Mostrando postagens com marcador New World Records. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador New World Records. Mostrar todas as postagens

23.10.25

MARTY EHRLICH'S DARK WOODS ENSEMBLE — Emergency Peace (1995) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

It's a fascinating blend of improvisation and original structures. Myles Boisen
Tracklist :
1.    Emergency Peace    10:14
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
2.    Dusk  9:25
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
Piano – Muhal Richard Abrams

3.    The Painter    7:23
  Composed By – Julius Hemphill
4.    The Tucked Sleeve Of A One-Armed Boy    1:33
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
5.    Unison    9:29
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
6.    Double Dance    3:42
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
7.    Circle The Heart    8:37
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
8.    Charlie In The Parker  4:46
Composed, Piano By – Muhal Richard Abrams
9.    Tribute    5:38
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
Credits :
Artwork [Cover Art] – Roberto Juarez
Cello – Abdul Wadud
Clarinet, Bass Clarinet, Flute, Flute [Wooden Flutes], Alto Saxophone – Marty Ehrlich
Double Bass – Lindsey Horner

22.10.25

MARTY EHRLICH'S DARK WOODS ENSEMBLE — Just Before The Dawn (1995) FLAC (tracks), lossless

The second Darkwoods Ensemble recording for multi-woodwind instrumentalist/composer Ehrlich is a true winner, and a progressive jazz icon for the '90s. To paraphrase Ehrlich's own description of his music "Sounds startle the air... birds call across as if the light won't come... these sounds will find a center or the center will change... metal hued breath across strings... birds in the darkness, waiting for no one... open the door, wake these sounds, just before the dawn." Ehrlich is assisted in this quest by French horn player Vincent Chancey, bassist Mark Helias, cellist Erik Friedlander, and percussionist Don Alias.

At their most free and uninhibited, the group digs in on "Side By Side" with Ehrlich's clarinet setting off some unison lines and a cello-bass-conga groove bridge, or there's the scatter shot improv, prompted by serious bass clarinet and goofy French horn, with terpsichorean tuneful unison during "Dance #1." Elephantine clarion calls from Chancey with other animals chattering on a freely associated "Underground/Overground" is a prelude for swooping bird sounds via the strings and quite soulful unison horns in this segmented piece. Also highly developed is the risky "Flight" starting as a whack waltz, going to multi-faceted lighthouse beam spotted melodies, and an intense, free bridge that suddenly stops, making way for introspective, collective meditations. As complexly written is "Thickets," with haunting cello, ethnic percussion, minimalist, repeated clarinet and NYC urgent traffic motifs. A more mournful bass/cello/alto sax informs "Mudpie Anthem" with additional chamber-like counterpoint. The most tuneful asides are the wood flute/percussion Afro-Cuban groove of "Spirit Of J.A.H." (for Julius Hemphill), the heavy bass/bass clarinet ostinato of "Eliahu," and the lilting, beautiful, tuneful flute/plucked cello/shaker percussion beaut "The Folksinger."

This music needs to be heard by all who love a good joust from improvising musicians who fully understand shadings, nuance, power and glory. Highly recommended, and a high point in Ehrlich's substantial discography. Michael G. Nastos
Tracklist :
1..    Spirit Of JAH    2:27
 Don Alias / Marty Ehrlich 
2.    Thickets    6:40
 Marty Ehrlich 
3.    Mudpie Anthem    7:56
 Mark Helias 
4.    Dance No. 1    6:07
 Marty Ehrlich 
5.    Flight    8:22
 Marty Ehrlich 
6.    The Folksinger    7:13
 Marty Ehrlich 
7.    Side By Side    6:59
 Marty Ehrlich 
8.    Underground/Overground    7:16
 Marty Ehrlich 
9.    Eliahu    6:31
 Marty Ehrlich 
Credits :
Cello – Erik Friedlander
Clarinet, Bass Clarinet, Alto Saxophone, Flute, Flute [Wooden Flutes], Liner Notes – Marty Ehrlich
Double Bass – Mark Helias
French Horn – Vincent Chancey
Percussion – Don Alias

28.4.25

ROY ELDRIDGE — The Nifty Cat (1970-1986) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

One of only two Eldridge-led studio sessions from the 1961-1974 period, this CD reissue of a set originally recorded for Master Jazz matches the great swing trumpeter with Budd Johnson (who doubles on tenor and soprano), trombonist Benny Morton, pianist Nat Pierce, bassist Tommy Bryant, and drummer Oliver Jackson. All six of the jump tunes are by Eldridge with "5400 North" and "Ball of Fire" being the best-known. For this album, the veteran trumpeter had a very rare opportunity to call his own shots on a recording date, and the generally inspired playing makes this CD a fine example of small-group swing from the early '70s. Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1 Jolly Hollis 9:51
Roy Eldridge
2 Cotton 5:00
Roy Eldridge
3 5400 North 6:04
Roy Eldridge
4 Ball of Fire 4:03
Roy Eldridge / Gene Krupa
5 Wineola 7:52
Roy Eldridge
6 The Nifty Cat 6:53
Roy Eldridge
Credits :
Double Bass – Tommy Bryant
Drums – Oliver Jackson
Piano – Nat Pierce
Tenor Saxophone – Budd Johnson
Trombone – Benny Morton
Trumpet – Roy Eldridge

28.3.25

GEORGE ANTHEIL : Piano Concerto No. 2 • Serenade No. 2 • Dreams (Philadelphia Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra · Daniel Spalding · Guy Livingston) (2006) APE (image+.cue), lossless

New World Records' George Antheil: Dreams, Piano Concerto No. 2, Serenade No. 2 takes the all-Antheil disc out of the realm of his symphonies and recitals of little, short piano pieces into other kinds of major literature that Antheil also produced. Dreams is one of Antheil's most infectious works, a ballet written for George Balanchine that co-mingles waltzes, marches, pop tunes, and even Schumann's The Happy Farmer in a lightly applied and certainly "dreamlike" tapestry as diaphanous as the music it was designed to replace, namely Darius Milhaud's Les Songes. One wonders why Balanchine would want to substitute for music that is as lovely as Les Songes, but there was a concern among émigré artists in the 1930s that their productions might be perceived as "too European" for American tastes. In any event, Antheil did Balanchine proud with Dreams, and it is equally mysterious that they did not work together again.

Just as light and precious is Antheil's Piano Concerto No. 2, though dating from his "futurist" period in the 1920s, is likewise light and colorful, although the harmonic palette in use is more daring. Although largely condemned as "pseudo-Stravinsky" when it was first heard, it is clear that the Piano Concerto No. 2 is a continuation of the ideas Antheil first pursued in Piano Concerto No. 1, except that it doesn't contain nearly as many violent contrasts. Antheil's score for Cecil B. DeMille's The Plainsman helped set the tone for the scoring of movie westerns, and some of that hickory-smoked flavor carries over into his American vernacular onSerenade No. 2, rubbing shoulders with cityscapes, skyscrapers, and lonely walks through dark, rainy alleyways. All three pieces dispense with familiar development schemes and even psychological form in favor of a sort of loose, stream-of-consciousness manner of folding one idea into another, or in making abrupt transitions like "jump cuts" in a movie.

Pianist Guy Livingston, who has done much on Antheil's behalf, is the featured soloist in the concerto, and the whole is performed by the Philadelphia Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra under Daniel Spalding. The recording, made at the First Presbyterian Church of Philadelphia, is good but a little distant, and at times the listener might wish to hear pianist David Hasbrig in Dreams a little better. None of these pieces had been recorded before when this disc was planned, and in the meantime, CPO managed to rush out an Antheil Piano Concerto No. 2 of its own a little ahead of this one. Given a choice between the two, any true Antheilian would want the one with Livingston, and indeed, it is worth the slight wait. Moreover, this is a nicely chosen combination of works that demonstrate that in his youth, Antheil viewed Europe through American eyes, but after his return in maturity, he was seeing America from the perspective of a European sensibility. Uncle Dave Lewis
George Antheil (1900-1959)
1-9.    Dreams    (28:18)
10-12.    Piano Concerto No. 2    (21:40)
13-15.    Serenade No. 2    (22:11)
Credits :
Conductor – Daniel Spalding
Orchestra – Philadelphia Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra
Piano – Guy Livingston

DINAH SHORE — Love and Kisses, Dinah (1992) Two Version | FLAC (image+.tracks+.cue), lossless

Tracklist : 1.    It's the Second Time You Meet That Matters 2:19 Betty Comden / Adolph Green / Jule Styne feat: Harry Zimmerman and his...