Wednesday, July 25, 2012

The Luca Ellis Trio live @ The Beverly Hills Hotel, July 26, from 9pm to midnight

As you walk into the newly renovated world famous Beverly Hills Hotel you can't help but feel the presence of its One Hundred Year History. Normally you would turn right and walk into the "Polo Lounge". That's what you do at the BH Hotel. Instead you turn left and find yourself walking up to Bar Nineteen 12.

Named after the year the hotel opened exactly one hundred years ago. As you walk in, you hear something familiar. Something almost as old as the hotel itself. "The Great American Song Book" being sung in... a classic style and tone.

Luca Ellis and his trio consist of some of the finest musicians SoCal has to offer. Paul McDonald on piano, Nick Klingenberg on bass and Steve Pemberton on drums. Come celebrate the Beverly Hills Hotel's 100th Anniversary. No cover, no drink minimum. Discounted Valet parking with validation.

Bar Nineteen 12 @ The Beverly Hills Hotel
9641 Sunset Boulevard
Beverly Hills, CA
Make reservations online at: http://www.beverlyhillshotel.com/bar-nineteen12
Or call 310.273.1912

Meditation in CA, tomorrow, with Rebekah Parr

This Thursday, July 26th, at 7pm, Rebekah Parr invites you to "Meditation with Reiki" in Burbank.
"During this meditation we will connect with the Higher Self and Spirit Guides to ask what part of us needs healing most," Rebekah explains. "As a Karuna Reiki© Master, I will hold space for you to experience the healing energy of Reiki in the Karuna way, the way of Compassion."

Practitioners and beginners welcome! $15
Feather & Gourd
3506 1/2 Magnolia Blvd
Burbank, CA
For more info, please visit www.angelsandunicorns.org

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

More "unofficial" CTI titles released in Europe, including an odd Bob James 12" single

Among the many "unofficial" CTI titles being released in Europe this Summer is this odd 12" single by Bob James. Under the fake catalog number CTI 6148, it includes two songs that originally appeared in different CTI albums, but are no longer part of the CTI catalog; in fact, both tracks are now owned by James himself and belong to his Tappan Zee label.

"Nautilus" was part of James' CTI debut, "One," while the famous (and much-sampled) rendition of Paul Simon's "Take Me To The Mardi Gras" comes from Bob James' "Two." Both tracks were recorded at Van Gelder Studios by the legendary engineer Rudy Van Gelder, an essential part of the CTI history.

"Nautilus" was cut in February 1974 with Bob James on keyboards (Yamaha YC30 organ and Fender Rhodes electric piano), Gary King on electric bass, Idris Muhammad on drums, Ralph MacDonald on percussion, and Richie Resnicoff on electric guitar, plus a large string section led by the violin virtuoso concertmaster Harry Lookofsky.

"We were working on a theme, I started using a particular stop on the Yamaha organ which sounded very good, like some underwater effect," Bob James recalled. "Creed Taylor thought it might suggest a cavern, with stalacties, but I felt it was more like a submarine journey."

"Mardi Gras," recorded on January 15, 1975, features Bob James (Fender Rhodes with a lot of distortion obtained through the use of delay and flanger), Eric Gale (playing both electric bass AND rhythm guitar!), Andrew Smith (drums), Arthur Jenkins & Ralph MacDonald (percussion), Eddie Daniels (clarinet) and Tony Studd (trombone), plus strings. One more essential item to CTI collectors.

...and Gerry Mulligan/Chet Baker's historic reunion concert comes out on CD in Europe

A new CD issue of "Gerry Mulligan/Chet Baker: Carnegie Hall Concert" just came out in Europe, on papersleeve format. The front cover (as shown above) is a little different from all previous digital issues, since it mentions "Volume 1" and "Volume 2," and also includes the names of the musicians who appeared in each of the original vinyls.

The back cover brings the titles of the eight tracks, as well as that info "Distributed by Motown Record Corp." used in the CTI jackets after the label entered a distribution agreement with Motown in 1974. There's no liner cover, though, which means that Doug Ramsey's text was deleted.

For those not familiar to this great CTI album, that November 24, 1974 night at Carnegie Hall was more than a concert; it became a media event, celebrating the first Mulligan/Baker reunion since their heyday in the 50s, when they became the top act of the so-called West Coast Jazz.

The tracklist includes "Line For Lyons," "(Song) For An Unfinished Woman," "My Funny Valentine," (sung by Chet Baker, obviously), Mulligan's haunting ballad "Song For Strayhorn," "It's Sandy At The Beach," Bernie Miller's "Bernie's Tune," the terrific "-4 Pacific," and Harry Warren's lovely standard "There Will Never Be Another You," another feature for Chet Baker's unmistakable vocal style.

According to CTI historian Doug Payne, "the above titles come from a concert featuring Baker, Mulligan, Stan Getz and each of their groups individually. Baker's group included Bob James on piano, Ron Carter on bass, Harvey Mason on drums, and Ed Byrne on trombone. Mulligan used the same rhythm section, adding vibist Dave Samuels, guitarist John Scofield and sometimes Baker. Getz - who is not present on the issued titles but whose tenor sax is clearly visible on the cover photo (and confirmed by Gerry Mulligan) - was joined by his own group, highlighted by drummer Buddy Rich and four female singers during one number."

Let's hope that, someday/somehow, the "lost" Getz tracks will also see the light of the day. Something possible by now, since Getz was signed to Columbia (now Sony Music) at the time of the concert, and the label also became owner of all the CTI catalog from the 70s.

The "Carnegie Hall Concert" Gold issue

However, the most sought-after digital issue ever of "Carnegie Hall Concert" remains the Gold CD released back in 1995 by Sony. For all the previous issues, the original 2-track master tapes (mixed by Rudy Van Gelder for the first vinyl LP in 1975) had been used. But, for the 24-karat Gold CD, with 4-color picture label, the NY-based French Didier Deutsch decided to request engineer Mark Wilder to remix everything at Sony Music Studios in New York.

"We had access to the multi-track tapes, which enabled us to remix the selections properly and make them flow naturally with appropriate audience response," says Didier. He tried to recreate the concert more or less as it happened (without Stan Getz' portion, of course), changing the track sequence to restore the original setlist, and adding a previously unreleased trackk: "Margarine," composed by Hal Galper (best known for his work as Phil Woods' pianist).

Two other classic CTI albums - George Benson's "White Rabbit" and Paul Desmond's "Pure Desmond" - also came out on Gold CDs remastered with 20-bit digital SBM (Super Bit Mapping) technology. All, unfortunately, currently out-of-print.

Friday, July 20, 2012

Tonight, in Downtown LA, George Kahn's The Jazz & Blues Revue feat. Gina Saputo, Courtney Lemmon & Dianne Wright

Join us tonight, July 20th for the fabulous sounds of the Jazz & Blues Revue featuring George Kahn, Courtney Lemmon, Gina Saputo, and Founder’s own, Dianne Wright. The J & B Revue is accompanied by a fantastic line up of musicians; Lyman Medeiros (bass), M. B. Gordy (drums), Chuck Manning (sax) and Mike Fortunato (trumpet).

Friday Night Jazz is Founder’s 3rd Friday of the month jazz experience that you won’t want to miss. 3281 West Sixth Street is the street address. Entry to the event is through the New Hampshire parking garage… follow the signs downstairs to Hornaday Hall, affectionately called Dr. Bill’s Club on Jazz Night. There is a $10 donation collected at the door, $15 dollars if you’d like to have a wonderful dinner included with your admission.

The music starts promptly at 7:30pm and it will have you headed home (or wherever the jazz music takes you) by 9:30pm. So, come on out of an evening of excellent, high quality music like you’ll find nowhere else in Los Angeles, especially for the price. The best secret we’re hoping is no longer kept because we’re expecting you to tell the world. Friday, July 20th at Founder’s. 213 388-9733 ex 101.

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Maria Rivas - Thursdays for Jazz @ Kitchen 305

Tonight, Kitchen 305 Presents "Thursdays For Jazz" @ Newport Beachside Resort (16701 Collins Ave, North Miami Beach, FL)! Live Performance by Maria Rivas & her band with a unique blend of American jazz and latin music. From 7:30pm to 10pm.

Reward your good taste & prepare for the weekend with great jazz, wine, food & cocktails. Many thanks to my dear friends Hannah Becker, Chasey Tamelin,Francine Lorenzo & Saul Rodriguez for the invitation. And you may attend every Thursday because Maria's show is never the same! U go, girl! RSVP: (305) 749-2110

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Obama - "Gray Hairs"



"Dear Arnaldo:

You are currently living and registered as a lawful permanent U.S. resident in California's 30th Congressional District
When I decided to run for president, I had significantly fewer gray hairs than I do today.
Michelle says I've earned them, which is the nicest possible way to say I'm getting older.
In fact, I'm turning 51 in a couple weeks, and to celebrate I'm heading home to Chicago for a get-together at my house.

I'd love for you to be one of my guests

Donate $3 or whatever you can to support the campaign, and you'll be automatically entered to join me at home in Chicago -- flight and hotel covered for you and a guest of your choice.

Chicago is where I fell in love with my wife and where our daughters were born. It's where decades ago I first started as a community organizer and where, six years ago, I first talked with Michelle about the possibility of running for president.
I'm looking forward to spending a few hours celebrating there before it's all systems go for the final weeks of the election.
Should be fun.
Thanks for all your support so far. If you can, enter today for a chance to join me and some friends at my house in Chicago, and I can thank you in person:
https://donate.barackobama.com/My-Birthday
Hope to see you soon,
Barack Obama"
No purchase, payment, or contribution necessary to enter or win. Contributing will not improve chances of winning. Void where prohibited. Entries must be received by July 26th, 2012. You may enter by contributing to Obama for America here or click here to enter without contributing. Two (2) winners will each receive the following prize package: round-trip tickets for winner and a guest from within the fifty U.S. States, DC, or Puerto Rico to a destination to be determined by Sponsor; hotel accommodations; and tickets for winner and a guest to an event with President Obama on a date, at a venue and for a duration to be determined by Sponsor (approximate retail value of all prizes $3,200). Odds of winning depend on number of entries received and timing of entries received. Promotion open only to U.S. citizens, or lawful permanent U.S. residents who are legal residents of 50 United States, District of Columbia and Puerto Rico and 18 or older (or age of majority under applicable law). Promotion subject to Official Rules and additional restrictions on eligibility. Sponsor: Obama for America, 130 E. Randolph St., Chicago, IL 60601.


Contributions or gifts to Obama for America are not tax deductible.

National Endowment for the Arts Announces 2013 NEA Jazz Masters

Dizzy Gillespie. Count Basie. Ella Fitzgerald. Herbie Hancock. Names of the greatest purveyors of America's homegrown art form, jazz -- and all NEA Jazz Masters. Today, the National Endowment for the Arts adds four new names to the list with the announcement of the 2013 NEA Jazz Masters. Like the 124 honorees who came before them, these four individuals are recognized for their lifetime achievements and significant contributions to the development and performance of jazz. They will each receive a one-time award of $25,000.
The 2013 NEA Jazz Masters are:
Mose Allison (pictured above), pianist, vocalist, composer
Born in Tippo, Mississippi, currently lives in Long Island, New York
Lou Donaldson, saxophonist
Born in Badin, North Carolina, currently lives in New York, New York
*Lorraine Gordon, jazz club owner
Born in Newark, New Jersey, currently lives in New York, New York
Eddie Palmieri, pianist, bandleader, arranger, composer
Born in New York, New York, currently lives in Las Vegas, Nevada
* Lorraine Gordon is the recipient of the 2013 A.B. Spellman NEA Jazz Masters Award for Jazz Advocacy, which is bestowed upon an individual who has contributed significantly to the appreciation, knowledge, and advancement of the art form of jazz.
Full profiles of the 2013 NEA Jazz Masters are available on the NEA's website.
NEA Chairman Rocco Landesman said, "Each of the 2013 NEA Jazz Masters has made an indelible mark on jazz as we know it today. Mose Allison's fusion of jazz and blues has created a new sound uniquely his own, influencing scores of musicians and songwriters after him. Lou Donaldson has been a major force not just as a musician but also as a scout for new talent for the Blue Note label. Eddie Palmieri successfully combines the sounds of his Puerto Rican heritage with the jazz music he grew up with as a first-generation American. And Lorraine Gordon continues to provide a haven for jazz musicians to present their art at the Village Vanguard. I look forward to celebrating their achievements and contributions to this important American art form."

Each member of the 2013 NEA Jazz Masters class is a distinguished artist whose significant lifetime contributions have helped to enrich jazz and further the growth of the art form:

•Mose Allison is not just a superior talent as an instrumentalist and singer, but also as a songwriter. Adept in both the blues and jazz, he defies categorization and has been a major influence on musicians, regardless of genre, for more than 50 years.
•Lou Donaldson's distinctive blues-drenched alto saxophone has been a bopping force in jazz for more than six decades. His early work with trumpeter Clifford Brown is considered one of the first forays into hard bop, and his recordings with organist and NEA Jazz Master Jimmy Smith led to the groove-filled jazz of the 1960s and '70s.

•A jazz haven for more than 55 years, the Village Vanguard is the longest-running jazz club in New York City and is still going strong under the ownership of Lorraine Gordon. Since 1957, when NEA Jazz Master Sonny Rollins recorded one of the first recording sessions at the club, the Vanguard has been the place to record a live jazz album, with its exceptional acoustics and intimate space.
•Known as one of the finest Latin jazz pianists of the past 50 years, Eddie Palmieri is also known as a bandleader of both salsa and Latin jazz orchestras. His playing skillfully fuses the rhythm of Puerto Rico with the melody and complexity of his jazz influences: Thelonious Monk and NEA Jazz Masters Herbie Hancock and McCoy Tyner.

The NEA will again partner with Jazz at Lincoln Center to produce an awards ceremony and concert in honor of the 2013 NEA Jazz Masters, that will be webcast live on Monday, January 14, 2013 on arts.gov and jalc.org/neajazzmasters. The ceremony will also be simulcast on SiriusXM Satellite Radio.
*********
About NEA Jazz Masters
Each year since 1982, the Arts Endowment has conferred the NEA Jazz Masters Award to living legends who have made major contributions to jazz. With this new class, 128 awards have been given to great figures of jazz in America, including Count Basie, George Benson, Art Blakey, Dave Brubeck, Betty Carter, Ornette Coleman, Miles Davis, Roy Eldridge, Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie, Lionel Hampton, Herbie Hancock, Elvin Jones, John Levy, Abbey Lincoln, Max Roach, Sonny Rollins, Cecil Taylor, Sarah Vaughan, Nancy Wilson, and Teddy Wilson.
NEA Jazz Masters are selected from nominations submitted by the public and receive a one-time fellowship award of $25,000, are honored at an awards ceremony, and may participate in NEA-sponsored promotional, performance, and educational activities. 173 nominations were considered for the 2013 NEA Jazz Masters. Only living musicians or jazz advocates may be nominated for the NEA Jazz Masters honor.
Nominations are currently being accepted for the 2014 NEA Jazz Masters. Visit the NEA's website to submit a nomination online. Nominations must be received by October 1, 2012.
The NEA has created numerous resources as part of the NEA Jazz Masters program, including:
•Video tributes, brief video tributes to recent NEA Jazz Masters' lives and careers in jazz,
•Jazz Moments, 222 short audio pieces featuring musical excerpts and short interviews with NEA Jazz Masters,
•Podcasts with NEA Jazz Masters and other jazz figures about the history and current state of jazz,
•In-depth interviews with more than 45 NEA Jazz Masters,
•NEA Jazz in the Schools, a free, five unit, online curriculum created in partnership with Jazz at Lincoln Center that explores jazz as an indigenous American art form and a means to understand American history,
•NEA Jazz Masters Live grants to support performance and educational activities featuring NEA Jazz Masters, administered by Art Midwest.

In addition, the NEA supports the Smithsonian Jazz Oral History Program, an effort to document the lives and careers of NEA Jazz Masters. In addition to transcriptions of the hours-long interviews, the website also includes audio clips with interview excerpts of the artists' early years; their first introduction to music and jazz; as well as their unique personal experiences in world of jazz.
The National Endowment for the Arts was established by Congress in 1965 as an independent agency of the federal government. To date, the NEA has awarded more than $4 billion to support artistic excellence, creativity, and innovation for the benefit of individuals and communities. The NEA extends its work through partnerships with state arts agencies, local leaders, other federal agencies, and the philanthropic sector. To join the discussion on how art works, visit the NEA at arts.gov.
Jazz at Lincoln Center is dedicated to inspiring and growing audiences for jazz. With the world-renowned Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra and a comprehensive array of guest artists, Jazz at Lincoln Center advances a unique vision for the continued development of the art of jazz by producing a year-round schedule of performance, education, and broadcast events for audiences of all ages. Under the leadership of Artistic Director Wynton Marsalis and Chairman Robert J. Appel, Jazz at Lincoln Center produces thousands of events each season in its home in New York City, Frederick P. Rose Hall, and around the world.

The Clare Fischer legacy @ Vitello's

The Clare Fischer Voices and Latin Jazz Group Perform at Vitello's, July 19th!

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Vocal CD Reissue of the Month - "Urszula Dudziak: Urszula"

Vocal CD Reissue of the Month
Urszula Dudziak: "Urszula" (Arista) 1975

Produced & Arranged by Michal Urbaniak
Executive Producer: Steve Backer
Engineering: Gene Paul & Les Paul, Jr. @ Dick Charles Studios, NYC, NY
Mastered by George Piros @ Atlantic Studios
Photos: Benno Friedmann
Cover Design: Nancy Greenberg
Art Direction: Bob Heimall

Featuring: Urszula Dudziak (vocals, percussion, synths), Harold Ivory Williams (Wurlitzer electric piano, Moog synthesizer, additional keyboards), Basil Fearrington (electric bass), Gerald Brown (drums), Joe Caro & Reggie Lucas (electric guitars), Mickal Urbaniak (lyricon)

The debut U.S. solo album by Polish jazz vocalist Urszula Dudziak, who was recording innovative albums for Muza/Polskie Nagarnia (like their live masterpiece "Constellation"), with his husband Mickal (aka Michal) Urbaniak, since their Warsaw days. On "Urszula," also her debut on the then-recently formed Arista Records founded by music biz shark Clive Davis after he left Columbia, the avant-garde singer established her name in the contemporary jazz scene. Urbaniak, a virtuoso violinist, played only lyricon, but arranged and produced the massive sessions that yielded a radio hit ("Papaya") and such funk-fusion gems as the "Mosquito" suite, "Zawinul," "Sno King," "Funky Rings" and "Butterfly" (an Urbaniak original, not the famous Herbie Hancock tune). Urszula is heard doing astonishingly sensual wordless vocals most of the time (through the us eof synthesizers and echoplex, in a similar way to Flora Purim's work at the time), actually singing (English) lyrics only on her own "Just The Way You Are," not to be mistaken with the Billy Joel pop hit.

The ferocious band on "Urszula" features guitarists Joe Caro and Reggie Lucas, bassist Basil Fearrington (heard on Jean-Luc Ponty's classic "Aurora"), drummer Gerry Brown (later a member of Chick Corea's Return To Forever") and keyboardist Harold Williams on the Wurlitzer electric piano (no Rhodes), something that helped to shape the raw sonority of the project. Hope her follow-up Arista album, "Midnight Rain," which features Steve Gadd and Dom Um Romao in superb renditions of "Lover," "Misty," "Night in Tunisia" and "Bluesette," will be reissued in a near future.  

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Instrumental CD Reissue of the Month - "Freddie Hubbard: Gleam"

Instrumental CD Reissue of the Month
Freddie Hubbard: "Gleam" (Sony/Wounded Bird) 1975

Rating:
***** (musical performance)
***** (recording quality)
**** (mixing & digital remastering)

Featuring: Freddie Hubbard (trumpet & flugelhorn), George Cables (Fender Rhodes), Henry Franklin (electric bass), Carl Burnett (drums), Buck Clark (congas & percussion) and Carl Randall, Jr. (flute & tenor sax)

Recorded live on March 17, 1975 @ Yubin Chokin Hall, Tokyo, Japan
Directed by Keiichi Nakamura
Engineer: Tomoo Suzuki
Cover Photo: Kenji Wakasugi
Liner Photo: Aiko Ninbari
Art Direction: Masaru Kawahara

The first CD reissue ever of Freddie Hubbard's rarest album, "Gleam," previously released only once, in 1975, and only in Japan as a 2-LP set. Includes a dreamy flugel-Rhodes duo on The Stylistics' "Betcha By Golly Wow" (previously recorded for the CTI album "Polar AC"), a ferocious take on "Spirits of Trane" (a tribute to John Coltrane originally available on "Keep Your Soul Together," another CTI session), plus 5 inspired renditions of songs from his Columbia days: the funkyfied "Put It In The Pocket" (without the vocals heard on the studio version), the spaced-out "Ebony Moondreams," the Afro-tinged "Kuntu," David Nichtern's "Midnight at The Oasis" turned into a hit by Maria Muldaur, and Stevie Wonder's glorious "Too High."

DVD of the Month - "Sounds and Silence"


DVD of the Month
"Sounds and Silence" (ECM/Good Movies!/Arsenal) 2012

Directed by Peter Gruyer & Norbert Wiedmer
Featuring: Manfred Eicher, Arvo Pärt, Eleni Karaindrou, Jan Garbarek, Dino Saluzzi, Anja Lechner, Anouar Brahem, Gianluigi Trovesi, Marilyn Mazur, Nik Bärtsch & Kim Kashkashian
Bonus Material: Manu Katché ("Playground" trailer)
NTSC, 87 minutes, Dolby Digital 5.1 and 2.0

A journey through Manfred Eicher's concept through the making-of scenes of some recent productions for his prestigious ECM label.

R.I.P.: José Roberto Bertrami

Brazil's top keyboardist ever. Period.

Vocal CD of the Month - "Rebecca Sullivan: This Way, This Time"

Vocal CD of the Month
Rebecca Sullivan & Mike Allemana: "This Way, This Time" (Rhyme or Reason) 2012

Produced by Geof Bradfield
Recorded & Mixed by Vijay Tellis-Nayak @ Transient Sound
Mastered by Brian Scwab
Front & Liner Photos: Maura Sullivan
Back Cover Photo: Ingrid Karolewski
Artwork: Gina Stewart

90% of new records I receive from female jazz singers are extremely predictable in terms of repertoire, arrangements and product. The same old GAS standards done with minimal or no creativity at all. Most of these singers want to be the next Diana Krall, when not even Krall herself seems comfortable in keeping her sonic aesthetics anymore. Anyway, what matters is the pleasure I feel when listening to someone who wants to break the mold. And takes chances!

Rebecca Sullivan does it very well on her debut CD, "This Way, This Time," so far one of the best surprises of the year. Her choice of repertoire is self-consciously unconventional. She goes beyond jazz, mixing affecting interpretations of infrequently heard gems by Johnny Mandel (“The Shining Sea”), Friedrich Hollaender (“Strange Enchantment”), and Hoagy Carmichael (“Ivy”) with boldly personal versions of songs by the Beach Boys (“Wouldn’t It Be Nice”), Nick Drake (“Blossom Friend”), and St. Vincent (“Human Racing”). She also contributes two originals ("Some Kind of Love" and the title track, co-written with Allemana), and closes the album with Johnny Mandel/Dave Frishberg’s poignant “You Are There.” That closing track, alone, would be enough to make Rebecca's work worthy of attention.
Gifted with a pure tone, she phrases and ennunciates better than most singers around these days. Sullivan knows how to tell a story: concisely & succintly. Chicago guitarist Mike Allemana is the perfect partner, not merely a backing musician. He doesn't only supports Sullivan; he challenges and stimulates her to musical adventures that many veteran singers (Rebecca, although incredibly mature, has only a 6-year professional career) would prefer to avoid. Not to mention some great guitar solos, always intriguing but never over-performed.

With her girlish sophistication, gleaming intelligence, and three-octave range, the Pennsylvania native is at 29 already a full-blown original. Sullivan came into her own as a jazz vocalist in Chicago, where she’s been based since 2006 and where she’s frequently gigged with Mike Allemana. Their compelling musical chemistry is the main event on "This Way, This Time," a fantastic duo session released on Rhyme or Reason Records last month.

“Rebecca has a lovely, liquid instrument, often evocative of Billie Holiday yet completely personal and unpretentious,” says saxophonist Geof Bradfield, who produced the album. “Her delivery is so intimate, and it really works seamlessly with Mike’s inspired colors and textures.”
“Rebecca really gets inside the lyric,” says Allemana. “Unlike many young singers, she never manipulates the melody or takes it out of context. She knows the composer wrote it that way for a reason.”

A native of York, Pennsylvania, Rebecca Sullivan grew up with several music traditions—singing in her family’s a cappella gospel group, studying classical piano (and winning competitions), steeping herself in American standards from the 1940s and ’50s. As a student at Portland’s Reed College, she performed folk music on open-mic nights, accompanying herself on guitar. But her first exposure to jazz came in the unlikely place of St. Petersburg, Russia, where in 2004 she spent a semester abroad studying Russian literature. There she had the opportunity to hear live jazz: “I had no idea songs could sound like that,” she recalls of that epiphany.

While in Russia, Sullivan put in serious listening time to recordings by Billie Holiday, Dinah Washington, and Carmen McRae, and once she returned home she was already on her way to pursuing a career as a jazz vocalist. She relocated to Chicago in 2006 to study at the Bloom School of Jazz, and also began attending tenor saxophone legend Von Freeman’s weekly jam session at the New Apartment Lounge. She made a deep impression on Mike Allemana, Freeman’s longtime guitarist. “It’s so refreshing to find a young singer who knows these beautiful old songs,” he says.

Long before Sullivan quit her day job (at the University of Chicago Press) to devote herself full-time to singing. “When I worked up the nerve to ask Mike if he would do a gig with me,” she says, “I really felt like I was in over my head. But he said yes, it worked pretty well, and we ended up doing more gigs and eventually recording the album together.”

Come fall, Sullivan, now 29, will be starting the next chapter in her musical journey in Boston, where she plans to pursue a master’s degree at the New England Conservatory. “I’ll be studying with Dominique Eade, and then I’ll have a separate improvisation teacher,” she says. “I decided to go there because I want to be immersed in the intense musical learning environment they offer, as well as to improve as a musician and songwriter. Also, some great jazz musicians whom I really admire studied at NEC: Roberta Gambarini, Luciana Souza, Bill McHenry. And I can’t wait to be back on the East Coast!”

Rebecca Sullivan performed with Mike Allemana at a CD release show on Sunday 6/24, 8:00 pm, at Szold Hall (Old Town School of Folk Music), in Chicago.

Instrumental CD of the Month - "Jurgen Friedrich: Monosuite"


Instrumental CD of the Month
Jürgen Friedrich: "Monosuite for String Orchestra and Improvisers" (Pirouet) 2012

Rating: ***** (musical performance & sonic quality)

Produced by Jurgen Friedrich & Jason Seizer
Recorded June 22, 23 & 24, 2011 by Christian Heck, Philipp Treiber & David Menke @ Studio Stolberger Strasse, Köln, Germany
Mixed March 13 & 14, 2012 by Markus Bornh @ Kleine Audiowelt, Sandhausen, Germany
Mastered by Christoph Stickel @ MSM-Studios, Munich, Germany
Cover Design & Cover Photo: Konstantin Kern

Jürgen Friedrich's best album as a leader since his superb debut CD for CTI, "Summerflod," released in 1998. Also the best of the three projects he recorded for Jason Seizer's Pirouet label, "Monosuite" - that's what this fascinating work with its sparkling, shimmering sounds is called - contains music that bursts out in a powerful, clear tonal stream. The listener is immediately pulled into a maelstrom of undiscovered beauty. This is a stunning composition for a 22-piece string orchestra and four masterful jazz soloists. These great musicians interact with the Sequenza String Orchestra in lively, elastic, and amazingly organic piece of jazz artistry - inspired music played with creative discipline.

Featuring: Jürgen Friedrich (composer, arranger, conductor), Hayden Chisholm (alto sax), Achim Kaufmann (acoustic piano), John Hébert (acoustic bass) & John Hollenbeck (drums)
Sequenza String Orchestra
1st violin: Gerdur Gunnarsdóttir, Constanze Sannemüller, Elias Schödel, Adrian Bleyer, Kira Kohlmann, Christine Rox
2nd violin: Irmgard Zavelberg, Mirjam Steymans, Alwin Moser, Naomi Binder, Adi Czeiger
viola: Marla Hansen, Pauline Moser, Yodfat Miron, Andrea Sanz-Vela, Valentin Alexandru
cello: Ulrike Zavelberg, Teemu Myöhänen, Nil Kocamangil, Marnix Möhring
bass: Axel Ruge, Matan Gurevitz
Supported by the Initiative Musik Non-profit Project Company Ltd. with project funds from the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and Media on the basis of a resolution passed by the German Bundestag.
Supported by Kunststiftung NRW

Jürgen Friedrich was born in 1970 in the town of Braunschweig, Germany. He is a musician who can be counted on for the unexpected sound, for music of the highest quality. In his previous Pirouet CD from 2009, "Pollock", Friedrich along with world-class bassist John Hébert and drummer Tony Moreno played off the impressions garnered from American abstract expressionist painter Jackson Pollock's "drip paintings". The album won praise from both the German and the international press. Not only Jürgen Friedrich has attracted attention as the essential part of a trio; he has also caught the jazz world's attention as composer for both small and large ensembles.

In 1997 he was the first European to win the USA's prestigious Gil Evans Award for Jazz Composition offered by the IAJE (International Association of Jazz Educators); he was heard by the legendary producer Creed Taylor and signed a contract with CTI Records, releasing the superb "Summerflood" CD in 1998, which featured Kenny Wheeler as special guest of Friedrich's quartet (completed by bassist Volker Heinze, drummer Darren Beckett and sax player Claudius Valk.) During the past two decades, he has also played with Michael Brecker, Sunday Night Orchestra, Ithamara Koorax, Gabriel Perez and the Friedrich-Herbert-Moreno Trio.

More awards followed, including twice wining the Julius Hemphill Composition Award given by the Jazz Composer's Alliance, an organization that was grounded in the USA in 1985. Friedrich is also in charge of master studies in composition and arrangement at the Mannheim University of Music and the Performing Arts. Since 2006 he has taught in Mannheim as a professor. His previous solo albums for Pirouet were titled "Seismo" and "Pollock."

Friday, June 8, 2012

SHM-CD of the Month - "Milt Jackson: Sunflower"


SHM-CD of the Month
Milt Jackson: "Sunflower" (CTI) 1973

Rating: ***** (musical performance, sonic quality & remastering)

Produced by Creed Taylor
Recorded (December 12 & 13, 1972), Mixed & Digitally Remastered by Rudy Van Gelder @ Van Gelder Studios (Englewood Cliffs, NJ)
Cover photo: Pete Turner
Liner photo: K. Abe
Album design: Bob Ciano

Featuring: Milt Jackson, Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, Billy Cobham, Ralph MacDonald, Jay Berliner, Freddie Hubbard, Phil Bodner, George Marge, Romeo Penque, Max Ellen, Paul Gershman, Emanuel Green, Charles Libove, Joe Malin, David Nadien, Gene Orloff, Elliot Rosoff, Irving Spice, Charles McCracken, George Ricci, Alan Shulman, Margaret Ross

"Sunflower" is the most revered solo album by Milt Jackson, one of the greatest of jazz vibraphone players, and one of the most acclaimed improvisational blues instrumentalists of all time. He was a founding member of the legendary Modern Jazz Quartet, voted by Downbeat’s readers into its Jazz Hall of Fame in 1999. Thanks to Creed Taylor's impeccable production and Don Sebesky's sumptuous scores, "Sunflower" became an instant classic, and Milt's better and most commercially successful album ever.

Jackson's own ballad "For Someone I Love" (featuring the famous Spanish-tinged acoustic guitar intro performed by Jay Berliner), the Thom Bell/Linda Creed's r&b classy classic "People Make The World Go Round" and Freddie Hubbard's lovely title track are the highlights, featuring such players as Hubbard himself, Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, Billy Cobham and Ralph MacDonald. Although "Sunflower" had been previously reissued on CD in the U.S., in remixed versions that changed the concept of both Creed Taylor & Rudy Van Gelder's works, this SHM-CD reissue produced by Taylor for the Asian market is the first one remastered by the legendary engineer himself.

Some weeks ago, the renowned French jazz historian Alain Manuel asked me to provide some comments about "Sunflower" from a more personal point of view. And that's what he posted on his famous CTI FANBLOG:
http://ctifanblog.blogspot.com.br/2012/05/milt-jackson-sunflower-cti-6024.html

jeudi 31 mai 2012 MILT JACKSON: Sunflower - CTI 6024
A la recherche d'un succès commercial mérité, le vibraphoniste Milt Jackson confia son étoile au producteur Creed Taylor. Le résultat est cet album de jazz orchestral teinté de romantisme. Parmi les invités prestigieux, on note la présence d'Herbie Hancock au piano, Freddie Hubbard à la trompette, Ron Carter à la contrebasse et Billy Cobham à la batterie. Ce quatuor de stars se met au diapason du vibraphone de Milt Jackson et permet un échange des plus courtois sans véritable leader. L'accompagnement est délicat, les solos comme murmurés. Dans cette ambiance tamisée, les superbes arrangements de cordes du directeur musical Don Sebesky font mouche.

Enfin, signalons "Necking", une des plus belles photos de Pete Turner choisie pour illustrer la pochette. Elle a été prise en Afrique du sud en 1970. Un disque pour les amoureux... du violon et du jazz.
♫ ♫ ♫ ♫ ♫

Arnaldo DeSouteiro, le journaliste américain d'origine brésilienne, m'a fait le grand honneur de me donner ses impressions sur cet album. C'est un immense plaisir pour moi de vous les faire partager:

... Je considère vraiment que "Sunflower" est l'un des 10 meilleurs, des 10 plus branchés et plus parfaits albums jamais parus au catalogue CTI, et aussi l'un des 10 meilleurs projets de Sebesky comme arrangeur, l'une des 10 meilleures sessions de Billy Cobham, et le meilleur album solo de Milt Jackson en tant que leader. "Sunflower" est véritablement parfait en tous points – le fabuleux répertoire, les arrangements sublimes de Don Sebesky, les performances musicales (magnifiques solos de Bags, Hancock et Hubbard, superbe performance de Cobham), le travail d'ingénieur du son (Van Gelder, comme toujours) et les magnifiques photographies de la pochette (K. Abe) et de la couverture (Pete Turner) "conditionnées" avec une extrême sophistication par le directeur artistique de CTI, Bob Ciano. Le tout produit à la perfection par Creed Taylor, bien sûr, qui a conçu l'esthétique de l'album.

Pour l'anecdote personnelle, j'ai eu mon premier exemplaire de "Sunflower" à sa sortie au Brésil début 1973, sous le label Top Tape, basé à Rio de Janeiro (aujourd'hui je possède 3 exemplaires vinyles et 5 ré-éditions CD). À l'époque, c'est-à-dire en 1973, j'avais 9 ans et je commençais à découvrir le catalogue CTI, après avoir passé mon enfance à écouter les albums de straight-ahead et mainstream jazz de la collection des mes parents – d'Art Tatum, Hazel Scott et Teddy Wilson à George Shearing, Art Van Damme et Ella Fitzgerald.

Mes parents m'obligeaient à aller au lit à 22 heures, mais quand j'étais sûr qu'ils dormaient, j'allumais toujours la radio, je la prenais dans mon lit et je l'écoutais tout doucement, tout contre mon oreille. Ma station de radio préférée à cette époque était JB AM qui diffusait deux émissions fabuleuses la nuit : "Noturno" (Nocturne) de 22 heures à minuit, suivie de "TAP Pelos Caminhos do Mundo" (TAP par les Chemins du Monde" – TAP était le sigle d'une compagnie aérienne appelée Transportes Aereos Portugueses, qui parrainait cette émission de radio, diffusée de minuit à 2 heures du matin).

Pendant des années, le générique de "Noturno" a été la version de Quincy Jones de "Jive Samba" par Nat Adderley, à partir de la création de l'émission par le DJ radio Simon Khoury, qui était aussi le directeur musical de la radio JB AM pendant son âge d'or – c'est grâce à leur programmation "normale" que j'ai entendu pour la première fois et découvert de nombreux grands albums par des artistes tels que Airto, Gaya, Tamba Trio, João Donato, Milton Nascimento, Walter Wanderley, Maria Toledo, Sivuca, Milton Banana etc.

Quelques années plus tard, la version de Airto de "Bebê" par Hermeto Pascoal (une piste de l'album "Natural Feelings" de Airto), est devenue le générique de "Noturno", quand un autre grand artiste de la radio, Luiz Carlos Saroldi, a pris les commandes de l'émission. À cette époque j'étais déjà adolescent, et j'ai commencé à participer à l'émission, non seulement en prêtant des disques, mais aussi en y amenant des artistes tels que Luiz Bonfá, Eumir Deodato, Mark Murphy, Steve Swallow, Tania Maria et bien d'autres pour des interviews.

Le dimanche, "Noturno" avait une édition spéciale, appelée "Noturno Jazz & Blues", programmée et présentée par Celio Alzer. Leur générique était "Fables of Faubus" par Charlie Mingus, et j'ai fini par participer aussi à ces soirées du dimanche. Le soir où j'ai présenté "Tempest In the Colosseum" par VSOP (ce fabuleux double album était sorti seulement au Japon et je l'avais reçu en cadeau de Flora Purim) a été un événement !

Et le générique de "TAP Pelos Caminhos do Mundo" était la magnifique ballade "For Someone I Loved" par Milt Jackson, la première piste de "Sunflower". Bien sûr ils n'utilisaient que l'intro, le solo de guitare acoustique de Jay Berliner, en terminant par un fondu après les premières notes de la mélodie par Freddie Hubbard. C'est ainsi que j'ai créé un lien très personnel et émotionnel avec cet air, qui reste l'un des mes préférés entre tous.

Du point de vue de l'historien du jazz et du collectionneur de CTI, je dois dire que, outre l'album vinyle original, les ré-éditions CD "indispensables" de "Sunflower" sont celles sorties en 1997 par Sony Legacy (ZK 65131) et en 2009 par King Records (KICJ 98519).

L'édition digipack ZK 65131 a été produite par un de mes amis, le producteur Didier Deutsch, basé à New York, et entièrement remixée par Danny Kadar qui, à la demande de Didier, a reconstruit les titres originaux / complets, allongeant la durée de certaines pistes auxquelles Van Gelder avait appliqué un "fondu", à la demande de Creed Taylor, sur l'album d'origine. Ce faisant, Deutsch & Kadar ont restitué les orchestrations de Sebesky telles qu'il les avait conçues à l'origine. La piste titre, "Sunflower", par exemple, atteint 10 min. 01 sec. alors que la version mixée par Van Gelder pour l'album original se terminait à 08 min. 49 sec. Il est encore plus intéressant d'écouter la performance de Jay Berliner tout au long de "For Someone I Love", car Creed Taylor – dans le mixage de l'album d'origine – avait décidé d'utiliser la nuance espagnole apportée par la guitare acoustique de Berliner seulement dans l'intro, demandant à Van Gelder d'atténuer la piste de la guitare au moment où le reste du groupe se met à jouer. Il y a également une piste bonus enregistrée par Milt avec seulement la section rythme, "SKJ", un blues que Taylor avait mis de côté pour le second album de Milt chez CTI, "Goodbye".

La ré-édition SHM-CD KICJ 98519, sortie uniquement au Japon, a été produite par Taylor lui-même et brillamment remasterisée par Van Gelder avec seulement les bandes de son mixage original, mais en élargissant l'étendue sonore pour rendre le son plus éclatant et plus fort, et faire ressortir TOUT le talent des musiciens présents, ce qui permet à l'auditeur de remarquer de nombreux détails "cachés" dans les albums gravés en 1973, 1979, et 1981 ainsi que dans toutes les autres éditions CD précédentes. Le son pur des cordes, des bois et de la batterie de Cobham (parfois musclé, parfois très subtil) devient particulièrement brillant et envoûtant dans les quatre pistes (pas de "SKJ" cette fois-ci).  J'espère que ces commentaires ont pu vous être utiles.

*Arnaldo DeSouteiro (Lettre du 21 mai 2012) Jazz Station - Arnaldo DeSouteiro's Blog
* Merci à Sylvie du forum international: help.berberber.com pour sa traduction
***********
My original text to Alain Manuel follows:

Cher Alain,

Maybe I made that comment in a previous private message to you. I have written so many times about "Sunflower" (some articles in English, others in Portuguese) that I can't find all of those reviews. Anyway, I really consider "Sunflower" as one of the 10 best, hippest and most perfect albums ever in the CTI catalog, as well as one of Sebesky's best 10 projects as an arranger, one of Billy Cobham's top 10 sessions, and Milt Jackson's best solo album ever as a leader.

"Sunflower" is truly perfect in everything - great repertoire, Don Sebesky's lush arrangements, musical performances (great solos by Bags, Hancock and Hubbard, superb Cobham performance), engineering (Van Gelder, as always) and great liner (K. Abe) and front (Pete Turner) cover pics "packaged" with ultra-sophistication by CTI's art director Bob Ciano. Everything perfectly produced by Creed Taylor, of course, who conceived the album aesthetic.

In a personal note: I got my first copy of "Sunflower" when it was released in Brazil in early 1973 by the Rio de Janeiro-based Top Tape label. (By now, I own 3 vinyl issues and 5 CD reissues) At that time, i.e. back in 1973, I was 9 years old and had just discovered the CTI catalog after having spent most of my childhood listening to straight-ahead and mainstream jazz albums from my parents collection - from Art Tatum, Hazel Scott and Teddy Wilson to George Shearing, Art Van Damme and Ella Fitzgerald.

My parents used to force me to go to bed around 10pm, but, after I was sure they were sleeping, I always turned on the radio and took it to my bed, listening it very low, as closer as possible to my ears. My favorite radio station at that time was JB-AM and they had two fabulous nightly programs: "Noturno" (Nocturne) from 11pm to midnight, and then "TAP Pelos Caminhos do Mundo" (TAP Throught The Ways of the World" - TAP was the sigla of an air-flight company called Transportes Aereos Portugueses, which was the sponsor of that radio show, broadcasted from midnight to 2am.)

For many years, the opening theme of "Noturno" was Quincy Jones' version of Nat Adderley's "Jive Samba," when the program was created by radio DJ Simon Khoury, who also worked as the musical director of the JB-AM radio on is heyday - on their "normal" programming I first heard and became aware of many great albums by such artists as Airto, Gaya, Tamba Trio, João Donato, Milton Nascimento, Walter Wanderley, Maria Toledo, Sivuca, Milton Banana etc.

Some years later, Airto's version of Hermeto Pascoal's "Bebê" (a track from Airto's "Natural Feelings" LP) became the opening theme of the "Noturno," when another great radio entertainner, Luiz Carlos Saroldi, took command of the show. At that time, I was already in my teens, and started to contribute to the radio show, not only by lending records as also by taking such artists as Luiz Bonfá, Eumir Deodato, Mark Murphy, Steve Swallow, Tania Maria and many others to be interviewed there.

On Sundays, "Noturno" had a special edition, called "Noturno Jazz & Blues," programmed & presented by Celio Alzer. Their opening theme was Charles Mingus' "Fables of Faubus," and I eventually also contributed to those Sundays nights. The night I presented VSOP's "Tempest In the Colosseum" (that fabulous 2-LP set had been released only in Japan and I had received hit as a gift from Flora Purim) caused a commotion!

And the opening theme of "TAP Pelos Caminhos do Mundo" was Milt Jackson's gorgeous ballad "For Someone I Loved," the opening track from "Sunflower." Of course they used only Jay Berliner's acoustic guitar solo intro, doing a fade-out after Freddie Hubbard's first statement of the melody. So, I developed an "intimate" and emotional association with that tune, which remains one of my all-time favorites.

In a perspective as a jazz historian and a CTI collector, I must say that, besides the original vinyl LP issue, the "essential" CD reissues of "Sunflower" are the ones released in 1997 by Sony Legacy (ZK 65131) and in 2009 by King Records (KICJ 98519).

The ZK 65131 digipak edition was produced by a dear friend of mine, NY-based producer Didier Deutsch, and entirely remixed by Danny Kadar who, at Didier's request, re-constructed the original/complete charts, expanding the lenght of some tracks that, on the original LP, had been "faded-out" by Van Gelder at Creed Taylor's request. By doing that, Deutsch & Kadar restored Sebesky's orchestrations as they had been originally conceived. The title track, "Sunflower", for example, reaches 10m01s while Van Gelder's mix for the original LP ended on 8m49s. Even more interesting is to listen to Jay Berliner's performing throughout "For Someone I Love," since Creed Taylor - on the original LP mix - had decided to use Berliner's Spanish-tinged acoustic guitar only in the intro, asking Van Gelder to mute the guitar channel when the rest of the band comes in. There's also a bonus track recorded by Milt only with the rhythm section, "SKJ," a blues that Taylor had saved for Milt's second CTI LP, "Goodbye."

The SHM-CD KICJ 98519 reissue, released only in Japan, was produced by Taylor himself and brilliantly remastered by Van Gelder using his original mix tapes, but expanding the sonic range to the point that makes the sound much brighter and louder, and brings out ALL the great musicianship contained within, allowing the listener to notice many details that were "hidden" in the 1973/1979/1981 LP pressings as well as in all other previous CD issues. The clean sound of the strings, woodwinds and of Billy Cobham's drumset (sometimes muscular, sometimes very subtle) becomes specially bright and bewitching in all four tracks (no "SKJ" this time). Hope these comments could be helpful to you.

A bientot,
Arnaldo

Thursday, June 7, 2012

DVD of the Month - "Chick Corea & Friedrich Gulda: The Meeting"


DVD of the Month
Chick Corea & Friedrich Gulda: "The Meeting" (Arthaus Musik) 2012

Rating:
***** (musical performance & sonic quality)
***** (audio & video remastering)
** (DVD art design, because the impact of the front cover pic, on which Corea & Gulda appeared holding hands, was destroyed since they modified it, maybe thinking it was "a gay thing"...Jesus!)
* (data info, since the names of original producers, engineers -- who did a wonderful job -- and photographers are omitted)

Originally released by the Philips label on vinyl LP in 1984 and some years later on LaserDisc (only in Japan) in 1988 -- with 4 tracks and around 55m of music on both formats --, "The Meeting" is finally reissued on DVD with its fabulous content expanded to 150 minutes (that's right, 2 hours and 30 minutes). This happens because, besides the stunning two-piano performances by Chick Corea & Friedrich Gulda, we now have available, for the very first time, the previously unreleased "solo parts" performed separately by the two geniuses on their Steinways during that blessed concert filmed at the Congress Room of the German Museum as part of the Münchner Klaviersommer (Munich Piano Summer Festival) on June 27, 1982.

The 16-page booklet, designed by Arndt WaBnann, includes rare b&w pics (by the uncredited photographer Roland Fischer) and insightful new liner notes by Marcus A. Woelfe printed in English, French and German. Oddly, however, the names of the original producers (Karl-Heinz Hein & Manfred Frei) as well as of the sound engineers (Gottfreid Düren, Peter Kramper, Wilhelm Meister) are also omitted on the DVD. Strange, very strange, and very regrettable too.

[Btw, the same uncredited producers were also responsible for having documented, during that same 1982 Klaviersommer, a few days earlier, on June 24, another memorable meeting, "Chick Corea & Nicolas Economou," released on LP by the Deutsche Grammophon label with classical works by Corea and Béla Barók, and recently reissued on CD, but never available in an official video release, although taped for broadcast on German television.]

Directed by Janos Darvas for Loft Production, the video starts with the late Gulda -- the iconoclastic Austrian virtuoso -- playing several brilliant originals (among them "Aria" and "General Dance," also included on another superb Gulda DVD, "Mozart No End," a compilation of concerts filmed in 1990) plus a highly personal rendition of Mozart's "Sonata For Piano K 330."

Corea's solo set, more cerebral but no less fascinating, consists of three improvisations and a 18-minute long variation on Thelonious Monk's "'Round Midnight" that cannot be compared to any other "version" of that famous jazz standard. But the highlight is really "The Meeting" of Corea & Gulda during 55 minutes of pure magic, when their improvised musical dialogues flow to Frank Churchill/Larry Morey's "Someday My Prince Will Come," Larry Spier's "Put Your Little Foot Right Out" (credited on both the LP and the LD to Miles Davis who, actually, developed a new tune based on it, "Fran-Dance," dedicated in 1958 to his then-wife dancer Francis Taylor Davis), "Poem No. 3" by Austrian pianist Fritz Pauer (a long-time associate of my late friend Art Farmer), and Johannes Brahms' dreamy "Wiegenlied." Pure art; essential and magnificent.

"Jazz Hot" - June/July 2012, nº 660


Cover: David S. WARE / Planetary Unknown
Featuring:
Norman GRANZ / Jammin’ the jazz
Tad HERSHORN / Norman et moi
Sergio VESCHI / Red Records
COOPER-MOORE / Musique de (ma) chambre
Darius JONES / Une affaire d’art
Le siècle de Hugues PANASSIÉ (1ère partie)

CDs Nouveautés-rééditions
Ray Anderson Pocket Brass Band, Sweet Chicago Suite, Intuition-Challenge Records 71306 (Intégral Distribution)
Peter Appleyard, The Lost Sessions 1974, Linus 270135 (http://www.linusinternainment.com/)
Dmitry Baevsky, The Composers, Sharp Nine Records 1047-2 (http://www.sharpnine.com/)
Stefano Bollani, Big Band !, Verve 0602527720820 (Universal)
Stefano Bollani / Riccardo Chailly & Gewandhausorchester, Gershwin-Rhapsody in Blue/Piano Concerto in F, Decca 4782739 (Universal)
Brian Carpenter’s Ghost Train Orchestra, Hothouse Stromp, Accurate 5062 (www.accuraterecords.com) François Chassagnite, Chat-ssagnite, Frémeaux & Associés 564 (Socadisc)
Claudio Fasoli / Luca Garlaschelli, Duology, RadioRecords SNJ-BF-025 (http://www.radiosnj.com/)
Etta James, The Dreamer, Verve Forecast 0602527831893 (Universal)
Sal La Rocca, It Could Be the End, Igloo Records 230 (Socadisc)
Keith Loftis, Simply, Loftis, Longtone Music (http://www.keithloftis.com/)
Charles Loos, Secret Laughs, Igloo Records 234 (Socadisc)
Nathalie Loriers New Trio, Les 3 petits singes, De Werf 103 (http://www.dewerf.be/)
Thelonious Monk, The Quintessence - 1947-1959, Frémeaux & Associés 284 (Socadisc)
Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers, The Quintessence - 1947-1959, Frémeaux & Associés 286 (Socadisc)
Horace Silver, The Quintessence - 1952-1959, Frémeaux & Associés 287 (Socadisc)
Jimmy Owens, The Monk Project, IPO 1022 (http://www.iporecordings.com/)
Xavier Richardeau, Back to the Present, Safety Records 201201 (Intégral Distribution)
Gary Smulyan, Smul’s Paradise, Capri 74113-2 (http://www.caprirecords.com/)

DVDs
Les Jazz Hot d'Or du mois:
Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers, Live in France 1959, Reelin’ in the Years/Jazz Icons-Mosaic/Ina 2003 (http://www.mosaicrecords.com/)
John Coltrane, Live in France 1965, Reelin’ in the Years/Mosaic/Ina 2001 (http://www.mosaicrecords.com/)
Thelonious Monk, Live in France ’69, Reelin’ in the Years/Jazz Icons-Mosaic/Ina 2002 (http://www.mosaicrecords.com/)
Johnny Griffin, Live in France 1971, Reelin’ in the Years/Jazz Icons-Mosaic/Ina 2004 (http://www.mosaicrecords.com/)
Rahsaan Roland Kirk, Live in France 1972, Reelin’ in the Years/Mosaic/Ina 2006 (http://www.mosaicrecords.com/)
Freddie Hubbard, Live in France 1973, Reelin’ in the Years/Jazz Icons-Mosaic/Ina 2005 (http://www.mosaicrecords.com/)

DVD Compilation of the Month - "Acoustic Africa feat. Madala Kunene"


DVD Compilation of the Month
"Acoustic Africa" (MELT 2000)

Rare unreleased live footage of great African artists. A surprising journey to exotic sonic landscapes.

Directed & Edited by Lianne Cox
Executive Producer: Robert Trunz
Recorded, Mixed & Mastered by Chris Lewis
Assistant Engineer: Kholofelo Sewale
Projection & Lights: Vernon Pendlebury
Packaging: Nicholas P. Hauser
Liner Notes by Robert Trunz, Greg Georgiades & Dinga Sikwebu

Featuring: Madala Kunene, Greg Georgiades, Ashish Joshi, LAP (Live African Percussion), Bernard Mindaweni, Mabi Thobejane, Carlo Mombelli & The Prisoners of Strange, Ernest Mothle, Thongo & His African Band et al.

An excerpt from Trunz' liner notes:
South Africa has too few festivals and musical events dedicated to showcasing the vast variety of traditional, world and jazz music the country has to offer. As a label, we at MELT 2000 strongly supported and promoted different facets of music and artist collaborations since the birth of the new democratic South Africa in 1994. It was back in 1997 when Pascal Letellier on behalf of the French city of Nantes showcased the most elaborate representation of South African culture - an event so beautiful that participating artists themselves were surprised to experience the rich variety of their own Rainbow nation's heritage. With the help of Pascal we recorded and filmed many of the participating acts. Material from Amampondo, Moses Taiwa Molelekwa, Busi Mhlongo and Madala Kunene that has now found its way onto DVD releases.

Exactly seven years later my friend Ananda introduced me to another Frenchman, Jean Bourdin (then director of the Alliance Francaise in Pretoria) who told me of his plans for a small, intimate festival sponsored by the Alliance and the IFAS (Institut Français d'Afrique du Sud). I immediately asked him if I could make some additional programme suggestions and expressed my wish to record and film the event.

Jean's musical program found form in the 2004 Fort West Village Heritage & Cultural Festival which was built around four musicians born or raised in Tshwane (Pretoria). These are Ernest Mothle, Carlo Mombelli and the two artists to whom this DVD is dedicated, Greg Hadjiyorki Georgiades and Madala Kunene. And yet despite their common roots, the diversity of their musical influences and inspirations is awesome. The team gathered with cameras and stacks of recording gear, some of which was flown in from London by Chris Lewis - a man whose expertise with acoustic music I certainly did not want to miss. Another journey and a new era of collaborations had begun. Watch this space.

CD Compilation of the Moon - "Sanscapes V.2"


CD Compilation of the Month
"Sanscapes V.2" (MELT 2000)

Compiled by Phil Meadley
Executive Producer: Robert Trunz
Liner Notes by Pops Mohamed & Phil Meadley
Photos: Lianne Cox
Mastered by Chris Lewis @ Heathside Nautillus Room

The proceeds from the publishing royalties of this CD go to the participating San families from the various corridors in Gobabis (Namibia) who contributed to the original recordings used for the remixes included on this album, and to the head organisation WIMSA and the Omaheka San Trust that operated locally to improve their education, health, and creating jobs and shelter. Contact: info@melt.co.za

A collection of remixes from songs originally released on the album "Bushmen of the Kalahari."
Featuring Anna Goute, Dave Harrow, Ben Atmo, Gabi Le Roux, U-Cef, Jung Collective, Allan Gubby, Mario Cee, Greg Hunter, Kamel Nitrate, Tony Marrisson, Nelson Dilation, System 7, Silk T, Mandragora, Mat Buggins, Thembelani Pinana, Jacques "Judah" Herman, Simon Williams, Geir Jenssan et al.

Maria Rivas - Thursdays for Jazz @ Kitchen 305


Tonight, Kitchen 305 Presents "Thursdays For Jazz" @ Newport Beachside Resort (16701 Collins Ave, North Miami Beach, FL)! Live Performance by Maria Rivas & her band with a unique blend of American jazz and latin music. From 7:30pm to 10pm.

Reward your good taste & prepare for the weekend with great jazz, wine, food & cocktails. Many thanks to my dear friends Hannah Becker & Saul Rodriguez for the invitation. And you may attend every Thursday because Maria's show is never the same! U go, girl! RSVP: (305) 749-2110

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

CD Reissue of the Month - "Quincy Jones: Songs for Pussycats / Quincy in Rio"


CD Reissue of the Month
Quincy Jones: "Originals - Songs for Pussycats / Quincy in Rio" (Mercury) 2012

Original sessions produced & conducted by Quincy Jones
Arranged by Bobby Scott (uncredited) & Quincy Jones
Compilation produced by Matthias Künnecke
Featuring: Bobby Scott, Luiz Bonfá, Ray Brown, Grady Tate, Jim Hall, Phil Woods, Zoot Sims, Clark Terry, Rudy Collins, José Paulo, Chris White, Cancho Gomez, Jack del Rio et al.

Vocal CD of the Month - "Sandy Patton & Thomas Dürst: Painting Jazz Vol. II"


Vocal CD of the Month
Sandy Patton & Thomas Dürst: "Painting Jazz Vol. II" (Unit) 2012

Rating: ***** (musical performance & sonic quality)

Produced by Sandy Patton & Thomas Dürst
Executive Producer: Peter Bürli (DRS 2)
Recorded May 15 & 16, 2011 @ Hardstudios, Switzerland
Engineered (recording, mixing & mastering) by Ron Kurz
Photos: Doris Kuert (Fotozone)
Graphic Design: Stefanie Nguyen

Certainly the best North American jazz singer currently based in Europe. And arguably the best female jazz singer in the world, in the tradition of Sarah Vaughan, Ella Fitzgerald, Betty Carter and other performers forged in the bebop area of phenomenal scat-singing skills. A tradition that Sandy Patton updates throughout this brilliant album, the second in a duo setting with Switzerland's top jazz bassist, Thomas Dürst, who also happens to be a member of trumpeter Peter Schärli's group.

She puts her personal stamp, gorgeous warm voice and astonishing phrasing in service of such incredible tunes like Rahsaan Roland Kirk's "Serenade To A Cuckoo" (she added lyrics to a tune I love since my childhood, when I heard Kirk's live version on the "Kirkatron" LP partly recorded at the Montreux Jazz Festival for Warner), Hank Mobley's "No Room For Squares," and even Erik Satie's "Gymnopedie No.1." There are also two medleys -- James Moody/Eddie Jefferson's "Moody's Mood" connected with the song that inspired it, Jimmy McHugh's "I'm in the Mood For Love," and Hugo Friedhofer's "Boy on a Dolphin" attached to Herbie Hancock's "Dolphin Dance" --, a surprising take on Astor Piazzolla's nuevo-tango classic "Libertango," and 5 originals by Patton and 3 by Dürst. I'll consider a miracle if a better vocal jazz album comes out in 2012.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Instrumental CD of the Month - "Dan Cray: Meridies"

Instrumental CD of the Month
Dan Cray: "Meridies" (Origin) 2012

Rating: ***** (musical performance & sonic quality)

"The Note" - Spring 2012


Featured Presentations:
Freddie Hubbard - 54 Years in 54 Minutes (fantastic! including reminiscences from his CTI years)
ESU Welcomes the Zoot Sims Collection
Remembering Zoot, Al Cohn and the NYC Loft Scene
To Russia, Without Love
Reflections on "If I'm Lucky" by Zoot Sims

Columns:
Phil in the Gap (by Phil Woods)
A Note from the Collection Coordinator (by Bob Bush)
From the Academy (by Patrick Dorian)
Insights from the Jazz Life, Part 3 (by David Liebman)
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"DownBeat" - June 2012


COVER
Kenny Garrett -- Saxophonist Kenny Garrett is back with Seeds From The Underground, a studio album of acoustic jazz. It's his first studio album in six years, and it contains 10 original compositions.

FEATURES
The Fringe -- The trio - consisting of saxophonist George Garzone, bassist John Lockwood and drummer Bob Gullotti - is celebrating its 40th anniversary. The Fringe is an institution in the Boston area, released several recordings, and they've toured Portugal. Over the course of his long career as an educator, Garzone has mentored many artists who are now famous, including Branford Marsalis, Donny McCaslin, Antonio Sanchez, Marcus Strickland and Luciana Souza.

Ralph Peterson -- DownBeat catches up with the drummer, trumpeter and composer, who has an album coming out in May. Peterson plays in several groups, including the Unity Project, the Fo'tet, a sextet, a trio, and an electric band called Direct Current.

Grégoire Maret -- The harmonica player, who was a member of the Pat Metheny Group, will release his long-awaited, self-titled debut on March 13. His guests include harmonica virtuoso Toots Thielemans (90 years of musical excellence), bassist Marcus Miller and vocalist Cassandra Wilson.

Special Section: 35th Annual Student Music Awards -- DownBeat's annual celebration of music education will include profiles of student musicians, as well as features on these exemplary educators:
* Hall of Fame: Steve Zegree of Western Michigan University
* Jazz Education Achievement Award: Mary Jo Papich and Lou Fischer of JEN
* Jazz Education Achievement Award: Christopher Dorsey of Dillard High School Center of the Arts

Special Section: Indie Life -- DownBeat profiles independent artists and labels who are creating great music and figuring out creative ways to get their music out to fans:
* Saxophonist Hailey Niswanger
* Saxophonist and oboist Evan Cobb
* Smalls Records, the NYC label run by Luke Kaven

PLAYERS
Scott Tixier (violin)
Mike LeDonne (piano/organ)
Kresten Osgood (drums)
Tom Kennedy (bass)

BLINDFOLD TEST- Mats Gustafsson

THE BEAT
* The Jazz Bakery's permanent home
* AUM Fidelity's 15th Anniversary
* Guitarist Julian Lage
* Caught: Bass Fest, Jazz en Rafale, Quebec; Vossa Jazz in Norway; Darcy James Argue's Secret Society

WOODSHED
Master Class: saxophonist Dan Wilensky: "Style Hopping"
Transcription: Seamus Blake tenor saxophone solo

TOOLSHED
* Avid Pro Tools X
* Zildjian K Constantinople cymbals
* P. Mauriat 655 and 700 series trumpets
* Ted Klum saxophone mouthpieces
* Cooperstands guitar stands GEAR BOX
* Toca Traditional series congas/bongos
* Hamilton (DANSR) System X horn stands
* Pro-Mark Horacio "El Negro" Hernandez signature stick
* The Realist Docking Station bass pickup volume attenuator by David Gage/NS Design
* Alfred Publishing's Jazz Real Book: Essential Jazz Standards
* Gator Cases Tablet/Mix bag

JAZZ ON CAMPUS
University of Louisville Jazz Festival with Eddie Gomez workshops

REVIEWS - Hot Box:
Ahmad Jamal, Blue Moon (Jazz Village)
Marlene Rosenberg Quartet, Bassprint (Origin)
Ted Nash, The Creep (Plastic Sax)
Jeff Hamilton Trio, Red Sparkle (Capri)

Reviews:
Floratone, Floratone II (Savoy)
Brian Charette, Music For Organ Sextette (SteepleChase)
Steve Lehman Trio, Dialect Fluorescent (Pi)
Mary Halvorson, Bending Bridges (Firehouse 12)
Mary Stallings, Don't Look Back (HighNote)
Jon Gold, Bossa Of Possibility (BluJazz)
Linda Oh, Initial Here (Greenleaf)
Chicago Underground Trio, Age Of Energy (Northern Spy)
Darius Jones Quartet, Book Of Mae'bul (Another Kind Of Sunrise) (AUM Fidelity)
John Benitez, Purpose (Seed)
Joel Harrison, Search (Sunnyside) combined w/ Joel Harrison, Holy Abyss (Cuneiform)
Erik Charlston JazzBrasil, Essentially Hermeto (Sunnyside)
Jerome Sabbagh, Plugged In (Bee Jazz)
Fredrik Kronkvist, New York Elements (Connective)
Eric Alexander & Vincent Herring, Friendly Fire (HighNote)
Josh Ginsburg, Zembla Variations (Brooklyn Jazz Underground)
Jakob Bro, Time (Loveland)
Kat Edmonson, Way Down Low (Spinnerette) w/Melissa Stylianou, Silent Movie (Anzic)
Carmen Lundy, Changes (Afrasia)
Ehud Asherie, Upper West Side (Posi-Tone)
Michael Veal & Aqua Ife, Volume 1 (NKCD), combined w/Michael Veal, Anyscape (NKCD)
Eri Yamamoto Trio, The Next Page (AUM Fidelity)
Sidi Touré, Koima (Thrill Jockey)
Charles Gayle Trio, Streets (Northern Spy)
Jeff Parker Trio, Bright Light In Winter (Delmark)

Jazz:
Michael Gibbs and the NDR BigBand, Back In The Days (Cuneiform)
Pete Christlieb & Linda Small, Tall & Small (Bosco)
Barry Guy London Jazz Composers Orchestra, Harmos: Live At Schaffhausen (Inakt)
Fred Ho & Quincy Saul, Present The Music Of Cal Massey: A Tribute (Mutable)
Michael Treni Big Band, Boy's Night Out (Bell Production)
Sammy Nestico Orchestra, On The Sammy Side Of The Street (SN Publishing)
Bob Lark And His Alumni Big Band, Reunion (Jazzed Media)

Blues:
Luca Giordano, My Kind Of Blues (Audacia)
Lisa Mills, Tempered In Fire (Really 'n' Truly)
Layla Zoe, Sleep Little Girl (Cable Car)
Ramon Goose, Uptown Blues (Blues Boulevard)
Tiny Legs Tim, One Man Blues (TLT Productions)
The Blues Band, Few Short Lines (Repertoire)

Beyond:
Chris Brown, Iconicities (New World)
Anna Clyne, Blue Moth (Tzadik)
Galina Ustvolskaya, Composition No. 2 "Dies Irae" et. al (Wergo)
Claire Chase, Terrestre (New Focus)
Toshio Hosokawa, Landscapes (ECM)

Historical:
George Duke, The Complete 1970s Epic Albums Collection (Legacy)

Books:
Robin Kelley, Africa Speaks, America Answers: Modern Jazz In Revolutionary Times (Harvard University Press), combined w/Steven Feld, Jazz Cosmopolitanism In Accra: Five Musical Years in Ghana (Duke University Press)