Mostrando postagens com marcador Ike Quebec. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Ike Quebec. Mostrar todas as postagens

23.11.23

IKE QUEBEC — It Might as Well Be Spring (1962-2010) RM | SACD, Hybrid | Serie The Blue Note Reissues | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Working with the same quartet that cut Heavy Soul -- organist Freddie Roach, bassist Milt Hinton and drummer Al Harewood -- Ike Quebec recorded another winning hard bop album with It Might As Well Be Spring. In many ways, the record is a companion piece to Heavy Soul. Since the two albums were recorded so close together, it's not surprising that there a number of stylistic similarities, but there are subtle differences to savor. The main distinction between the two dates is that It Might As Well Be Spring is a relaxed, romantic date comprised of standards. It provides Quebec with ample opportunity to showcase his rich, lyrical ballad style, and he shines throughout the album. Similarly, Roach has a tasteful, understated technique, whether he's soloing or providing support for Quebec. The pair have a terrific, sympathetic interplay that makes It Might As Well Be Spring a joyous listen. Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Tracklist :

1 It Might as Well Be Spring 6:22

Oscar Hammerstein II / Richard Rodgers
2 A Light Reprieve 5:25
Ike Quebec
3 Easy - Don't Hurt 6:08
Ike Quebec
4 Lover Man 5:57
Jimmy Davis / Roger "Ram" Ramirez / Jimmy Sherman
5 Ol' Man River 6:37
Oscar Hammerstein II / Jerome Kern
6 Willow Weep for Me 5:20
Ann Ronell
Credits :
Double Bass – Milt Hinton
Drums – Al Harewood
Organ – Freddie Roach
Tenor Saxophone – Ike Quebec

13.9.23

IKE QUEBEC – 1944-1946 | The Chronogical Classics – 957 (1997) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Ike Quebec was something like Ben Webster in his ability to play lush ballads or to scream like a smokestack when the band was cooking. After working for Roy Eldridge and Frankie Newton, Quebec became Cab Calloway's star tenor man in 1944, making everyone sit up and take notice when he wailed over Cab's band in a wonderfully raspy tone utilizing the instrument's extremities for maximum effect. Each of Quebec's sessions as a leader produced staggeringly potent records. J.C. Heard is the drummer on all 20 tracks -- check him out on "Indiana" -- and for bassists you have Milt Hinton, Grachan Moncur II, or Oscar Pettiford. While Roger Ramirez was an excellent pianist, it is a gas hearing Johnny Guarnieri on the Savoy session. Guest horn players are Buck Clayton, Keg Johnson, Jonah Jones, and Tyree Glenn. Guitarist Tiny Grimes is present on three of these dates. His "Tiny's Exercise" is one of the high points of the whole collection. The repertoire throughout is excellent. Languid blues and ballads mingle with piping-hot jam structures. Two very pleasant surprises arrive in a smoothly swung version of Fats Waller's "Blue Turning Grey Over You" and the pleasant "Girl of My Dreams," scheduled to resurface in 1959 as a streamlined vehicle driven by the Charles Mingus Jazz Workshop. With all due respect to the Mosaic label and their exhaustively compiled Ike Quebec/John Hardee box, it's good to have these Blue Note master takes together on one disc along with the magnificent Savoy All Stars session that concludes this portion of the chronology. In just a little over one year, Ike Quebec made all of these great jazz records. Each one is a knockout performance guaranteed to blow you away every time you go back and get another taste. arwulf arwulf             Tracklist + Credits :

3.9.23

HOT LIPS PAGE – 1940-1944 | The Chronogical Classics – 809 (1995) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

For fans of small-combo jazz from the '40s (pre-bebop, that is), Hot Lips Page's many sides offer that perfect marriage of jazz licks and blues atmospherics. And although Page wasn't necessarily a trumpet ace in the league of Armstrong or Cootie Williams, his irrepressible style and raspy-to-bright tone usually enlivened most every date he graced (just check out his early work on Bennie Moten's epochal 1932 recordings). Page also could have made a handsome living just as a blues singer; his was a gruff and driving voice equally at home on both the serious and novelty end of the form. This Classics release brings together a fetching mix from Page's 1940-1944 freelancing prime, with a large dose of his vocal work getting nicely framed by the day's top jazz players. Two highlights from the first part here include "Evil Man Blues" and "Just Another Woman," two of Page's best vocals featuring Leonard Feather on piano and Teddy Bunn on guitar. The majority of the remaining tracks are ones Page and his band cut in 1944. Amidst the prevailing after-hours mood, there's a wealth of fine soloing by the likes of Don Byas, Chu Berry, Lucky Thompson, and Vic Dickenson. This disc might not make it into any jazz polls, but it's a solid collection for those who love Page's infectious style and sophisticated jump grooves. Stephen Cook
Tracklist + Credits :

20.7.23

ROY ELDRIDGE – 1943-1944 | The Classics Chronological Series – 920 (1998) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Roy Eldridge worked with Gene Krupa for a couple of years, then made a series of hot sides with a great seven-piece band, featuring tenor saxophonists Ike Quebec and Tom Archia. "After You've Gone" begins with a funny false-start introduction that Eldridge seems to have developed while working with Krupa. "The Gasser," a hot-to-trot walking blues, was based on the chord changes of "Sweet Georgia Brown." Also included here are two lovely, passionate ballads and an incomplete take of "Oh, Lady Be Good." The Esquire Metropolitan Opera House V-Disc Jam Session turned into a real all-star blowout on "Tea for Two," the conglomerated ensemble sounding pretty crowded by the time it works up to the out chorus. Eldridge's next adventure occurred with Lionel Hampton's V-Disc All-Stars. "Flyin' on a V-Disc" is, of course, Hamp's big hit "Flyin' Home." He hammers the vibes while saying "heyyy!' and keeps on saying it, clapping his hands and braying like a goat throughout all subsequent solos by the horn players, eventually leading the pack into an inevitable grandstand conclusion. The Little Jazz Trumpet Ensemble is heard on one of the earliest of all Keynote sessions, and the very first of producer Harry Lim's instrument-oriented dates, setting a precedent for the Coleman Hawkins Sax Ensemble and the Benny Morton Trombone Choir. Emmett Berry's inspiration was Roy Eldridge himself, while Joe Thomas patterned himself after Louis Armstrong. "St. Louis Blues" in particular is amazing. They work it up to a fine finish. Eldridge's working relationship with Decca Records bore fruit briefly in June of 1944 with another big-band date. This particular group included former Fats Waller trumpeter John "Bugs" Hamilton, ace trombonist Sandy Williams, and a pair of strong tenor players -- Franz Jackson and Hal Singer. Two dramatic ballads resulted, along with yet another patented stampede version of "After You've Gone." The orchestra assembled on October 13, 1944, had a formidable trombone section, as Williams found himself flanked by noteworthy slip horn agents Wilbur DeParis and Vic Dickenson. This band was also fortified with the presence of trumpeter Sidney DeParis, drummer Cozy Cole, and flashy amplified guitarist Napoleon "Snags" Allen, who is heavily featured on "Fish Market," a rocking blues that sounds a bit like "Tuxedo Junction." After Eldridge savors a pretty air called "Twilight Time," he leads a charge through "St. Louis Blues." Running the changes as fast as he can through a muted horn, Eldridge fires off a rapid stream of lyrics, turns Franz Jackson loose for a scorching hot tenor solo, and heads up an explosive hot finale. arwulf arwulf
Tracklist + Credits :

30.5.23

LUCKY MILLINDER AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1947-1950 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1173 (2001) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

This third volume of Lucky Millinder's complete works in chronological order brings together for the first time three Deccas from October 1947, 12 sides recorded for Victor between January and November 1949, and 12 titles waxed for the King label during the year 1950. Millinder is remembered as a shrewd bandleader who accurately assessed the prevailing trends in popular entertainment during the late '40s. His strategy seems to have involved a wide range of musical styles, a spectrum reflected in this grab bag compilation. Millinder clearly tailored the material to fit each record label and its assumed audience. Of course, Victor was selling to a more generalized public while King's clientele was predominately Afro-American. Listening through all 25 tracks is quite an experience. There is coy, bluesy jazz and there is jazzy blues sung by saucy, soulful Annisteen Allen. There's a surprise appearance by rowdy Myra Johnson, famous for her work with Fats Waller during the early '40s. There are crooners who exude oily sentimental ballads. There are several jump tunes on which Millinder himself sings boisterously along with the band. And there are just three instrumentals, groovy as can be but only three. "Bersark [sic] Boogie" is a progressively structured, pleasantly manic woogie set in a minor mode. The rocking, rolling "D Natural Blues" is really "Do the Hucklebuck," itself a pilfering of Charlie Parker's "Now's the Time." By January of 1949 half of the white bands in the country were making money off of this tune, so Mr. Lucky decided to get himself a piece of the action. (Naturally, nobody was paying Bird any royalties.) "Awful Natural" is a very cool piece of blues featuring the elegant clarinet of Tony Scott. Lucky Millinder's orchestra, in fact, was peppered with outstanding players like trumpeter Lamar Wright, trombonist Tyree Glenn, guitarist Danny Barker, drummer Art Blakey, and a formidable team of saxophonists including Rudy Powell (Musheed Karween), Bull Moose Jackson, Ike Quebec, Frank Wess, Paul Quinichette, Seldon Powell, John Hardee, and Numa "Pee Wee" Moore. While more uniformly satisfying Millinder retrospectives surely exist, the Classics Chronological Series provides an overview that is necessary for an accurate appraisal of this amazing all-purpose jazz/pop/R&B orchestra and the individuals who kept it going during a transitional time when many other big bands fell apart at the seams. arwulf arwulf  
Tracklist + Credits :

17.5.23

SAM PRICE – 1942-1945 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1083 (1999) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

A nice collection of Price's 1942-1945 recordings that spotlights this highly undervalued boogie pianist. Kicking off with four sides backing Mabel Robinson, the set also includes ten sides that Price's small groups cut for the Decca label, as well as ten piano solos recorded in New York but originally issued in France. A stray duo track with drummer Big Sid Catlett rounds out the collection. A hidden treasure. Cub Koda
Tracklist + Credits : 

11.5.23

TRUMMY YOUNG – 1944-1946 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1037 (1998) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Compare Trummy Young's vocal on Jimmie Lunceford's "Easy Street," or the songs he sang in front of his own All-Stars in 1945 (see Classics 888) with the infrequently heard speech and singing voice of Lester Young. Trummy had a high, smooth delivery that sounded quite similar to Lester's speaking tone as heard on live broadcasts and Prez's outrageously naughty improvised singing on his Verve recording of "It Takes Two to Tango." These men had a lot in common. They both hung out with Billie Holiday, not as her boyfriends but as pals, drinking and smoking companions who could be trusted. The fundamental common denominator was: hipness. Trummy and Prez were definitively hip. They both eased into early modern jazz without any problems whatsoever. Trummy's activity during the mid-'40s is outlined in detail by this core sample of rare recordings. Listen to Trummy's passionate singing on "Talk of the Town," a shaming and blaming exercise that could never have been written by a woman. Rather than merely hassling his ex, Trummy seems to be demonstrating the loneliness that all people have in common. "Hollywood" is a jam, but the band on "Good 'n Groovy" is considerably tougher. Ike Quebec, for example, sounds as truculent as a truckload of nails. Buck Clayton's been lifting weights. It's 1945 and the music is changing. There's bop in the air, and R&B is everywhere. The phrase "Rattle and Roll" describes a throw of the dice but the music is about carousing and getting into harmless trouble. "I'm Living for Today" is Trummy's ode to feeling good and refusing to worry about anything. Keynote recording artist Kenny Kersey drives "Behind the Eight Bar" with exceptionally fine boogie piano, and the band rocks out. Just in case you thought "Four or Five Times" was antiquated, check out Trummy's ultra cool version with lyrics describing DTs and military insubordination, a special treat for the V-Disc audience. A fabulous five-minute "Tea for Two" boils over largely because Roy Eldridge puts it in the broiler. Some of the white singers included in this part of the chronology sound terribly square. The hip antidote to the white vocal group billed as the Holidays can be found on "Tidal Wave" (no relation to the Fletcher Henderson tune), which is a big-band boppish feature for Herbie Fields, who disturbs the peace using both alto and tenor saxophones. The Hot Record Society proceedings of Trummy Young's Big Seven, like most of the material brought out on HRS, have plenty of solid solos based upon original compositions of inconsistent creative merit. George Johnson's "Frutie Cutie" and "Johnson Rock" are simple melodies designed for uncomplicated jamming. On the other hand, "Blues Triste" and "Lucky Draw," composed by pianist Jimmy Jones, are beautiful, elegant mood pieces, every bit cool as Trummy and Prez and Lady Day. arwulf arwulf  
Tracklist & Credits : 

10.5.23

JONAH JONES – 1936-1945 | The Classics Chronological Series – 972 (1997) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

While the first six recordings presented in this initial volume of the chronologically reissued recordings of Jonah Jones are undeniably rare and worth having access to, the reason for their obscurity is immediately apparent. Dick Porter, the nominal leader of both bands responsible for these Vocalion sides, was a Fats Waller imitator of the worst sort. He patterned his act so closely on Waller's jubilant vocal delivery that it is impossible to ascertain what -- if any -- originality existed in the person of Mr. Porter. Seizing upon Waller's habitual exclamations, Porter overused the outburst "Aha!" until it lost every ounce of its novelty or effectiveness. He even absconded with an entire punch line that Waller had used at the end of his own cheerfully misogynistic version of "I Adore You" -- not to be confused with Waller's "I Simply Adore You." The phrase in question -- "To the pound with the beautiful hound" -- required some form of theatrical buildup. While Waller was making canine references all throughout "I Adore You," Porter chucked the line in at the end of "There's No Two Ways About It" as if he couldn't think of anything else to steal from Waller. The effect of all this upon anyone who knows and loves Waller's work is maddening, and Porter sticks in the mind as a primal irritant to be avoided at all costs. What does this have to do with ace trumpeter Jonah Jones? Well, he played on both of these sessions, striving with the other players to deliver solid swing as desired by the public in the middle 1930s. And yet let it be said that the inclusion of two outstanding Keynote dates and one Commodore blowing session more than make up for the itching, burning sensation created by Dick Porter. Jonah Jones & His Orchestra, consisting of only six players, made four wonderful sides for Harry Lim's Keynote label in September of 1944. Having emerged from Cab Calloway's big band, Jones had a healthy habit of including his friends from Calloway's horde. Tyree Glenn played both vibraphone and trombone. Hilton Jefferson, featured soloist on the creamy "Just Like a Butterfly (That's Caught in the Rain)," also cooked when heat was needed. "Lust for Licks" was based on the changes of "Exactly Like You," and "B.H. Boogie" was a tip of the hat to Buster Harding, whose arrangement of "Twelfth Street Rag" inspired some serious jamming. The 1945 Milt Hinton Sextet, also billed by Keynote as an "Orchestra," shared three crucial players with the previous band: Tyree Glenn, the honorable Mr. Hinton, and the immaculate J.C. Heard. Hinton's "Beefsteak Charlie" got its name from a bar in Manhattan that was preferred by jazz musicians. The reissuing of these Keynote recordings is a serious matter, and the producers of the Classics Chronological Series are to be commended for making them digitally available to the public in the same package with Jones' Commodore session from July 31, 1945. For here are the very best elements from both of the previous bands -- Glenn, Jefferson, Hinton, and Heard -- bundled in with several other strong players including clarinetist Buster Bailey and smokestack tenor Ike Quebec. Jefferson is handed another elegant ballad in "You Brought a New Kind of Love to Me," and the band deep-fries the "Rose of the Rio Grande." "Hubba Hubba Hub" seems at first a bit short on melodic invention but quickly evolves into a perfectly satisfying jam vehicle, closing with one of Jones' hottest solos on record. "Stompin' at the Savoy" is set up as a march by Heard, then struts itself silly. arwulf arwulf
Tracklist :

15.4.23

CAB CALLOWAY AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1942-1947 (1998) The Classics Chronological Series – 996 | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

The final CD of the Classic label's complete reissuance of Cab Calloway's 1930-47 recordings also includes the last recordings of Cab with his regularly working big band. This 1998 CD starts out with a couple of superior but originally rejected numbers ("What's Buzzin', Cousin?" and "Chant of the Jungle") from 1942, followed by a couple of rare V-disc numbers from 1944. Otherwise, the material dates from 1945 or 1947 with just two selections from 1946. During this era, the still-popular Calloway was finding it increasingly difficult to keep his orchestra together, as were all the other bandleaders, but the quality of his music remained fairly high, even touched slightly by bop in some of the arranged passages. Some of the vocals are a bit silly, particularly "Dawn Time and "Afternoon Moon," but there are also a few near-classic jive numbers. Highlights include the snobbish "A Blue Serge Suit With a Belt in the Back," "Don't Falter at the Altar" (released here for the first time), "The Jungle King" (one of two numbers done with a septet called the Cab-Jivers), "Give Me Twenty Nickels for a Dollar," "Two Blocks Down, Turn to the Left," "The Calloway Boogie," "Everybody Eats When They Come To My House," and the somewhat bizarre "The San Francisco Fan." Although Calloway dominates the music, there are scattered and consistently worthwhile solos by trumpeter Jonah Jones and tenors Ike Quebec and Sam "The Man" Taylor. Virtually all of these recordings are obscure, making the release of this music quite noteworthy both for swing collectors and Calloway fans. Recommended, as are all of the CDs in Classics' perfectly done Cab Calloway series. Scott Yanow  
Tracklist  :
1    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    What's Buzzin', Cousin? 2:38
Mack Gordon / Harry Owens
Vocals – The Cabaliers

2    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Chant Of The Jungle    3:18
 Nacio Herb Brown / Arthur Freed
3    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    I'm Making Believe 1:50
Vocals – Dotty Salters
 Mack Gordon / James V. Monaco

4    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Foo A Little Ballyhoo    3:01
 Cab Calloway / Buster Harding / Jack Palmer
5    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Let's Take The Long Way Home    2:36
 Harold Arlen / Johnny Mercer
6    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Foo A Little Bally-hoo    3:01
 Cab Calloway / Buster Harding / Jack Palmer
7    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    All At Once    2:50
 Ira Gershwin / Kurt Weill
8    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Dawn Time    3:01
 Eddie DeLange / Buster Harding
9    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    If This Isn't Love    2:57
 Cab Calloway
10    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    A Blue Serge Suit With A Belt In The Back    2:26
 John Fortis / Max Spickol
11    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Here I Go Just Dreamin' Away    2:47
 Al J. Neiburg / William Henri Woode
12    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    The Honeydripper    2:55
 Joe Liggins
13    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Afternoon Moon    3:09
 Eddie DeLange / Duke Ellington
14    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Hey Now, Hey Now    2:55
 Cab Calloway / Stanley Hill
15    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    I Got A Gal Named Nettie    3:06
 Cab Calloway
16    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Hi-De-Ho Man    2:59
 Cab Calloway / Buster Harding / Jack Palmer
17    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Necessity    2:52
 E.Y. "Yip" Harburg / Burton Lane
18    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Oh Grandpa    2:59
 Cab Calloway / Stanley Hill / Bill Tennyson
19    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Don't Falter At The Alter    2:40
 Cab Calloway
20    Cab Calloway And His Cab-Jivers–    Give Me Twenty Nickels For A Dollar    3:01
Wolf / Brandt
21    Cab Calloway And His Cab-Jivers–    The Jungle King    3:14
 Mort Dixon
22    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Two Blocks Down, Turn To The Left    3:10
 Teddy Powell / Alex Rogers
23    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    San Francisco Fan    3:17
 Sammy Mysels / Dick Sanford
24    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    The Calloway Boogie    3:00
 Cab Calloway
25    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Everybody Eats When They Come To My House    2:43
 Jeanne Burns / Cab Calloway
Credits
Alto Saxophone – Hilton Jefferson
Alto Saxophone, Baritone Saxophone – Andrew Brown (tracks: 1, 2), Charles Frazier (tracks: 16 to 19, 22 to 25), Rudy Powell (tracks: 7 to 15)
Baritone Saxophone – Greely Walton (tracks: 3 to 6)
Bass – Milt Hinton
Clarinet, Alto Saxophone – Alfred Gibson (tracks: 2 to 15), Jerry Blake (tracks: 1)
Directed By – Cab Calloway
Drums – Buford Oliver (tracks: 12, 13), Cozy Cole (tracks: 1, 2, 14, 15), J.C. Heard (tracks: 3 to 11), Panama Francis (tracks: 16 to 25)
Guitar – Danny Barker (tracks: 1 to 13), John Smith (tracks: 14 to 25)
Piano – Bennie Payne (tracks: 1, 2, 14, 15), Dave Rivera (tracks: 3 to 13, 16 to 25)
Tenor Saxophone – Bob Dorsey (tracks: 7 to 15), Ike Quebec (tracks: 3 to 15), Irving "Skinny" Brown (tracks: 2 to 6), Sam Taylor (tracks: 16 to 25), Ted McRae (tracks: 1), Walter "Foots" Thomas (tracks: 1, 2)
Trombone – Earl Hardy (tracks: 14 to 19, 22 to 25), Fred Robinson (tracks: 3 to 13), James Buxton (2) (tracks: 16 to 19, 22 to 25), John Haughton (tracks: 9 to 11), Keg Johnson (tracks: 1 to 8, 12 to 19, 22 to 25), Quentin Jackson (tracks: 1 to 19, 22 to 25)
Trombone, Vibraphone – Tyree Glenn (tracks: 1 to 15)
Trumpet – Johnny Letman (tracks: 16 to 19, 22 to 25), Jonah Jones, Lammar Wright (tracks: 1, 2, 16 to 19, 22 to 25), Paul Webster (tracks: 3 to 13, 16 to 19,to 25), Roger Jones (tracks: 5 to 15), Russell Smith (tracks: 1 to 15), Shad Collins (tracks: 1 to 15)
Vocals – Cab Calloway (tracks: 1, 2, 4 to 25)

CAB CALLOWAY AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1949-1955 (2003) The Classics Chronological Series – 1287 | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Having spent years showcasing his own personality while diminishing the importance of the instrumentalists in his bands, Cab Calloway groveled during the early '50s, resorting to every imaginable gimmick and often sounding positively desperate. Two rather forced duets with Eugenie Baird employ exactly the same material as Pearl Bailey and Hot Lips Page were using during that same time period. These somewhat irritating covers are as different as can be from the fine artistry of Pearl and Page. "Rooming House Boogie" actually rocks, and Sam Taylor has a good hot solo. An overbearing tribute to Joe Louis is followed by the misogynistic "Your Voice." Notoriously intolerant of new musical ideas when young Dizzy Gillespie worked in his orchestra, by 1949 Cab had the unmitigated gall to sing a stupid novelty called "I Beeped When I Shoulda Bopped." This in itself was a gross imitation of Dizzy Gillespie's hit record "He Beeped When He Shoulda Bopped." Musical genres alternate as if Cab's career has been stuffed into a Waring blender. "Pero Que Jelengue," "La Mucura," and to some extent "Que Pasa Chica" are interesting examples of Calloway getting in touch with his Latino background. Cab should have done this more often! "The Duck Trot" has a bit of conga drumming and the tough tenor sax of Ike Quebec. On "Shotgun Boogie," Cab attempts to emulate Tennessee Ernie Ford. "One for My Baby" depicts a pathetic, lonely man trying to bond with his bartender. In 1952 Calloway began recording as a star vocalist backed by various orchestras rather than his own. Some of these tunes sound as if they were written expressly for Webb Pierce or Lefty Frizzell. There's a significant influx of material from the country & western market. "Hey Joe" was sent up by Homer & Jethro under the title "Hay Schmo." Why Cab Calloway tried to sing these songs, or indeed more than half of the material gathered together on this disc, is a mystery that can only be explained by economic straits and the often horrifying pop culture landscape of the 1950s. While Ray Charles was able to triumph with this kind of music, Calloway merely sounded like he was cornered by circumstances. arwulf arwulf  
Tracklist  :
1    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Baby It's Cold Outside 2:17
Vocals – Eugenie Baird
2    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    The Huckle-Buck    2:27
3    Cab Calloway And His Cab Jivers–    Ol' Joe Louis 2:31
Choir [Uncredited] – The Cab Jivers
4    Cab Calloway And His Cab Jivers–    Your Voice 2:36
Speech [Uncredited] – Maud McElroy
5    Cab Calloway And His Cab Jivers–    Rooming House Boogie    3:20
6    Cab Calloway And His Cab Jivers–    I Beeped When I Shoulda Bopped    2:35
7    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    The Duck Trot    3:10
8    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Pero Que Jelengue    2:44
9    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    The Keeper Of The Blues    2:44
10    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    La Mucura    2:51
11    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Que Pasa Chica    2:31
12    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Shot Gun Boogie    3:00
13    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Frosty Morning    2:35
14    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    One For My Baby    3:28
15    Cab Calloway Acc. By Jimmy Carroll And His Orchestra–    I'll Get By    2:47
16    Cab Calloway Acc. By Jimmy Carroll And His Orchestra–    Minnie The Moocher    3:05
17    Cab Calloway Acc. By Jimmy Carroll And His Orchestra–    Gambler's Guitar (Gamblers' Blues)    2:31
18    Cab Calloway Acc. By Jimmy Carroll And His Orchestra–    Hey Joe    2:25
19    Cab Calloway Acc. By Sy Oliver And His Orchestra–    Jilted    2:06
20    Cab Calloway Acc. By Sy Oliver And His Orchestra–    Such A Night    2:07
21    Cab Calloway Acc. By Sy Oliver And His Orchestra–    Unchained Melody    2:45
22    Cab Calloway Acc. By Sy Oliver And His Orchestra–    Learning The Blues    2:35
Credits
Alto Saxophone – Bernie Peacock (tracks: 1, 2), Hilton Jefferson (tracks: 5, 6)
Bass – Milt Hinton (tracks: 1 to 6)
Drums – Panama Francis (tracks: 1 to 6)
Piano – Dave Rivera (tracks: 1 to 10)
Reeds – Leon "Diamond" Washington (tracks: 3, 4), S.A. Stewart (tracks: 3, 4)
Tenor Saxophone – Ike Quebec (tracks: 7 to 10), Sam "The Man" Taylor (tracks: 1, 2, 5, 6)
Trombone – John "Streamline" Ewing (tracks: 3, 4), Keg Johnson (tracks: 1, 2), Tyree Glenn (tracks: 5, 6)
Trumpet – Jonah Jones (tracks: 1 to 10)
Vocals – Cab Calloway

28.6.21

GRANT GREEN - The Latin Bit (1962-2007) RVG Edition | FLAC (tracks), lossless

Grant Green, being known mainly as a soul jazz guitarist, eventually gravitated into the popular boogaloo sound. The Latin Bit is the natural bridge to that next phase, though a bit premature for most in 1961-1963, even relative to the subsequent bossa nova craze. Pianist Johnny Acea, long an underrated jazzman, is the nucleus of this session, grounding it with witty chops, chordal comping, and rhythmic meat. The Latino rhythm section of drummer Willie Bobo and conga player Carlos "Patato" Valdes personify authentic, seasoned spice, while at times the chekere sound of Garvin Masseaux makes the soup too thick. At its collective best, the group presents a steady, serene, and steamy "Besame Mucho" and the patient, slow, slinky, sultry "Tico Tico." Just a small step below is a classy take on Charlie Parker's "My Little Suede Shoes," a premier jazz bebop (emphasis) tune with a Latin undertow and Green's tiniest staccato phrases, slightly marred by the overbearing constant chekere, but still classic. "Mama Inez" ranks high for its calypso-infused happy feeling and wry stop-start lines. The straight-ahead hard bopper "Brazil" and lone soul-jazz tune, "Blues for Juanita," display the single-note acumen that made Green's style instantly recognizable. This date always yielded mixed results for staunch fans of Green, but it remains a credible effort, even if slightly flawed in part. [Some reissues add two selections with pianist Sonny Clark and tenor saxophonist Ike Quebec, the latter of whom plays hip secondary harmonies on the bossa nova-flavored "Granada," but is in the complete background and a non-factor on the pop tune "Hey There."] Scott Yanow  
Tracklist :
1 Mambo Inn 5:48
Written-By – Woodlon, Sampson, Bauza
2 Besame Mucho 7:09
Written-By – C. Velasquez, S. Skylar
3 Mama Inez 6:38
Written-By – E. Grenet, L. Gilbert
4 Brazil 4:59
Written-By – A. Barroso, S. K. Russell
5 Tico Tico 7:42
Written-By – Jose Abreu
6 My Little Suede Shoes 6:21
Written-By – Charlie Parker
7 Blues For Jaunita 7:02
Written-By – Grant Green
8 Grenada 6:23
Written-By – Augustin Lara
9 Hey There 7:24
Written-By – J. Ross, R. Adler
Credits :
Bass – Wendell Marshall
Congas – Carlos "Patato" Valdes
Drums – Willie Bobo
Guitar – Grant Green
Percussion [Checkere] – Garvin Masseaux (tracks: 1 to 6)
Piano – Johnny Acea (tracks: 1 to 7), Sonny Clark (tracks: 8, 9)
Recorded By, Remastered By [2007] – Rudy Van Gelder
Tenor Saxophone – Ike Quebec (tracks: 8, 9)
Notes
Tracks 1-6 originally issued in 1963 as Blue Note BST 84111.
Tracks 7-9 originally issued in 1996 on the first CD edition of this album. Bonus tracks, not part of original LP

14.6.21

SONNY CLARK — Leapin' and Lopin' (1961-1987) Serie Blue Note CD Treasury – 24 | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

Sonny Clark's fifth Blue Note recording as a leader is generally regarded as his best, especially considering he composed four of the seven tracks, and they all bear his stamp of originality. What is also evident is that he is shaping the sounds of his quintet rather than dominating the proceedings as he did on previous dates. Tenor saxophonist Charlie Rouse and trumpeter Tommy Turrentine play very little harmony on the date, but their in-tune unison lines are singularly distinctive, while bassist Butch Warren and young drummer Billy Higgins keep the rhythmic coals burning with a steady, glowing red heat. Among the classic tunes is the definitive hard bop opener "Somethin' Special," which lives up to its title in a most bright and happy manner, with Clark merrily comping chords. "Melody for C" is similarly cheerful, measured, and vivid in melodic coloration. The showstopper is "Voodoo," the ultimate late-night slinky jazz tune contrasted by Clark's tinkling piano riffs. Warren wrote the exciting hard bopper "Eric Walks" reminiscent of a Dizzy Gillespie tune, while Turrentine's "Midnight Mambo" mixes metaphors of Afro-Cuban music with unusual off-minor phrases and Rouse's stoic playing. Tenor saxophonist Ike Quebec plays a cameo sans the other horns on the soulful ballad "Deep in a Dream," exhibiting a vocal quality on his instrument, making one wonder if any other sessions with this group were done on the side. Top to bottom, Leapin' and Lopin' is a definitive recording for Clark, and in the mainstream jazz idiom, as well. Michael G. Nastos
Tracklist :
1     Somethin' Special 6:23
Sonny Clark
2     Deep in a Dream 6:47    
Eddie DeLange / James Van Heusen
3     Melody for C 7:50
Sonny Clark
4     Eric Walks 5:41
Butch Warren
5     Voodoo 7:39
Sonny Clark
6     Midnight Mambo 7:16
Tommy Turrentine
7     Zellmar's Delight 5:43
Sonny Clark
8     Melody for C 8:14
Sonny Clark
Credits :    
Bass – Butch Warren
Drums – Billy Higgins
Piano – Sonny Clark
Tenor Saxophone – Charlie Rouse, Ike Quebec
Trumpet – Tommy Turrentine

1.7.20

IKE QUEBEC - Bossa Nova Soul Samba (1962-1996) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

With his thick, engaging sound and elegant romanticism, it only made sense for Ike Quebec to try his hand at the bossa nova boom Stan Getz kick-started in 1962, and that's what he did with Soul Samba. However, Quebec makes the session much more than mere bandwagon-jumping. He takes some chances with the repertoire and consciously adds a heavy blues inflection that makes Soul Samba one of the more unique interpretations of the bossa nova style. It's also one of the more sensuous, thanks in part to the combination of Quebec's natural tendencies and the soft, light style itself, but even more so with the extra bit of meat added via the blues. The music is warm and danceable, yet with a late-evening hush that's more suggestive of winding down and getting cozy with someone. Quebec's choices of material are never obvious -- the Brazilian selections do not include any Jobim standards, for one thing, and both Quebec and guitarist Kenny Burrell (absolutely stellar in support) contribute original material that ranks among the album's best performances (particularly Quebec's "Blue Samba" and Burrell's "Loie"). What's more, Quebec adapts some unlikely sources -- the traditional standard "Liebestraum" and the Dvorak theme "Goin' Home" -- into surprisingly effective samba pieces. The whole project is thoughtfully conceived and beautifully executed, treating bossa nova as a new means of personal expression, not just a fad to be cashed in on. Sadly, Soul Samba was Quebec's final album, but at least his career ended on a high note. Steve Huey
Tracklist:
1 Loie 3:10
Kenny Burrell
2 Lloro Tu Despedida 3:04
Aldo Cabral / John Camacho / Benedicto Lacerda
3 Goin' Home 5:42
Antonin Dvorák
4 Me 'N You 5:59
Ike Quebec
5 Liebestraum 3:47
Johannes Brahms
6 Shu Shu 3:31
Antonio Almeida / Ciro de Souza
7 Blue Samba 5:22
Ike Quebec
8 Favela 0:04
Joracy Camargo / Heckel Tavares
9 Linda Flor 3:27
Pedro Berrios / Henrique Vogeler
10 Loie [Alternate Take] 3:34
Kenny Burrell
11 Shu Shu [Alternate Take] 3:19
Antonio Almeida / Ciro de Souza
12 Favela [Alternate Take] 3:21
Joracy Camargo / Heckel Tavares
Credits:
Bass – Wendell Marshall
Drums – Willie Bobo
Engineer [Recording] – Rudy Van Gelder
Guitar – Kenny Burrell
Tenor Saxophone – Ike Quebec

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...