coming in at over 16 minutes. There is quite a bit of improvisation here as one might expect, with Corea playing intense Latin contrapuntal melodies on his Rhodes and clavinet -- even moving into descarga at one point -- and Bridgewater and Bey stretching their vocals to drape the music; their pairing is utterly elegant, soulful, and lovely. Clarke and White are a force maejure as a rhythm section, they push and entwine with one another in a dance of double, triple, and half-time beats and pulses, bringing a sense of not only movement but travel to the proceedings without ever leaving the groove. The beautiful front line of Corea and Webb in the head and during the middle section is subtle and haunting; it literally drifts, anchored only by the rhythm section that keeps them from lifting off into more modal explorations. Martino is free to fill, solo, vamp, and project. Clarke's bowed bass fiddle solo, which interplays with Bey's vocal, is brave and deeply moving; there isn't a trace of gimmickry in it (or anywhere else on this set, for that matter). Like the aforementioned Connors' recordings, Children of Forever has aged exceedingly well, and sounds as warm, inviting, and full of possibility in the early 21st century as it did in the early '70s. It's full of heart, soul, passion, and truly inspired musicianship. by Thom Jurek
Tracklist:
1 Children Of Forever 10:41
2 Unexpected Days 5:51
3 Bass Folk Song 7:58
4 Butterfly Dreams 6:51
5 Sea Journey 16:28
Credits:
Double Bass [Bass Fiddle], Electric Bass – Stanley Clarke
Drums – Lenny White
Electric Guitar, Twelve-String Guitar – Pat Martino
Electric Piano, Clavinet [Clavinette], Piano [Acoustic], Producer – Chick Corea
Flute – Arthur Webb
Vocals – Andy Bey (tracks: 1, 2, 4, 5), Dee Dee Bridgewater (tracks: 1, 2, 5)
30.5.19
DEE DEE BRIDGEWATER - Love And Peace (A Tribute to Horace Silver) (1994) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Tracklist:
1 Permit Me to Introduce You to Yourself 3:24
Horace Silver
2 Nica's Dream 5:13
Horace Silver
3 The Tokyo Blues 5:44
Horace Silver
4 Pretty Eyes 5:07
Horace Silver
5 Saint Vitus Dance 2:42
Horace Silver
6 You Happened My Way 6:28
Horace Silver
7 Soulville 4:17
Horace Silver
8 Filthy McNasty 4:52
Horace Silver
9 Song for My Father 5:36
Horace Silver
10 Doodlin' 6:07
Horace Silver
11 Lonely Woman 5:22
Horace Silver
12 The Jody Grind 5:00
Horace Silver
13 Blowin' the Blues Away 3:57
Horace Silver
Credits
Arranged By – Hein Van De Geyn (tracks: 2-12), Lionel Belmondo (tracks: 1)
Bass – Hein Van De Geyn
Composed By – Horace Silver
Drums – André "Dédé" Ceccarelli
Organ [Hammond B3] – Jimmy Smith (tracks: 8, 12)
Piano – Horace Silver (tracks: 2, 9), Thierry Eliez (tracks: 1, 3-8, 10-13)
Tenor Saxophone – Lionel Belmondo
Trumpet – Stéphane Belmondo
Vocals – Dee Dee Bridgewater
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An exploration of the traces left by Celtic music on its journey from European music into jazz. In "Jazz at Berlin Philharmonic," ...