Mostrando postagens com marcador Rhino. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Rhino. Mostrar todas as postagens

7.4.24

Grover Washington, Jr. — Winelight (1980-2014) RM | Serie Fusion Best Collection 1000 | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Grover Washington, Jr., has long been one of the leaders in what could be called rhythm & jazz, essentially R&B-influenced jazz. Winelight is one of his finest albums, and not primarily because of the Bill Withers hit "Just the Two of Us." It is the five instrumentals that find Washington (on soprano, alto, and tenor) really stretching out. If he had been only interested in sales, Washington's solos could have been half as long and he would have stuck closely to the melody. Instead he really pushes himself on some of these selections, particularly the title cut. A memorable set of high-quality and danceable soul-jazz. Scott Yanow

Tracklist  :
1    Winelight 7:32
Written-By – William Eaton
2    Let It Flow (For "Dr. J") 5:52
Written-By – Grover Washington, Jr.
3    In The Name Of Love 5:26
Written-By – Ralph MacDonald, William Salter
4    Take Me There 6:16
Written-By – Grover Washington, Jr.
5    Just The Two Of Us 7:23
Written-By – Bill Withers, Ralph MacDonald, William Salter
6    Make Me A Memory (Sad Samba) 6:32
Written-By – Grover Washington, Jr.
Credits :
Backing Vocals – Hilda Harris, Ullanda McCullough, Yvonne Lewis
Bass – Marcus Miller
Clavinet – Paul Griffin (tracks: 1), Raymond Chew (tracks: 1)
Congas, Percussion, Electronic Drums [Syndrums] – Ralph MacDonald
Drums – Steve Gadd
Electric Piano [Fender Rhodes] – Paul Griffin (tracks: 2, 4), Richard Tee (tracks: 1, 3, 5, 6)
Guitar – Eric Gale
Soprano Saxophone, Alto Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Grover Washington, Jr.
Steel Drums – Robert Greenidge
Synthesizer [Oberheim 8-Voice] – Ed Walsh
Synthesizer [Oberheim] – Bill Eaton (tracks: 5)
Technician [Steel Drums Tuned By] – Rudolph Charles
Vocals – Bill Withers (tracks: 5)

3.4.24

CHARLES LLOYD — In The Soviet Union (1967- 2013) RM | Serie Jazz Best Collection 1000 – 6 | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

The Charles Lloyd Quartet was (along with Cannonball Adderley's band) the most popular group in jazz during the latter half of the 1960s. Lloyd somehow managed this feat without watering down his music or adopting a pop repertoire. A measure of the band's popularity is that Lloyd and his sidemen (pianist Keith Jarrett, bassist Ron McClure and drummer Jack DeJohnette) were able to have a very successful tour of the Soviet Union during a period when jazz was still being discouraged by the communists. This well-received festival appearance has four lengthy performances including an 18-minute version of "Sweet Georgia Bright" and Lloyd (who has always had a soft-toned Coltrane influenced tenor style and a more distinctive voice on flute) is in top form.  Scott Yanow
Tracklist :

1.    Days and Nights Waiting 7:06
Keith Jarrett
2.    Sweet Georgia Bright 17:54
Charles Lloyd
3.    Love Song to a Baby 12:32
Charles Lloyd
4.    Tribal Dance 10:22
Charles Lloyd
Credits :
Bass – Ron McClure
Drums – Jack DeJohnette
Piano – Keith Jarrett
Tenor Saxophone, Flute – Charles Lloyd

15.1.24

JOE ZAWINUL — The Rise & Fall Of The Third Stream + Money In The Pocket (1994) RM | Serie Atlantic Jazz Gallery | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Two of keyboardist Joe Zawinul's finest recordings as a leader were reissued on this single CD. The Money in the Pocket album from 1965 features Zawinul on acoustic piano in a sextet with trumpeter Blue Mitchell, tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson, and baritone saxophonist Pepper Adams playing superior hard bop, highlighted by the funky title cut, "If," and "My One and Only Love." The other session utilizes a string quartet, trumpeter Jimmy Owens, and the tenor and arrangements of William Fischer. Its diverse music hints at fusion (Zawinul doubles on electric piano) and has many colorful moments. This gem of a CD is highly recommended. Scott Yanow   Tracklist & Credits :

24.12.22

ORNETTE COLEMAN - Beauty Is a Rare Thing : The Complete Atlantic Recordings (1993) RM | Atlantic Jazz Gallery | 6CD | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

While it's true this set has been given the highest rating AMG awards, it comes with a qualifier: the rating is for the music and the package, not necessarily the presentation. Presentation is a compiler's nightmare in the case of artists like John Coltrane and Ornette Coleman, who recorded often and at different times and had most of their recordings issued from the wealth of material available at the time a record was needed rather than culling an album from a particular session. Why is this a problem? It's twofold: First is that listeners got acquainted with recordings such as The Shape of Jazz to Come, This Is Our Music, Change of the Century, Twins, or any of the other four records Ornette Coleman released on Atlantic during that period. The other is one of economics; for those collectors who believe in the integrity of the original albums, they need to own both those recordings and this set, since the box features one album that was only issued in Japan as well as six unreleased tunes and the three Coleman compositions that appeared on Gunther Schuller's Jazz Abstractions record. Politically what's interesting about this box is that though the folks at Rhino and Atlantic essentially created a completely different document here, putting Coleman's music in a very different context than the way in which it was originally presented, his royalty rate was unchanged -- he refused to do any publicity for this set when it was issued as a result. As for the plus side of such a collection, there is a certain satisfaction at hearing complete sessions in context. That cannot be argued -- what is at stake is at what price to the original recorded presentations. Enough complaining. As for the music, as mentioned, the original eight albums Coleman recorded for Atlantic are here, in one form or another, in their entirety: Shape of Jazz to Come, Change of the Century, The Art of the Improvisers, Twins, This Is Our Music, Free Jazz, Ornette, and Ornette on Tenor, plus To Whom Keeps a Record, comprised of recordings dating from 1959 to 1960. In fact all of the material here was recorded between 1959 and 1961. Given that there is a total of six completely unreleased compositions as well as alternate takes and masters, this is a formidable mountain of material recorded with not only the classic quartet of Coleman, Don Cherry, Charlie Haden, and Billy Higgins, but also the large double quartet who produced the two-sided improvisation that is Free Jazz with personalities as diverse as Eric Dolphy, Freddie Hubbard, and Scott LaFaro, as well as Coleman, Cherry, Haden, and Ed Blackwell, who had replaced Higgins on the music for To Whom Keeps a Record and This Is Our Music -- though Higgins does play on Free Jazz.

The progression of the recording sessions musically is one of dynamics, color, and, with the addition of Blackwell, firepower. As the listener moves from the first session that would become most of The Shape of Jazz to Come, listeners can hear how the interplay between Cherry and Coleman works lyrically not so much as a system, but as system of the creation of melody from dead fragments of harmony, thereby creating a harmonic sensibility that cares not for changes and chord progressions, but for the progression of music itself in the context of a quartet. From the sharp edges on "Focus on Sanity," through "Peace" and "Congeniality," through "Lonely Woman," Coleman's approach to harmony was one of disparate yet wholly compatible elements. This is the story as the sessions unfold, one kind of lyricism evolving into itself more fully and completely with time. On Change of the Century, Twins, and This Is Our Music, Coleman shifts his emphasis slightly, adding depth and dimension and the creation of melody that comes out of the blues as direct and simply stated as possible. By the time LaFaro enters the picture on Free Jazz and Art of the Improvisers, melody has multiplied and divided itself into essence, and essence becomes an exponential force in the creation of a new musical syntax. The recordings from 1960 and 1961, along with the unreleased masters and alternates, all show Coleman fully in possession of his muse. The trek of musicians through the band -- like Jimmy Garrison and Eric Dolphy, as well as people like Jim Hall and Bill Evans where Coleman appeared in Gunther Schuller's experiments -- all reveal that from The Shape of Jazz to Come through Ornette on Tenor, Coleman was trying to put across the fully developed picture of his musical theory of the time. And unlike most, he completely succeeded. Even on the unreleased compositions, such as the flyaway storm of "Revolving Doors" or "PROOF Readers" or the slippery blues of "The Tribes of New York," Coleman took the open-door approach and let everything in -- he didn't necessarily let it all out. The package itself is, as are all Rhino boxes, handsome and original; there are three double-CD sleeves that all slip into a half box, which slips, reversed, into the whole box. There is a 68-page booklet with a ton of photographs, complete session notes, and liners by Coleman (disappointingly brief, but he was pissed off at the label), a fantastic essay by the late Robert Palmer, recollections by all the musicians, and quotes from Coleman from interviews given through the decades. The sound is wonderful and the mastering job superb. In all -- aside from the breach of pop culture's own historical context, which is at least an alternate reality -- this is, along with John Coltrane's Atlantic set and the Miles & Coltrane box, one of the most essential jazz CD purchases.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
All Tracks & Credits :
Notas.
This six-CD set contains the entirely of Ornette Coleman's recorded output for the Atlantic label, including the contents of the following albums:

The Shape Of Jazz To Come
Change Of The Century
This Is Our Music
Free Jazz
Ornette!
Ornette On Tenor
The Art Of The Improvisers
Twins
To Whom Who Keeps A Record
Also included are six previously unreleased compositions (2-7, 2-9, 2-10, 2-12, 3-2, 5-1) and two selections from (composer) Gunther Schuller's Jazz Abstractions featuring Ornette Coleman on alto saxophone.

19.12.22

THE ORNETTE COLEMAN QUARTET - Ornette (1962-2003) RM | Atlantic Jazz Masters | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Recorded a little over a month after his groundbreaking work Free Jazz, this album found Coleman perhaps retrenching from that idea conceptually, but nonetheless plumbing his quartet music to ever greater heights of richness and creativity. Ornette! was the first time bassist Scott LaFaro recorded with Coleman, and the difference in approach between LaFaro and Charlie Haden is apparent from the opening notes of "W.R.U." There is a more direct propulsion and limberness to his playing, and he can be heard driving Coleman and Don Cherry actively and more aggressively than Haden's warm, languid phrasing. The cuts, with titles derived from the works of Sigmund Freud, are all gems and serve as wonderful launching pads for the musicians' improvisations. Coleman, by this time, was very comfortable in extended pieces, and he and his partners have no trouble filling in the time, never coming close to running out of ideas. Special mention should be made of Ed Blackwell, with one of his finest performances. Ornette! is a superb release and a must for all fans of Coleman and creative improvised music in general. Brian Olewnick  
Tracklist :
1     W.R.U. 16'25
Ornette Coleman
2     T. & T. 4'35
Ornette Coleman
3     C. & D. 13'10
Ornette Coleman
4     R.P.D.D. 9'39
Ornette Coleman
- BONUS TRACK -
5    Proof Readers 10'25
Ornette Coleman
Credits :
Alto Saxophone – Ornette Coleman
Bass – Scott LaFaro
Drums – Ed Blackwell
Trumpet [Pocket] – Donald Cherry

28.11.22

RAHSAAN ROLAND KIRK - Does Your House Have Lions : The Rahsaan Roland Kirk Anthology (1993) 2CD | RM | Atlantic Jazz Gallery | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

The Atlantic/Rhino anthology line has delighted novices and angered purists who have balked at what they deem questionable inclusions and exclusions, plus non-chronological sequencing and liners with plenty of personal anecdotes but limited musical analysis. The 31 selections on this two-disc set range from 1961 to 1976 and cover Rahsaan Roland Kirk originals, covers, straight jazz, pop/soul, gospel-backed and hard bop workouts, and feature both live and studio segments. While it is a bit jarring to hop from the early '60s to the '70s and back, series compiler Joel Dorn opted for stylistic organization rather than session exactness. Any hardcore Kirk fan will want the individual albums the label is reissuing. Otherwise, the anthology serves its purpose, which is to spotlight a brilliant player and make you want to hear more. Ron Wynn
Tracklist 1 :
1     Wham Bam Thank You Ma'am 4'41
Charles Mingus
2     Conversation 0'58    
3     Bye Bye Blackbird 2'42
Mort Dixon / Ray Henderson
4     Horses (Monogram/Republic) 0'16
5     If I Loved You 8'37
Oscar Hammerstein II / Richard Rodgers
6     Old Rugged Cross 7'13
Traditional
7     Ain't No Sunshine 2'26
Renaldo Benson / Al Cleveland / Marvin Gaye
8     Volunteered Slavery 5'42
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
9     Seasons: One Mind Winter/Summer/Ninth Ghost 10'34
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
10     Introduction 1'36
11     Medley: Going Home/Sentimental Journey/In Monument/Lover 4'50
Les Brown / Antonin Dvorák / Bud Green / Lorenz Hart / Ben Homer / Rahsaan Roland Kirk / Richard Rodgers
12     The Black and Crazy Blues 6'04
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
13     I Say a Little Prayer 7'57
Burt Bacharach / Hal David
14     Medley: This Love of Mine/Roots 4'09
Rahsaan Roland Kirk / Sol Parker / Henry Sanicola / Frank Sinatra
Tracklist 2 :    
1     The Inflated Tear 4'50
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
2     Blacknuss 5'10
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
3     I Love You, Yes I Do 2'47
Chris Allen / Johnny Cameron
4     Portrait of Those Beautiful Ladies 7'54
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
5     Water for Robeson and Williams 3'48
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
6     A Laugh for Rory 2'51
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
7     The Entertainer 6'01
Scott Joplin
8     Black Root 3'14
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
9     Carney and Bigard Place 5'35
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
10     Anysha 8'12
Trudy Pitts
11     Making Love After Hours 4'31
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
12     Freaks for the Festival 5'32
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
13     Sesroh 0'23 
14     Bye Bye Blackbird 2'35
Mort Dixon / Ray Henderson    
15     Conversation 0:56     
16     Three for the Festival 5'23
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
17     Bright Moments 0'02
Rahsaan Roland Kirk

25.11.22

RAHSAAN ROLAND KIRK - I, Eye, Aye : Live at the Montreux Jazz Festival, 1972 (1972-1996) RM | Atlantic Jazz Gallery | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

This live recording is a companion to a documentary called The One Man Twins. Released for the first time in 1996, both audio and video gives both fans and the uninitiated a glimpse of the century's most colorful performers and most complex jazz musicians. Kirk's band for the date was comprised of pianist Ron Burton, bassist Henry "Pete" Pearson, drummer Robert Shy, and percussionist Joe Texidor. Only Burton and Texidor were Kirk regulars. The set is absolutely electrifying. From the few short raps Kirk offers the crowd, one cannot be prepared for the honking, shouting, funky, gritty sets that follow. Kirk begins with "Seasons," a careening rush of flute acrobatics, and on into a deeply moving rendition of "Balm in Gilead," where Kirk evokes the spirit of Paul Robeson, and then into arguably the greatest version of "Volunteered Slavery" on record, a slamming R&B stomp of literally epic proportions, where Kirk uses each of his horns and starts blowing different notes on each simultaneously. There is a gorgeous solo medley where Kirk combines Ellington's "Satin Doll" and an improvisation on its two themes and comes up with something completely new, yet reverentially sound. The set ends with "Serenade to a Cuckoo," which moves across scalar dimensions and tonal registers with a deep, funky grace, and finally, "Pedal Up," a standard Kirk crowd-pleaser that brings all of his elements -- the spectral, the spiritual, and the carnal -- into full play. The band, with new players, can barely keep up with Kirk, but Burton keeps them right in line with the master's shifts in mood, mode, and tempo while keeping the entire gig harmonically on course no matter which instrument Kirk chooses to play. This is a hell of an introduction to one of the least-understood figures in jazz history, and an absolute necessity for fans.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
1     Rahsaantalk, No. 1 0:38
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
2     Seasons 6:00
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
3     Rahsaantalk, No. 2 1:12
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
4     Balm in Gilead 7:05
Traditional
5     Volunteered Slavery 10:20
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
6     Rahsaantalk, No. 3 0:24
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
7     Blue Rol, No. 2 9:04
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
8     Solo Piece: Satin Doll/Improvisation 4:19
Duke Ellington / Rahsaan Roland Kirk
9     Serenade to a Cuckoo 3:28
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
10     Pedal Up 6:11
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
Credits :
Bass – Henry "Pete" Pearson
Drums – Robert Shy
Percussion – Joe "Habao" Texidor
Piano – Ron Burton
Tenor Saxophone, Saxophone [Manzello], Saxophone [Stritch], Clarinet, Flute, Nose Flute, Siren, Performer [Other Stuff] – Rahsaan Roland Kirk

RAHSAAN ROLAND KIRK - Bright Moments (1974-1993) 2CD | RM | Atlantic Jazz Gallery | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Rahsaan Roland Kirk's live club gigs were usually engaging, freewheeling affairs, full of good humor and a fantastically wide range of music. The double album Bright Moments (reissued as a double CD) is a near-definitive document of the Kirk live experience, and his greatest album of the '70s. The extroverted Kirk was in his element in front of an audience, always chatting, explaining his concepts, and recounting bits of jazz history. Even if some of his long, jive-talking intros can sound a little dated today, it's clear in the outcome of the music that Kirk fed voraciously off the energy of the room. Most of the tracks are long (seven minutes or more), demonstrating Kirk's wealth of soloing ideas in a variety of styles (and, naturally, on a variety of instruments). "Pedal Up" is a jaw-dropping demonstration of Kirk's never-duplicated three-horns-at-once technique, including plenty of unaccompanied passages that simply sound impossible. There's more quintessential Kirk weirdness on "Fly Town Nose Blues," which heavily features an instrument called the nose flute, and the title track has a healthy dose of Kirk singing through his (traditional) flute. His repertoire is typically eclectic: Ellington's "Prelude to a Kiss"; a groovy Bacharach pop tune in "You'll Never Get to Heaven"; a lovely version of Fats Waller's "Jitterbug Waltz"; and a stomping, exultant New Orleans-style original, "Dem Red Beans and Rice." Perhaps the best, however, is an impassioned rendition of the ballad standard "If I Loved You," where Kirk's viscerally raw, honking tone hints in a roundabout way at the avant-garde without ever losing its melodic foundation. Bright Moments empties all the major items out of Kirk's bag of tricks, providing a neat microcosm of his talents and displaying a consummate and knowledgeable showman. In short, it's nothing less than a tour de force. Steve Huey  
Tracklist 1 :
1     Introduction 2:06
Rahsaan Roland Kirk    
2     Pedal Up 11:52
Rahsaan Roland Kirk    
3     You'll Never Get to Heaven (If You Break My Heart) 9:48
Burt Bacharach / Hal David
4    Clickety Clack 2:30
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
5     Prelude to a Kiss 5:05
Duke Ellington / Irving Gordon / Irving Mills
6     Talk (Electric Nose) 2:33
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
7     Fly Town Nose Blues 8:52
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
Tracklist 2 :    
1     Talk (Bright Moments) 3:30
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
2     Bright Moments 10:02
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
3     Dem Red Beans and Rice 7:05
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
4     If I Loved You 8:50
Oscar Hammerstein II / Richard Rodgers
5     Talk (Fats Waller) 1:30
Rahsaan Roland Kirk / Fats Waller
6     Jitterbug Waltz 7:00
Richard Maltby, Jr. / Fats Waller    
7     Second Line Jump 1:30
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
Credits :
Bass – Henry Pearson
Drums – Robert Shy
Flute, Tenor Saxophone, Nose Flute, Liner Notes – Rahsaan Roland Kirk
Percussion – Joe Habao
Piano – Ron Burton
Synthesizer, Tambourine – Todd Barkan

30.10.22

CHARLES LLOYD - Forest Flower : Charles Lloyd at Monterey + Soundtrack (1994) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

This classic album is dominated by the Charles Lloyd Quartet's historic appearance at the 1966 Monterey Jazz Festival. In addition to "East of the Sun," Lloyd (on tenor and flute), pianist Keith Jarrett, bassist Cecil McBee, and drummer Jack DeJohnette performed the 17½-minute, two-part "Forest Flower," which was the hit of the festival and helped make the group a sensation. Also included on this album are renditions of Jarrett's "Sorcery" and McBee's "Song of Her," which were recorded ten days earlier. One of the high points of Charles Lloyd's career. Scott Yanow
Forest Flower : Charles Lloyd At Monterey    
1    Forest Flower - Sunrise    7:17
Composed By – Charles Lloyd
2    Forest Flower - Sunset    10:19
Composed By – Charles Lloyd
3    Sorcery 5:11
Composed By – Keith Jarrett
4    Song Of Her 5:16
Composed By – Cecil McBee
5    East Of The Sun 10:20
Composed By – Brooks Bowman
Soundtrack    
6    Sombrero Sam    10:26
Composed By – Charles Lloyd
7    Voice In The Night    8:47
Composed By – Charles Lloyd
8    Pre-Dawn    2:34
Composed By – Charles Lloyd
9    Forest Sunflower '69    16:51
Composed By – Charles Lloyd
Credits :
Bass – Cecil McBee (pistas: 1 to 5), Ron McClure (pistas: 6 to 9)
Drums – Jack DeJohnette
Piano – Keith Jarrett
Tenor Saxophone, Flute – Charles Lloyd
Notas.
Tracks 1, 2 & 5: Recorded September 18, 1966 at the Monterey Jazz Festival
Tracks 3 & 4: Recorded September 8, 1966 at Atlantic Recording Studios, New York City
Tracks 6-9: Recorded November 15, 1968 at Town Hall, New York City
2 albums on 1 cd.

27.8.21

HERBIE MANN - Introducing Herbie Mann (2006) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

Herbie Mann was no purist when it came to material to use as basis for his improvisation. He fused Samba, Soul or Southern Rock into his jazz, he covered hits of the day and he even released singles. It is an error to dismiss him as just a popularizer, he was a pioneer of fusion.
This compilation tries to embrace his whole spectrum from the early 60s Brazilian influences via his Southern Soul period to the mid/late 70s world music approach.
The selection is mostly of his best known tracks. The title "Introducing..." is adequate and this is a really good introduction to the Man(n) and recommended to those who are not too familiar with his discography. by Roxanne Walsh
Tracklist :
1    Comin' Home Baby (Single Edit)    2:37
2    Right Now    3:13
3    One Note Samba 3:20
Featuring – Joao Gilberto
4    Sawa Sawa Dé    3:00
5    The Oud And The Pussy Cat    5:03
6    A Man And A Woman 2:23
Featuring – Tamiko Jones
7    This Little Girl Of Mine    2:27
8    Memphis Underground    7:07
9    Muscle Shoals Nitty Gritty    6:47
10    Hold On I'm Comin'    4:07
11    Philly Dog    2:26
12    Mushi Mushi    3:26
13    Hi Jack    5:16
14    Waterbed    3:50
15    Cajun Moon 5:16
Featuring – Cissy Houston
16    Superman    3:05

8.6.21

BEN WEBSTER – The Warm Moods (1963-2003) RM | Serie Warner Bros. Jazz Masters | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

The veteran tenor Ben Webster had a very warm tone on ballads that contrasted with the aggressive biting sound he used on faster material. For this 1960 set Webster is joined by a string quartet (arranged by Johnny Richards) and a rhythm section for his melodic interpretations of a dozen standards. Even when simply stating the melody, Webster brings out unexpected beauty in the songs. His tone has never been accurately duplicated and is the main reason to pick up this CD reissue Scott Yanow
Tracklist:
1 The Sweetheart Of Sigma Chi
Written-By – F. Dudleigh Vernor
2 Stella By Starlight
Written-By – Ned Washington, Victor Young
3 With Every Breath I Take
Written-By – Leo Robin, Ralph Rainger
4 Accent On Youth
Written-By – Tot Seymour, Vee Lawnhurst
5 But Beautiful
Written-By – Jimmy Van Heusen, Johnny Burke
6 Time After Time
Written-By – Jule Styne, Sammy Cahn
7 Nancy (With The Laughing Face)
Written-By – Jimmy Van Heusen, Phil Silvers
8 I'm Beginning To See The Light
Written-By – Don George, Duke Ellington, Harry James, Johnny Hodges
9 It Was So Beautiful
Written-By – Arthur Freed, Harry Barris
10 The Whiffenpoof Song
Written-By – George Pomeroy, Meade Minnigerode, Tod B. Galloway
11 It's Easy To Remember
Written-By – Lorenz Hart, Richard Rogers
12 There's No You
Written-By – Hal Hopper, Tom Adair
Credits :
Arranged By, Conductor – Johnny Richards
Bass – Don Bagley
Cello – Armand Kaproff
Drums – Frank Capp
Piano – Donn Trenner
Tenor Saxophone – Ben Webster
Viola – Cecil Figelski
Violin – Alfred Lustgarten, Lisa Minghetti

24.5.21

MONGO SANTAMARIA - Mongo At Montreaux (1971-2012) RM / Jazz Best Collection 1000 – 4 / FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Recorded live at the 1971 Montreux Jazz Festival, the blistering Mongo at Montreux captures Mongo Santamaria in the absolute prime of his career, embracing all facets of his expansive musical vision for a set that is far more than the sum of its parts. Spanning from soulful Latin boogaloo grooves like "Come Candela" to psychedelic jazz renditions of pop hits like the Temptations' "Cloud Nine" to straight-up funk excursions like "Climax," Mongo at Montreux is relentlessly energetic music genetically engineered for dancing -- most impressive of all is "Conversation in Drums," a virtual primer in Latin percussion. by Jason Ankeny
Tracklist :
1     Come Calenda 3:33
Mongo Santamaria
2     Climax 4:25
Alphonse Mouzon
3     Disappear 4:40
Marty Sheller
4     Marty's Tune  4:21
Marty Sheller
5     Soleil 5:39
Jean-François Perrier, Michel Fugain
6     Conversation in Drums 1:32



Mongo Santamaria
7     I Wanna Know 2:59
Hubert Laws
8     Watermelon Man 0:59
Herbie Hancock
9    Standing Ovation
10     Cloud Nine 4:54
Barrett Strong, Norman Jesse Whitfield
11    Watermelon Man (alt) 0:33
Herbie Hancock
Credits :
Arranged By – Marty Sheller
Congas – Mongo Santamaria
Congas, Bongos – Armando Peraza
Drums, Timbales – Steve Berrios
Electric Bass – Edward Rivera
Flute, Vibraphone [Vibes] – Roger Glenn
Piano – Eddie Martinez
Tenor Saxophone, Flute – Carter Jefferson
Trumpet, Cowbell – Ray Maldonado

22.7.20

JACK KEROUAC – Readings by Jack Kerouac on the Beat Generation (1960-1990) MONO | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Readings by Jack Kerouac on the Beat Generation was the culmination of the author's short-lived recording career, a solo performance that transcends poetry and music -- it's literally spoken jazz, the artist improvising freely on the printed text of his own work in front of him. Produced by Bill Randle, it was Kerouac's most musical performance, despite the fact that the recording contained only his voice and no accompaniment, using his voice and language the way a saxophonist might improvise on a particular melodic line or riff. He's spellbinding throughout, intense, focused, and even subtly changing voices with the work itself. [Reissued in Rhino's Jack Kerouac Collection with a bonus track consisting of an excerpt from a 1958 forum on the existence of the "Beat Generation," held at Hunter College in New York.] Bruce Eder
Tracklist :
1 San Francisco Scene (The Beat Generation) 3:09
Jack Kerouac
2 San Francisco Blues 3:02
Jack Kerouac
3 Lucien Midnight: The Sound of the Universe in My Window 4:22
Jack Kerouac
4 History of Bop 10:53
Jack Kerouac
5 The Subterraneans 3:07
Jack Kerouac
6 Visions of Neal: Neal and the Three Stooges 16:59
Jack Kerouac
Credits:
Liner Notes – Allen Ginsberg, Randy Hutton
Photography By – Allen Ginsberg
Voice, Written-By – Jack Kerouac
Recorded probably 1958 or early 1959.
Readings by Jack Kerouac on The Beat Generation originally released on LP (Verve LP #15005, January 1960).
Allen Ginsberg's original liner notes are reproduced on fifteen illustrated postcards.
Nominated for the 1999 Grammy award for Best recording package.

ESBJÖRN SVENSSON TRIO — Winter In Venice (1997) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Esbjörn Svensson has stood not only once on stage in Montreux. He was already a guest in the summer of 1998 at the jazz festival on Lake Gen...