9.6.25

BUSONI : Piano Music • 6 — Fantasy and Fugue on 'Ad nos, ad salutarem undam' (Liszt-Busoni) · Piano Sonata in F Minor · Prélude et étude en arpèges (Wolf Harden) (2009) FLAC (tracks), lossless

Naxos continues its edition, with pianist Wolf Harden, of Ferruccio Busoni's piano music, of which there is a lot, with most of it written at a very high level of difficulty and some invested in rather long pieces that require almost superhuman endurance. Volume six contains three rather uncommon pieces, starting with Busoni's piano transcription of Liszt's organ work Fantasy and Fugue on "Ad nos, ad salutarem undam," a piece recorded in part by Busoni's pupil Leo Sirota as early as the mid-'20s, but seldom visited since. Liszt created his own four-hand version of the piece that is far more frequently played over Busoni's solo piano edition. This is followed by Busoni's early Piano Sonata in F minor, Op. 20a, composed in 1883 when Busoni was 17, a relative rarity hardly known before the 1980s. The Prélude et Etude en Arpèges (1923) is a very late Busoni composition and the best-known work on the program; it is a highly regarded piece that bears some kinship with his never-finished opera Doktor Faustus. All of these pieces are well worth hearing; as in the case of the Spanish Rhapsody, although it's technically a transcription of Liszt, no one would mistake the Fantasy and Fugue on "Ad nos, ad salutarem undam" for being Liszt because it has Busoni's special gestures and approach to piano technique all over it. Although Busoni rejected all of his pre-1893 works for what he felt was their precocity and lack of finish, as it turns out the F minor Piano Sonata is a fully mature and ambitious statement that is unusual for an Italian composer in the opera-obsessed 1880s and written in a time when the piano sonata itself was a form suffering from a brief eclipse.
The Naxos Busoni piano music edition has some strong advantages over other, similar projects; Busoni's piano music is so expansive and confusing that some editions have found ways to curtail the overall project in some way -- the Bach/Busoni or other kinds of transcriptions are left out, or made a different project on its own, or -- as Gunnar Johansen did on his Artist's Direct label in the 1960s -- limiting it only to fully original compositions. In Johansen's day, though, it was practically impossible to access the earlier Busoni works in manuscript that were extant; by the twenty-first century most of these efforts had found their way into print. Naxos' edition is pretty much all-inclusive of everything and combines works on individual volumes in an intelligent way; certainly the recordings are technically superior to anything that appeared on Artist's Direct. However, one genuinely wishes the label could have employed a pianist just a little more on the ball than Harden; it sounds like he is reading these scores, and it's a very good reading, but he often seems behind Busoni's music and there really isn't a strong interpretive sense at play in these renderings. To his credit, Johansen had his personal contact with Busoni to draw from and his passion for the project, so it's easy to forgive the bad sound and occasional finger slips here and there. Harden seems a bit lacking on the passion front and during the Prélude et Etude en Arpèges -- stated almost entirely in arpeggios -- we hear an arpeggio that has a note missing from it; Harden simply wasn't able to place his finger on the key at that moment. Naxos should have retaken it, but didn't; with Roland Pöntinen, Carlo Grante, and Ronald Stevenson already out there in this work, this recording simply doesn't have a competitive edge. Uncle Dave Lewis  

The sixth volume of Busoni’s piano music features two major projects from the earlier part of his career. The Liszt transcription powerfully recreates the composer’s grandest work for organ in terms of the piano, while the Piano Sonata in F minor is an exhilarating example of late-Romantic virtuosity that remained unknown until recent decades. In total contrast, the brief Prélude et étude en arpèges finds Busoni’s late musical language at its most concentrated and refractory. naxos

Ferruccio Busoni (1866-1924)
1-3. Fantasy And Fugue On 'Ad Nos, Ad Salutarem Undam' (26:41)
Arranged By – Ferruccio Busoni
Composed By – Franz Liszt

4-6.     Piano Sonata In F Minor, Op. 20, K204 (28:34)
7-8.     Prelude Et Etude En Arpeges, K297 (9:36)
Credits :
Piano – Wolf Harden

BUSONI : Piano Music • 7 — Concert fantasy on motifs from Goldmark's 'Merlin · Chamber Fantasy on Bizet's 'Carmen' (Wolf Harden) (2013) FLAC (tracks), lossless

The essence of Ferruccio Busoni’s music lies in its synthesis of his Italian and German ancestry, emotion and intellect, imagination and rigour. This seventh volume in Naxos’s highly-praised series brings together several virtuosic operatic transcriptions, paraphrases and fantasies, as well as demanding studies and two piano sonatinas. ‘Wolf Harden is a stupendous pianist who can deliver what Busoni demands and then some’ (American Record Guide on Vol. 2, 8.555699). naxos

Ferruccio Busoni (1866-1924)
1. Concert Fantasy On Motifs From The Opera "Merlin" By Goldmark    17:40
2. Fantasy On Motifs From The Comic Opera "Der Barbier Von Bagdad" By Peter Cornelius    9:38
3. Variation-Study After Mozart No. 1: Canzonetta From "Don Giovanni"    1:39
4. Funeral March From "Götterdämmerung" 8:07
Arranged By – Ferruccio Busoni
Composed By – Richard Wagner

5. Sonatina No. 3: 'Ad Usum Infantis Madeline M. Americanae    6:45
6. Sonatina No. 6: Chamber Fantasy On Bizet's "Carmen"    7:59
7-11. Five Short Pieces For The Cultivation Of Polyphonic Playing 16:24
Credits :
Piano – Wolf Harden 

BUSONI : Piano Music • 8 — 24 Preludes, Op.37 · Macchiette medioevali, Op.33 (Wolf Harden) (2013) FLAC (tracks), lossless

Ferruccio Busoni’s Preludes, Op 37 and Macchiette medioevali, Op 33 were a product of his teenage years (1881–83), but they are far from being derivative juvenilia. In these charming and engaging works Busoni moves away from the Baroque and Classical models of his earlier works towards a more inventive and personal accommodation with the Romanticism of the mid-nineteenth century. Wolf Harden’s playing in this series has been described as “the clear current benchmark” (BBC Music Magazine on Volume 2 / 8.555699). naxos

Ferruccio Busoni (1866-1924)
1-24. 24 Preludes, Op. 37 (Kind. 181) (1881) 52:23
25-30. Macchiette Medioevali, Op. 33 (Kind. 194) (1882-83) 12:54
Credits :
Piano – Wolf Harden 

BUSONI : Piano Music • 9 — Una festa di villaggio · Racconti fantastici · Danze antiche · Suite campestre (Wolf Harden) (2017) FLAC (tracks), lossless

All the works on this recording were composed when Busoni was between the ages of eleven and fifteen. Full of charm and wit, they reveal his precocious absorption of earlier models—principally Bach, Mozart, Weber and Schumann—as well as exceptional technical finesse. Una festa di villaggio charts the day’s events of a village festival whilst Suite campestre, one of his most distinctive early compositions, possesses moments of inwardness that presage the mature works to come. naxos

Ferruccio Busoni (1866-1924)
1-6. Una Festa Di Villaggio, Op. 9 (Kind.185)    (23:36)
7-9. Racconti Fantastici, Op. 12 (Kind. 100)    (9:43)
10-13. Danze Antiche, Op. 11 (Kind. 126)    (11:48)
14. Gavotte, Op. 70 (Kind. 152)    3:13
15-19. Suite Campestre, Op. 18 (Kind. 81)    (13:05)
20-24. Cinq Pièces, Op. 3 (Kind. 71)    (10:35)
Credits :
Piano – Wolf Harden

BUSONI : Piano Music • 10 — Transcriptions of Works by J.S. Bach, Brahms, Cramer, Liszt and Mozart (Wolf Harden) (2018) FLAC (tracks), lossless

Busoni embodied an essentially recreative approach to the music of the past. His Bach transcriptions reveal an absolute command of intricate polyphony and a limpid clarity. Mozart stood as an aesthetic and technical exemplar while Cramer’s little-known Etudes are adapted for modern piano technique. Busoni preserved the Lutheran austerity of Brahms’s Chorale Preludes for Organ, Op. 122 whereas in the Mephisto Waltz No. 1 he augments Liszt’s heady writing with a super-virtuosity of his own. naxos

Ferruccio Busoni (1866-1924)
1-3.     Fantasia, Adagio e Fuga (after J.S. Bach's BWV 906 and 968)
 Mozart - Piano Concerto No. 9 in E-Flat Major, K. 271, "Jeunehomme": II. Andantino
4.    Mozart - Piano Concerto No. 9 in E-Flat Major, K. 271, "Jeunehomme": II. Andantino
5-12.    Klavierübung in 5 Teilen (first edition, 1917-22), Part IV: 8 Etudes after Cramer
Johannes Brahms /  Ferruccio Busoni - Arranger
13-18.     11 Chorale Preludes, Op. 122 (arr. F. Busoni for piano) (excerpts)
Franz Liszt, / Ferruccio Busoni - Arranger
Der Tanz in der Dorfschenke, S110/R427, "Mephisto Waltz No. 1" (arr. F. Busoni for piano)
Credits :
Wolf Harden - Piano 

BUSONI : Piano Music • 11 — Ten Chorale Preludes · Sonatina brevis Nº.5 · Preludio al Corale e Fuga (Edizione minore) Prelude, Fugue and Allegro (Wolf Harden) (2019) FLAC (tracks), lossless

Transcriptions occupied Ferruccio Busoni from early in his career, but his famously Romantic version of the Chaconne in D minor (Naxos 8.555699) contrasts with the later and more austere Sonatina brevis based on Bach’s Fantasy and Fugue in D minor, BWV 905. Music from Bach’s The Art of Fugue is invoked in the rarely heard Edizione minore version of the Fantasia contrappuntistica, and the Ten Chorale Preludes include the glorious Wachet auf, ruft uns die Stimme. Sir Edward Elgar considered Busoni ‘the greatest musical mind of his time’, and Wolf Harden’s playing of Busoni has been described as ‘the clear current benchmark’ (BBC Music Magazine on Volume 2, 8.555699). naxos

Ferruccio Busoni (1899-1924)
1.    Sonata Brevis (No. 5) 'In Signo Joannis Sebatiani Magni', BV.280 (1919) 5:11
2-6.    Preludio Et Corale E Fuga Sopra Un Frammento Di Bach (Edizione Minore Della Fantasia Contrappuntistica), BV. 256a (1912) 18:57
7.    Prelude, Fugue And Allegro In E Flat Major, BWV 998, BV B.36 (1915) 8:36
J.S. Bach / Ferruccio Busoni - Arranger
8-17.    Ten Chorale Preludes, BV B. 27 (1898)
J.S. Bach / Transcription By – Ferruccio Busoni
Wolf Harden - Piano

COLOSSEUM — Daughter of Time (1970-2005) RM | Arcàngelo Art-Rock Series | Unofficial Release, Mini LP | Two Version | FLAC (image+.tracks+.cue), lossless

A concept album loosely based on man's fascination and allure for war throughout the ages, Daughter of Time contains all the elements required to create a pure progressive rock album. Joining David Greenslade and Chris Farlowe is Louis Cennamo from Renaissance, who plucks away at the bass guitar with a heavy hand. A multitude of instruments combine to create a brilliant melange of music on every one of the eight songs. Vibrant spurts of trombone, trumpet, and flute are driven to the height of each song, which gives way to some implements of jazz fusion. Rich organ and vibraphone can be heard in behind "Three Score and Ten, Amen" and "Take Me Back to Doomsday" adding to the melancholy theme. Countering this are beautiful string arrangements made up of violin, viola, and cello used effectively to conjure up mood, and doing an excellent job. Even a flügelhorn is blared from time to time on top of the accentuated drums. A spoken word passage from Dick Heckstall-Smith creates an eerie aura, as his voice echoes on about the coming of the apocalypse. Colosseum's music works extremely well in that it builds suspense and reels the listener into the songs. As far as the lyrics go, they're stark and foreboding and have a medieval taste to them, coinciding with the music perfectly. Each song, all around six minutes in length, should have been longer to let the instruments play out with their illustriousness. Except for the fact that it is a short album, Daughter of Time is a sturdy example of progressive rock. Mike DeGagne
Tracklist :
1.    Three Score And Ten, Amen 5:38
Written-By – Clempson, Greenslade, Hiseman
2.    Time Lament 6:13
Written-By – Greenslade, Hiseman
3.    Take Me Back To Doomsday 4:26
Written-By – Clempson, Greenslade, Hiseman
4.    The Daughter Of Time 3:33
Written-By – Dennen, Greenslade, Heckstall-Smith
5.    Theme For An Imaginary Western 4:07
Written-By – Bruce, Brown
6.    Bring Out Your Dead 4:20
Written-By – Clempson, Greenslade
7.    Downhill And Shadows 6:13
Written-By – Clempson, Hiseman, Reeves
8.    The Time Machine (Live) 8:11
Written-By – Hiseman
Credits :
Jon Hiseman - Drums
Dave "Clem" Clempson - Guitars, Vocals
Dave Greenslade - Organ, Keyboards, vibraphone
Mark Clarke - Bass, vocals
Chris Farlowe - Vocals
Dick Heckstall-Smith - Saxophones
Barbara Thompson - Flute , Saxophones
Louis Cennamo - Bass

JANE MORGAN — What Now My Love? (1962) Vynil LP | FLAC (tracks), lossless

What Now My Love was to be the final album Jane Morgan recorded for Kapp Records, which had been her home for some six years. Her time had been relatively successful, resulting in a British chart topper in The Day The Rains Came and a US Top Ten hit in Fascination, but there were disagreements between singer and record company over the direction her career should pursue. This would therefore be an interesting album purely because of its status as her last for the label, but throw into the mix the production skills of Burt Bacharach and it takes on a different perspective altogether. What is especially revealing is that Burt, one of the best songwriters of his era, should contribute only one song to this ten track package, the remaining nine tracks being something of a delve into the romantic side of the great American songbook. It is either a missed opportunity (given Bacharachs later success with Dionne Warwick, for example) or an interesting stroll down memory lane, depending upon your viewpoint. Janes performance is never less than top notch, and the instrumental backdrops enable the whole album to show off to maximum advantage the fine qualities of each melody.
Tracklist :
1 Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out To Dry 3:50
 Cahn / Styne
2 Black Coffee 4:08
 Wegster / Burke
3 The End Of A Love Affair 3:26
Edward C. Reading
4 I'm A Fool To Want You 3:51
 Sinatra / Herron / Wolf
5 What Now My Love 2:41
 Sigman / Becaud
6 Goodbye 3:17
 Gordon Jenkins
7 It Never Entered My Mind 3:41
Rodgers / Hart
8 Look Look Away 2:43
 Rodgers / Hammerstein
9 Here's That Rainy Day 3:24
 Burke / Van Heusen
10 Waitin' For Charlie To Come Home 2:32
 Hilliard / Bacharach
Credits :
Orchestras Directed by Burt Bacharach & Peter Matz
Vocals - Jane Morgan

8.6.25

ANN BURTON WITH LOUIS VAN DYKE TRIO ‎— Blue Burton (1967-2013) FLAC (tracks), lossless

The youth of Johanna 'Ansje' Rafalowicz, born on march 4th , 1933 in Amsterdam is for a great part darkened by the second world war. She had to go into hiding because of her Jewish descent, not to get caught by the German occupiers. And in the years after the liberation of Holland the sun still won't shine in Ansje's life. She perpetually clashes with her mother, which eventually leads to her being taken under the wings of a social welfare worker. Her dawning love for music is not without consequence: she becomes a singer with a combo, goes abroad, and soon adopts as her stage name Ann Burton.
When she enters the small Amsterdam theatre 'Het Bavohuis' in the evening of September 24th 1967 to record the first session of her first album, Blue Burton she is 34 years old and has 12 years of experience as a singer. At that moment the Beatles lead the top 10 in Holland with "All you need is love"....
Since Ann Burton made the singing of the Doris Day repertoire her business the world of popular music has seen a lot of changes - in the beginning by the arrival of rock'n' roll, later by the beat. Just so the Ann Burton repertoire underwent the necessary changes during these years. The singer broadened her musical horizon very much after getting acquainted with the jazz. After listening to the way Billie Holiday, Sara Vaughn and Ella Fitzgerald handle their songs she started to put much more emotion into the interpretation of her lyrics, and this explains why she reckons Shirley Horn as one of her youngest favourites. From being just another singer Ann developed into a singer who is very careful in the handling of text and who can move and allure her audience with her sensitive voice. As Paul Visser (alias for Pete Venudor) wrote it in the original liner notes of Blue Burton: "Whether or not she is the best jazz singer in the Netherlands, others may decide. She undoubtedly is the most personal. ] And very, very blue".
Tracklist :

1    I Can't Give You Anything But Love 4:59
Written-By – Dorothy Fields, Jimmy McHugh
2    Go Away Little Boy 7:16
Written-By – Goffin And King
3    He Was Too Good To Me 3:18
Written-By – Rodgers & Hart
4    But Not For Me 3:40
Written-By – George & Ira Gershwin
5    It's Easy To Remember 4:25
Written-By – Rodgers & Hart
6    You've Changed 5:43
Written-By – Bill Carey, Carl Fisher
7    The Good Life 2:36
Written-By – Jack Reardon, Sacha Distel
8    In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning 3:26
Written-By – Bob Hilliard, David Mann
9    Sunny 3:25
Written-By – Bobby Hebb
Credits :
Alto Saxophone – Piet Noordijk (faixas: 3, 6, 8)
Bass – Jacques Schols
Drums – John Engels
Lead Vocals – Ann Burton
Piano – Louis Van Dyke 

ANN-MARGRET — On the Way Up (1962-2007) RM | RCA Female Vocal 1000 Series | FLAC (tracks), lossless

Ann-Margret's RCA Victor debut album, And Here She Is..., didn't get much attention in 1961, but she did better with her bluesy single "I Just Don't Understand," which peaked in the Top 20 in September. That set up this, her second solo LP, which featured "I Just Don't Understand," and like it was recorded partially in Nashville under the aegis of Chet Atkins and Dick Pierce. The two naturally brought a slight country feel to some of the tracks, notably the remakes of Don Gibson's 1958 hit "Oh, Lonesome Me" and the 1960-1961 hit "My Last Date (With You)" (aka "Last Date"). But the closest approximation of the sound was the kind of country-inflected pop/rock being pursued by Elvis Presley around the same time, which made a rendition of Presley's first major hit, "Heartbreak Hotel," an appropriate choice. At 20, Ann-Margret was an effective singer, if something of a chameleon, seeming to adopt a different persona for each number. She was at her most seductive singing Otis Blackwell's "Slowly," and she came on like a Latin fireball on "Fever," but was demure on the singles-chart entry "What Am I Supposed to Do" and ingenuously winning on "Moon River." RCA Victor appears to have been hoping it had found a distaff Presley, and it's possible Ann-Margret might have justified such a hope if her film acting career hadn't quickly outpaced her recording career; by the time this album was released, her movie debut, Pocketful of Miracles, had been out for several months and State Fair, which would establish her as a redheaded bombshell, was just getting into theaters. (She was still a mousy brunette on the album cover.) On the Way Up was an appropriate title, but records would soon take a back seat to other career goals. William Ruhlmann 
Tracklist :
 1 Oh, Lonesome Me 2:37
Don Gibson
2 Slowly 2:07
Otis Blackwell
 3 Fever 2:52
Eddie Cooley / John Davenport
 4 What Do You Want From Me 2:32
Mike Cain
 5 Heartbreak Hotel 2:28
Mae Boren Axton / Tommy Durden / Elvis Presley
 6 I Just Don't Understand 2:40
Kent Westberry / Marijohn Wilkin
 7 His Ring 2:23
William Katz / Ruth Roberts
 8 Could It Be?  2:13
Patti Ferguson / Barry De Vorzon
9 What Am I Supposed to Do 2:48  
Helen Carter
 10 Let Me Go, Lover! 3:00
Jenny Carson / Al Hill
 11 Moon River 2:30
Henry Mancini / Johnny Mercer
 12 My Last Date (with You) 2:37
Boudleaux Bryant / Floyd Cramer / Skeeter Davis
Credits :
Joe Reisman Arranger, Orchestra Director
Ann-Margret - Vocals

BARBARA LEA — Barbara Lea With The Johnny Windhurst Quintets (1957-1991) RM | Original Jazz Classics Limited Edition Series | FLAC (tracks), lossless

Singer Barbara Lea's second album is pretty definitive of her early years. Lea is joined by the great (but ill fated and largely forgotten) trumpeter Johnny Windhurst, Dick Cary on either piano or alto horn, sometimes pianist Richard Lowman, guitarist Al Casamenti, bassist Al Hall, and drummer Osie Johnson. Originally a dozen selections, the CD reissue adds an alternate take and an additional title. Lea remains true to the lyrics yet uplifts the material, while the rhythm section swings lightly. Among the many highlights are "Nobody Else but You," "I'm Comin' Virginia," "My Honey's Lovin' Arms," and "Baltimore Oriole." Delightful music by a singer who deserves to be celebrated. Scott Yanow
Tracklist : 
1 Nobody Else But Me 3:13 
Oscar Hammerstein II / Jerome Kern
2 Where Have You Been? 3:31
Cole Porter
3 I'm Coming Virginia 3:22 
Will Marion Cook / Donald Heywood
4 Honey in the Honeycomb 2:47 
Vernon Duke / John Latouche
5 Thrusday's Child 2:26 
Lee Holdridge
 6 I've Got a Pocketful of Dreams 1:21 
James V. Monaco
 7 My Honey's Lovin' Arms 2:46 
Joseph Meyer / Herman Ruby
 8 I Had Myself a True Love 3:45 
Harold Arlen / Johnny Mercer
 9 Gee Baby, Ain't I Good to You 3:08 
Andy Razaf / Don Redman
 10 I Feel at Home with You 2:34 
Lorenz Hart / Richard Rodgers
11 Baltimore Oriole 3:52 
Hoagy Carmichael / Paul Francis Webster
12 Blue Skies 3:07 
Irving Berlin
 13 I Feel at Home with You 2:46 
Lorenz Hart / Richard Rodgers
 14 Straw Hat Full of Lilacs 2:46
Credits :
Bass – Al Hall (tracks: 1 to 13)
Drums – Osie Johnson (tracks: 1 to 13)
Engineer [Recording Engineer] – Rudy Van Gelder
Guitar – Al Casamenti (tracks: 2 to 4, 6, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13)
Harp – Unknown Artist (tracks: 14)
Horn [Alto Horn] – Dick Cary (tracks: 1, 7, 8, 11, 12)
Piano – Dick Cary (tracks: 2 to 4, 6, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13), Richard Lowman (tracks: 1, 5, 8, 11)
Trumpet, Leader – Johnny Windhurst (tracks: 1 to 8, 9 to13)
Vocals – Barbara Lea

7.6.25

BEA WAIN — My Reverie (2000) MONO | FLAC (tracks), lossless

Bea Wain's gorgeous voice is marvelously reproduced and celebrated on Jasmine's My Reverie, a fabulous compendium of classic big band recordings dating from 1937-1941. Backed by the orchestras of Larry Clinton, Artie Shaw and Leonard Joy, this charming woman demonstrates her ability to handle each and every song with uncontrived style and finesse. Her version of Harold Arlen's "Stormy Weather" is an immaculately rendered rite of passage. Even Hoagy Carmichael's long-suffering "Heart and Soul" becomes a delectable treat when sung by Wain. Songs of a romantic nature undergo a magical transformation; "Deep Purple" and "I Didn't Know What Time It Was" become arrestingly beautiful, while "Dancing in the Dark" might well cause susceptible listeners to abandon all worldly attachments and responsibilities in order to worship the voice of Wain by playing this one song -- "Dancing in the Dark," words by Howard Dietz, music by Arthur Schwartz -- over and over again for the rest of time. arwulf arwulf

Bea Wain's major successes were as Larry Clinton's band singer, most famously with My reverie, one of four American number one hits. This compilation contains some of her Larry Clinton tracks and some of her solo music after she quit Larry's band, all in chronological order. Her solo tracks are not that different in style from her band music. Like so many of the band singers of the time, Bea could swing, though she could also do the love songs. The songs here include three of those number one hits (My reverie, Heart and soul, Deep purple) though Cry baby cry, their first number one, is omitted. You can find it on a Larry Clinton compilation, along with many other hits they had together, some of which are also on this CD, but most are not. You may remember Deep purple - it was a big American hit for Nino Tempo and April Stevens in the sixties, and again for Donny and Marie Osmond in the seventies - this is the version that is probably best known in Britain. Bea and Larry's band did one of the original versions. There were several versions released at around the same time (in 1939) but this version outsold them all, by a considerable margin. There are other big hits from her Larry Clinton days here too - Old folks, The masquerade is over and My heart belongs to Daddy - but most of this CD is filled with her solo music. Bea only had four solo hits, but only three of them (Do I worry?, My sister and I, Kiss the boys goodbye) are included. The other, I'm nobody's baby, is missing, but it doesn't matter - this is a brilliant compilation of Bea's music. Of the non-hits, my favorite song here is Oh you crazy moon, but every track is wonderful. -Jazmine Records

Tracklist :
1 My Reverie 3:25
Claude Debussy
Bea Wain feat: Larry Clinton & His Orchestra
2 Heart and Soul 3:09
Hoagy Carmichael / Frank Loesser
Bea Wain feat: Larry Clinton & His Orchestra
3 Old Folks 3:18
Dedette Lee Hill / Willard Robison
Bea Wain feat: Larry Clinton & His Orchestra
4 Deep Purple 3:41
Peter DeRose / Mitchell Parish
Bea Wain feat: Larry Clinton & His Orchestra
5 The Masquerade Is Over 2:46
Herbert Magidson / Allie Wrubel
Bea Wain feat: Larry Clinton & His Orchestra
6 My Heart Belongs to Daddy 2:34
Cole Porter
Bea Wain feat: Larry Clinton & His Orchestra
7 I Get Along Without You Very Well 3:20
Hoagy Carmichael
Bea Wain feat: Larry Clinton & His Orchestra
8 If It's the Last Thing I Do 3:01
Sammy Cahn / Saul Chaplin
Bea Wain feat: Artie Shaw & His Orchestra
9 Dancing in the Dark 3:22
Howard Dietz / Arthur Schwartz
Bea Wain feat: Leonard Joy & His Orchestra
10 I Don't Stand a Ghost of a Chance with You 3:08
Bing Crosby / Ned Washington / Victor Young
 11 Oh, You Crazy Moon 2:53
Johnny Burke / James Van Heusen
 12 Stormy Weather 3:16
Harold Arlen / Ted Koehler
 13 I Didn't Know What Time It Was 3:19
Lorenz Hart / Richard Rodgers
 14 I Could Make You Care 3:05
Sammy Cahn / Saul Chaplin
 15 Kiss the Boys Goodbye 2:46
Frank Loesser / Victor Schertzinger
 16 That's How I Got My Start 2:33
Frank Loesser / Victor Schertzinger
 17 Peekaboo to You 2:08
Johnny Mercer / Joseph Meyer / Carl Sigman
 18 You Started Something 2:50
Ralph Rainger / Leo Robin
 19 I Don't Want to Cry Anymore 3:36
Victor Schertzinger
 20 Our Love Affair 3:02
Roger Edens / Arthur Freed
 21 Do I Worry? 2:36
Stanley Cowan / Bobby Worth
 22 I'm the Lonesomest Gal in Town 3:11
Lew Brown
23 My Sister and I 3:15
Alex Kramer / Joan Whitney / Hy Zaret
 24 You Can Depend on Me 2:37
Charles Carpenter / Louis Dunlap / Earl Hines
Credits :
Artie Shaw & His Orchestra & Larry Clinton & His Orchestra 
Vocal - Bea Wain

MARILYN MOORE — Moody Marilyn Moore (1957) Vynil LP | MONO | FLAC (tracks) 24-96Hz

Singer Marilyn Moore was wed to reedist Al Cohn at the time she recorded her lone LP, the aptly titled Bethlehem session Moody Marilyn Moore, but the scarcity of her studio output and the connubial origins of the session shouldn't be considered a condemnation of her talents. Working with a small but beguiling backing unit including Cohn on tenor and bass clarinet, Milt Hinton on bass, Barry Galbraith on guitar, Joe Wilder on trumpet, Don Abney on piano and Osie Johnson on drums, Moore proves herself a first-rate stylist in the Billie Holiday mode, with a lived-in, seen-it-all authority that lends the music a welcome edge. The arrangements perfectly capture a smoky, late-night atmosphere, but it's Moore's vocals that truly underscore the solitude and heartbreak so essential to the record's potency. Jason Ankeny
Tracklist :
1. I'm Just A Lucky So And So (2:56)
 Mack David / Duke Ellington
2. Ill Wind (2:50)
 Harold Arlen / Ted Koehler
3. If Love Is Trouble (2:39)
 George Handy / Jack Segal
4. Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby? (3:22)
 Bill Austin / Louis Jordan
5. Born To Blow The Blues (3:34)
 Bob Russell / Jack Segal
6. Lover Come Back To Me (2:55)
 Oscar Hammerstein II / Sigmund Romberg
7. You're Driving Me Crazy (2:51)
 Walter Donaldson
8. Trav'lin' All Alone (3:05)
 J.C. Johnson
9. I Cried For You (Now It's Your Turn To Cry Over Me) (2:14)
 Gus Arnheim / Arthur Freed / Abe Lyman
10. Leavin' Town (3:29)
 George Handy / Jack Segal
11. Trouble Is A Man (2:49)
 Alec Wilder
12. I Got Rhythm (2:09)
 George Gershwin / Ira Gershwin
Credits :
Bass – Milt Hinton
Drums – Osie Johnson
Guitar – Barry Galbraith
Piano – Don Abney
Tenor Saxophone, Bass Clarinet – Al Cohn
Trumpet – Joe Wilder
Vocals – Mariyn Moore

TOMMY FLANAGAN TRIO — Overseas (1957-1999) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

This studio session represents one of Tommy Flanagan's earliest dates as a leader, recorded while he was in Stockholm, Sweden. Bassist Wilbur Little and a young Elvin Jones on drums provide strong support, but the focus is on Flanagan's brilliant piano. The brilliant opener is a potent brisk run through Charlie Parker's "Relaxin' at Camarillo," followed by a faster than typical "Chelsea Bridge," which the leader playfully detours into another Billy Strayhorn composition ("Raincheck") for a moment, while also featuring Jones' brushwork in a pair of breaks. Flanagan's approach to the venerable standard "Willow Weep for Me" is steeped in blues, backed by Little's imaginative accompaniment. The bulk of this date is devoted to Flanagan's compositions, though only one, "Eclypso," remained in his repertoire for long. This engaging piece alternates between calypso and bop, with Jones switching between sticks and brushes. "Beat's Up" has the obvious influence of Bud Powell, while the extended blues "Little Rock" opens with a sauntering bass solo. This album has been released under various titles on several labels, including DIW, Dragon, Met, and Prestige, though Fantasy reissued it with three alternate takes in 1999. -Ken Dryden
Tracklist :
1. Relaxin' At Camarillo 3:20
 Charlie Parker 
2. Chelsea Bridge 3:45
 Billy Strayhorn 
3. Eclypso 6:00
 Tommy Flanagan 
4. Beat's Up 4:20
 Tommy Flanagan 
5. Skal Brothers 2:30
 Tommy Flanagan 
6. Little Rock 7:00
 Tommy Flanagan 
7. Verdandi 2:10
 Tommy Flanagan 
8. Delarna 4:35
 Tommy Flanagan 
9. Willow Weep For Me 6:20
 Ann Ronell 
– BONUS TRACKS –
10. Delarna (take 2) 4:35
 Tommy Flanagan 
11. Verdandi (take 2) 2:10
 Tommy Flanagan 
12. Willow Weep For Me (take 1) 6:12
 Ann Ronell
Credits :
Bass – Wilbur Little
Drums – Elvin Jones
Piano – Tommy Flanagan

6.6.25

WES MONTGOMERY — So Much Guitar (1961) RM | Four Version | Original Jazz Classics Remasters Series | 24-Karat Gold Plated | FLAC (image+.tracks+.cue), lossless

One of Wes Montgomery's finest recordings, a Riverside date that showcases the influential guitarist in a quintet with pianist Hank Jones, bassist Ron Carter, drummer Lex Humphries, and the congas of Ray Barretto. All eight performances are memorable in their own way, with "Cottontail," "I'm Just a Lucky So and So," and a brief unaccompanied "While We're Young" being high points. -Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1. "Twisted Blues" (Wes Montgomery) – 5:31
2. "Cotton Tail" (Duke Ellington) – 3:38
3. "I Wish I Knew" (Mack Gordon, Harry Warren) – 5:26
4. "I'm Just a Lucky So-and-So" (Ellington, Mack David) – 5:57
5. "Repetition" (Neal Hefti) – 3:48
6. "Somethin' Like Bags" (Montgomery) – 4:44
7. "While We're Young" (Morty Palitz, Alec Wilder) – 2:12
8. "One for My Baby (and One More for the Road)"  (Harold Arlen, Johnny Mercer) – 7:38
Credits :
Wes Montgomery – Guitar
Ron Carter – Bass
Lex Humphries – Drums
Ray Barretto – Conga
Hank Jones – Piano 

CONTE CANDOLI & LEE MORGAN — Howard Rumsey Presents ... Double or Nothin' (1957-2003) Two Version | FLAC (image+.tracks+.cue), lossless

Rare recordings produced by Howard Rumsey with his incredible Howard Rumsey's Lighthouse All Stars and Charles Persip's Jazz Statesmen.
"There was only a short week in which to record, so we made a date for a double session at Liberty's fabulous new studios... Lee Morgan and Frank Rosolino flipped into some original dance steps at the sound of the playbacks. It was a happy date." -Howard Rumsey
Tracklist :
1. Reggie Or Chester 4:36
Bass – Wilfred Middlebrooks
Drums – Charlie Persip
Piano – Wynton Kelly
Tenor Saxophone, Written-By – Benny Golson

2. Stabelmates 5:08
Bass – Red Mitchell
Drums – Stan Levey
Piano – Dick Shreve
Tenor Saxophone, Written-By – Benny Golson
Trombone – Frank Rosolino
Trumpet – Lee Morgan

3. Celedia 4:40
Bass – Wilfred Middlebrooks
Drums – Charlie Persip
Piano – Wynton Kelly
Tenor Saxophone, Written-By – Bob Cooper
Trombone – Frank Rosolino
Trumpet – Conte Candoli

4. Moto 5:43
Bass – Red Mitchell
Drums – Stan Levey
Piano – Dick Shreve
Tenor Saxophone – Benny Golson
Tenor Saxophone, Written-By – Bob Cooper
Trombone – Frank Rosolino
Trumpet – Conte Candoli, Lee Morgan

5. The Champ 4:40
Bass – Red Mitchell
Drums – Stan Levey
Piano – Dick Shreve
Tenor Saxophone – Bob Cooper
Trombone – Frank Rosolino
Trumpet – Conte Candoli
Written-By – Dizzy Gillespie

6. Blues After Dark 7:45
Bass – Red Mitchell
Drums – Charlie Persip
Piano – Wynton Kelly
Tenor Saxophone, Written-By – Benny Golson
Trumpet – Lee Morgan

 7. Wildwood 5:52
Bass – Wilfred Middlebrooks
Drums – Charlie Persip
Piano – Wynton Kelly
Tenor Saxophone – Benny Golson, Bob Cooper
Trombone – Frank Rosolino
Trumpet – Conte Candoli, Lee Morgan
Written-By – Gigi Gryce

8. Quicksilver 3:56
Bass – Red Mitchell
Drums – Stan Levey
Piano – Dick Shreve
Tenor Saxophone – Bob Cooper
Trombone – Frank Rosolino
Trumpet – Conte Candoli
Written-By – Horace Silver

9. Bye Bye Blues 4:05
Bass – Red Mitchell
Drums – Stan Levey
Piano – Dick Shreve
Tenor Saxophone – Bob Cooper
Trombone – Frank Rosolino
Trumpet – Conte Candoli

THE ROBERT FRIPP STRING QUINTET — The Bridge Between (1993) Three Version | WV + FLAC (image+.tracks+.cue), lossless

Fusing the talents of Robert Fripp, Trey Gunn, and the California Guitar Trio, you'd be wrong to assume that The Bridge Between is a boring album of guitar aerobics for guitar enthusiasts. This is a wonderful piece of work. Its most dubious attribute is to sometimes descend into Sky (the Anglo-Australian outfit formed by John Williams, Francis Monkman etc) territory in its medieval harpsichord delivery ("Passacaglia," "Contrapunctus"). However "Kanon Power" and standouts "Bicycling to Afghanistan" and "Blockhead" are fretboard knitted excellence. Unfortunately, the latter two are separated by a five-minute downbeat -- "Blue" -- and the set is spoiled by a near-13-minute endgame "Threnody for Souls in Torment," which would be better placed elsewhere. None the less, you can always hit the stop button after "Passacaglia" or better, stick "Afghan" and "Blockhead" on repeat! Kelvin Hayes
Tracklist :
1. Kan-Non Power 4:02
 Hideyo Moriya 
2. Yamanashi Blues  2:41
 Bert Lams 
3. Hope 5:32
 John Sinks 
4. Chromatic Fantasy 1:37
 Johann Sebastian Bach 
5. Contrapunctus 5:00
 Johann Sebastian Bach 
6. Bicycling to Afghanistan 3:22
 Curt Golden 
7. Blue 5:35
 Robert Fripp / Trey Gunn 
8. Blockhead 3:19
 Paul Richards 
9. Passacaglia 6:58
 Johann Sebastian Bach 
10. Threnody for Souls in Torment 12:51
 Robert Fripp / Trey Gunn 
Credits :
Robert Fripp - Guitar, Frippertronics
Bert Lams, Hideyo Moriya - Acoustic Guitar
Paul Richards - Acoustic Guitar, Fuzz E-bow Guitar
Trey Gunn - Chapman Stick

5.6.25

LARRY CARLTON — Last Nite (1986) Two Version | APE + FLAC (image+.tracks+.cue), lossless

This live set is one of Larry Carlton's best recordings because the guitarist stretches himself. Joined by keyboardist Terry Trotter, bassist Abraham Laboriel, drummer John Robinson and percussionist Alex Acuna (and an occasional three-piece horn section), Carlton plays five- to eight-minute versions of four originals (including "The B.P. Blues"), plus Miles Davis's "So What" and "All Blues." Recorded at the Baked Potato in North Hollywood in California, Carlton is heard throughout at his very best, making one wonder why he has recorded so few albums of a similar spontaneous nature in his career. Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1     So What     7:58
2     Don't Give It Up     5:30
3     The B.P. Blues     7:50
4     All Blues     7:50
5     Last Nite     7:58
6     Emotions Wound Us So     6:17
Credits :
Guitar – Larry Carlton
Bass – Abraham Laboriel
Drums – John Robinson, Rick Marotta (tracks: B1)
Keyboards – Terry Trotter
Percussion – Alex Acuña
Saxophone – Marc Russo
Trumpet – Gary Grant, Jerry Hey 

BUD POWELL TRIO - Bouncing with Bud (1962) RM | MONOAURAL | 24 Kt Gold Plated | Original Master Recording, Ultradisc II Series | Three Version | FLAC (image+.tracks+.cue), lossless

Although Bud Powell's performance level could widely vary during the last few years of his life, this
1962 session in Copenhagen finds him in top form. Joined by promising young bassist Niels Pedersen and drummer William Schiopffe, Powell literally wails along as he plays the works of fellow boppers such as Thelonious Monk ("Straight, No Chaser" and "52nd Street Theme"), Tadd Dameron ("Hot House"), Denzil Best ("Move"), as well as his own "Bouncing With Bud." He also delves into a breezy take of Irving Berlin's "The Best Thing for You" and Coleman Hawkins' "Rifftide" (a familiar reworking of "Oh, Lady Be Good!"). Even though the music pretty much stays at a fairly brisk to fast tempo, there's no danger of listener burnout. Originally issued by Sonet, the selections on this highly recommended Storyville CD have also been issued on a number of other labels. Ken Dryden 
Tracklist :
1 Rifftide  4:10
Coleman Hawkins
2 Bouncing with Bud  5:57
Gil Fuller / Bud Powell
3 Move  4:57
Denzil Best
4 The Best Thing for You  6:00
Irving Berlin
5 Straight, No Chaser  6:40
Thelonious Monk
6 I Remember Clifford  6:07
Benny Golson
7 Hot House  5:47
Tadd Dameron
8 52nd Street Theme  2:22
Thelonious Monk
Credits :
Bass – Niels Henning Orsted Pedersen
Drums – William Schiöpffe
Piano – Bud Powell
  

DE DE LIND — Io Non So Da Dove Vengo E Non So Dove Mai Andrò. Uomo È Il Nome Che Mi Han Dato (1973) RM | Two Version | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Mention De De Lind to most aficionados of Italian progressive rock and, chances are, they will come right back at you with the band's best known claim to fame -- one of the longest LP titles ever accepted by a major label (Mercury) -- Io Non So da Dove Vengo e Son So Dove Mai Andrio, Uomo è il Nome Che Mi …. Even more impressively, most of those aficionados will then inform you that it is one of the genre's finest ever releases, and send you out in search of it, on either its original vinyl or via the 1990 Mercury CD reissue.

De De Lind formed in 1969, with a lineup of Vito Paradiso (vocals, acoustic guitar), Gilberto Trama (flute, sax, keyboards), Matteo Vitolli (guitar), Eddy Lorigiola (bass), and Ricky Rebajoli (drums). Signing to the Windsor label, they released the single "Anche se Sei Qui"/"Come si Fa?" that same year, before being scooped up by Mercury. Two singles followed over the next two years, "Mille Anni"/"Ti Devo Lasciare" in 1970, and "Signore Dove Vai"/"Torneremo Ancora" the following year. Io Non So da Dove Vengo e Son So Dove Mai Andrio, Uomo è il Nome Che Mi … was released in 1972, and proved to be the band's last stand. By the end of the year, De De Lind had vanished, with only vocalist Paradiso ever resurfacing, for a short-lived solo career during the late '80s. Dave Thompson
Tracklist :
 1. Fuga E Morte (7:21) 
2. Indietro Nel Tempo (4:18) 
3. Paura Del Niente (7:46) 
4. Smarrimento (8:00) 
5. Cimetero Di Guerra (5:20) 
6. Voglia Di Rivivere (3:35) 
7. E Poi (2:05) 
Personnel :
Vito Paradiso - Vocals, Acoustic Guitar 
Gilberto Trama - Flute, Saxophone, Keyboards 
Matteo Vitolli - Guitar, Percussion, Piano, Flute 
Eddy Lorigiola - Bass 
Ricky Rebajoli - Drums, Percussion  

INGER MARIE GUNDERSEN – Make This Moment (2006) Two Version | FLAC (image+.tracks+.cue), lossless

Anyone hearing the debut album of IMG, "Make This Moment", will realise that this is an artist belonging to the elite of this styl...