Hi there,
i've re-posted the following couple of new link as requested in relative comments.
* Eddie Costa -The House of Blue Lights
* Cal Tjader & Eddie Palmieri - Bamboleate
Sunday, October 21, 2012
Saturday, October 20, 2012
Ben Webster and Joe Zawinul . Soulmates (1963)
What initially seems like an unlikely pairing for this
session delivers on its unique pedigree with performances that do full justice
to tenor legend Ben Webster and to the then up and coming pianist Joe Zawinul.
Recorded in 1963 while the pianist was a member of the Cannonball Adderley
Sextet, the session came about as a result of Webster's and Zawinul's sharing a
New York apartment for several months. It's actually billed as Zawinul's first
session as leader and Webster's last in the U.S. before his move to Europe. The
tunes generally keep to mid-tempos, a pace that affords Webster the opportunity
to wield the gentler side of his legendary sound. His rich, nuanced tone and
magnificent phrasing are superbly in evidence. Listeners only familiar with
Zawinul's soul-jazz side with Adderley and later his pioneering synthesizer
work with Weather Report may be surprised at his eloquent playing here in a
classic style right out of Tommy Flanagan or Red Garland. The presence of Thad
Jones -- a legend in his own right -- on cornet for four tacks is a bonus. With
a rhythm section rounded out by the slightly lesser legends of drummer Philly
Joe Jones and bassist Sam Jones, alternating with Richard Davis, there isn't
one false step on this set. It may tend to the mellower side of things, but
that simply means there's more opportunity to luxuriate in Webster's peerless
sound.
Review by Jim Todd
http://www.allmusic.com/album/soulmates-mw0000674693
Sunday, October 14, 2012
Eddie Costa - The House of Blue Lights (1959)
Reviewed by Kenny Dryden
http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-house-of-blue-lights-mw0000699431
New link in comments. Any probs, please let me know. Thank you!
Monday, September 10, 2012
Sonny Clark - Dial "S" for Sonny (1957)
Dial "S" for Sonny, Sonny Clark's first session
for Blue Note Records and his first session as a leader, is a terrific set of
laidback bop, highlighted by Clark's liquid, swinging solos. Clark leads a
first-rate group -- Art Farmer (trumpet), Curtis Fuller (trombone), Hank Mobley
(tenor sax), Wilbur Ware (bass), Louis Hayes (drums) -- through four originals
and two standards, balancing the selections between swinging bop and reflective
ballads. There are traces of Bud Powell in Clark's style, but he's beginning to
come into his own, developing a style that's alternately edgy and charmingly
relaxed. Mobley, Farmer and Fuller have their moments, but Clark steals the
show in this set of fine, straight-ahead bop.
by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
http://www.allmusic.com/album/dial-quot-s-quot-for-sonny-mw0000267905
Saturday, August 11, 2012
Dave Pike - Manhattan Latin: The Sensuous Rhythms of Spanish Harlem (1964)
Manhattan Latin captures Dave Pike in flux between the
straight-ahead approach of his earlier sessions and the psychedelic pop-jazz of
his efforts for MPS: a playful yet methodical immersion into pure, sunkissed
groove, its artful assimilation of global rhythms and textures anticipates the
direction of Pike's most memorable work. Recorded with an impressive lineup
including flautist Hubert Laws, drummer Willie Bobo and then-unknown pianist
Chick Corea, the album largely eschews familiar Latin standards in favor of
Pike originals. What's impressive is that the end result seems completely
organic, living up to the album's title in terms of both sophistication and
flavor. Phenomenal cover, too.
By Jason Ankenyhttp://www.allmusic.com/album/manhattan-latin-mw0000738396
Labels:
Attila Zoller,
Cachao,
Carlos Patato Valdes,
Chick Corea,
Dave Burns,
Dave Pike,
Don Friedman,
Hubert Laws,
Jack Six,
Jazz,
Joseph Grimaldi,
Ray Copeland,
Robert Thomas Jr.,
Willie Bobo
Sunday, July 22, 2012
Bill Smith Quartet - Folk Jazz (1961)
A record that could only have been made in the late '50s, 1959's Folk Jazz is a meeting of the two great collegiate crazes of the period, post-bebop modern jazz and traditional folk music. Clarinetist Bill Smith and a low-key piano-less trio ? Jim Hall on guitar, Monty Budwig on bass and the great Shelly Manne on drums ? take 10 songs from the folk tradition, strip them down to the bare essentials of melody and chord progressions and turn them into a Kind of Blue-like experiment in cool-toned modal jazz. Familiar standards like "Black Is the Color of My True Love's Hair" (which opens with an extended unaccompanied solo by Smith that's a marvel of economy) are presented in entirely new and fresh settings. Perhaps the best of the lot is an extended meditation on the spiritual "Go Down Moses" that turns the song from a gospel shout to an intimate whisper. The 2003 CD reissue adds two tracks, alternate takes of "Reuben, Reuben" and "Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen."
By Stewart Mason
http://www.allmusic.com/album/folk-jazz-mw0000027934
Monday, July 9, 2012
Cal Tjader & Eddie Palmieri - Bamboleate (1967)
The second album pairing Palmieri
and Tjader, Bamboleate moves beyond El Sonido Nuevo into the respective
territories of each artist. "Bamboleate" is the Latin cooker ones
expects from Palmieri but did not find on the more subdued El Sonido Nuevo.
"Semejanza" is an equally affecting jazz lilt led by Tjader. Framed
by a melody that could have come straight off the Vince Guaraldi Trio's Charlie
Brown Christmas album, it has an equally indelible, locomotive rhythm. Tjader's
samba, "Samba De Los Suenho," is a welcome departure from the
relative rigidity of El Sonido Nuevo. Also vital are the vocal tracks
(Palmieri's); the blatant channel-switching in "Guajira Candela" is
an abuse of stereo separation, however. (Use a second voice or instrument for
that.) "Pancho's Seis Por Ocho" is typical of the deep, mid-tempo,
Afro rhythm of Bamboleate and El Sonido Nuevo. Trombonist Mark Weinstein
contributes the closing "Ven Y Recibelo (Come an' Get It)," a
mod/soul cooker on a par with the best of Verve all-stars Tjader, Ogerman,
Winding, and Schifrin. Finally, the album was reissued in 1977 as Tico
LPS-88806 and distributed by Fania; the reissue at least features illustrations
of Tjader and Palmieri by Jose Vargas.
Review - Tony Wilds
http://www.allmusic.com/album/bambol%C3%A9ate-mw0000273328
Monday, May 14, 2012
Art Farmer & Benny Golson - Meet the Jazztet (1960)
Although this CD has the same
program as the original LP, it gets the highest rating because it is a hard bop
classic. Not only does it include superior solos from trumpeter Art Farmer,
trombonist Curtis Fuller, tenor saxophonist Benny Golson, and pianist McCoy
Tyner (who was making his recording debut) along with fine backup from bassist
Addison Farmer and drummer Lex Humphries, but it features the writing of
Golson. Highlights include the original version of "Killer Joe" along
with early renditions of "I Remember Clifford" and "Blues
March." This was Fuller and Tyner's only recording with the original
Jazztet, and all ten selections (which also include "Serenata,"
"It Ain't Necessarily So," "It's All Right With Me," and
"Easy Living") are quite memorable.
Scott Yanow
http://www.allmusic.com/album/meet-the-jazztet-r138558
1. Serenata
2. It Ain't Necessarely So
3, Avalon
4. I Remember Clifford
5. Blues March
6. It's All Right With Me
7. Park Avenue Petite
8. Mox Nix
9. Easy Living
10. Killer Joe
Art Farmer (tp), Benny Golson (ts), Curtis Fuller (tb), McCoy Tyner (p),
Addison Farmer (b), Lex Humphries (d)
Sunday, May 6, 2012
This Here Is Bobby Timmons - Bobby Timmons Trio (1960)
1. This Here
2. Moanin'
3. Lush Life
4. The Party's Over
5. Prelude to A Kiss
6. Dat Dare
7. My Funny Valentine
8. Come Rain Or Come Shine
9. Joy Ride
Bobby Timmons (p), Sam Jones (b) Jimmy Cobb (d)
Saturday, March 24, 2012
Bennie Green Mosaic Select Complete Blue Note Recordings 1958 - 1962
Trombonist Bennie Green's Blue Note albums were
almost completely overlooked until this Mosaic Select compilation appeared in
2003. The first session, originally issued as Back on the Scene, features
Charlie Rouse joining Green in the front line. Green's up-tempo "Bennie
Plays the Blues" is the best blowing vehicle, while he and Rouse both
contribute lyrical solos in Melba Liston's "Melba's Mood." Pianist
Gildo Mahones wrote three of the six tracks recorded for Walkin' & Talkin',
with Eddy Williams taking Rouse's place. The overall session isn't up to
Green's Blue Note debut, but his snappy blues "Walkin' and Talkin'"
contains some of his hottest playing within this boxed set. Williams is also on
hand for the ten selections first released in Japan as The 45 Sessions with
pianist Sonny Clark, bassist Paul Chambers, and drummer Jerry Segal. The solos
are consistently hot and the quintet never wraps things in a perfunctory manner
as one would expect with recordings made for jukeboxes. All of the
instrumentals rate high praise, especially the loping "On the Street Where
You Live" and the leader's "Ain't Nothin' But the Blues." The
addition of singer Babs Gonzales on the last three cuts mar some otherwise
excellent performances. Tenor saxophonists Gene Ammons and Billy Root are on
hand for the session which produced Soul Stirrin'. While the material on this
date is uneven, Green's interpretation of "That's All" is very
satisfying. Unfortunately, Gonzales appears for two more numbers. The last five
songs come from a date led by tenor saxophonist Ike Quebec (eventually issued
as Congo Lament), adding Stanley Turrentine, Milt Hinton, and Art Blakey to
join Green and Clark. Green's exotic "Congo Lament" and Turrentine's
upbeat "Cue's Pill" are impressive.
Review: Ken Dryden
http://www.allmusic.com/album/mosaic-select-bennie-green-r641454
Review: Ken Dryden
http://www.allmusic.com/album/mosaic-select-bennie-green-r641454
Disc One
1. I Love You
(A) 6:02 (Cole Porter)
2. Melba’s
Mood (A) 5:33 (Melba Liston)
3. Just
Friends (A) 6:59 (S. Lewis-J. Klenner)
4. You’re Mine
You (A) 5:15 (J. Green-E. Heyman)
5. Bennie
Plays The Blues (A) 8:24 (Bennie Green)
6. Green
Street (A) 5:08 (Melba Liston)
7. The Shouter
(D) 4:57 (Gildo Mahones)
8. Green
Leaves (D) 5:43 (Gildo Mahones)
9. This Love
Of Mine (D) 6:45
(Parker-Sanicola-Sinatra)
10. Walkin’
And Talkin’ (D) 8:57 (Bennie Green)
11. All I Do
Is Dream Of You (D) 5:32 (A. Freed-N.H. Brown)
12. Hoppin’
Johns (D) 5:29 (Gildo Mahones)
Disc Two
1. It’s Groovy
(C) 3:41 (unknown)
2. On The
Street Where You Live (C) 5:50 (A.
Lerner-F. Loewe)
3. Can’t We Be
Friends (C) 5:32 (P.James-K.Swift)
4. Ain’t
Nothin’ But The Blues (C) 5:13 (Bennie
Green)
5. Bye Bye
Blackbird (C) 5:24 (R. Henderson-M.
Dixon)
6. Minor
Revelation (C) 5:17 (Harold Ousley)
7. Why Do I
Love You (C) 5:58 (J. Kern-O.
Hammerstein)
8. Encore
(stereo LP take) (C) 4:16 (Babs
Gonzales)
9. Encore
(mono 45 take) (C) 4:29 (Babs Gonzales)
10. Soul
Stirrin' (mono take) (B) 6:44 (Babs
Gonzales)
Disc Three
1. Soul
Stirrin’ (B) 6:49 (Babs Gonzales)
2. We Wanna
Cook (B) 6:38 (Bennie Green)
3. That’s All
(B) 6:25 (B. Haymes-A. Brandt)
4. Lullaby Of
The Doomed (B) 6:00 (Babs Gonzales)
5. B.G. Mambo
(B) 8:15 (Bennie Green)
6. Black Pearl
(B) 5:45 (Billy Graham)
7. See See
Rider (E) 8:59 (Ma Rainey)
8. Congo
Lament (E) 6:50 (Bennie Green)
9. Que's Pill
(E) 5:37 (Stanley Turrrentine)
10. B.G.'s
Groove Two (E) 6:12 (Bennie Green)
11. I. Q.
Shuffle (E) 9:43 (Ike Quebec)
Bennie Green, Charlie Rouse, Gildo Mahones, Eddie Williams, Sonny Clark, Paul Chambers, Jerry Segal, Babs Gonzales, Gene Ammons, Billy Root, Ike Quebec, Stanley Turrentine, Milt Hinton, Art Blakey.
Labels:
Art Blakey,
Babs Gonzales,
Bennie Green,
Billy Root,
Charlie Rouse,
Eddie Williams,
Gene Ammons,
Gildo Mahones,
Ike Quebec,
Jazz,
Jerry Segal,
Milt Hinton,
Paul Chambers,
Sonny Clark,
Stanley Turrentine
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