Louis Armstrong & Oscar Peterson – Louis Armstrong Meets Oscar Peterson (1959/2001/FLAC)

 

By 1957, hard bop was firmly established as the "jazz of now," while pianist Oscar Peterson and his ensemble with bassist Ray Brown and guitarist Herb Ellis were making their own distinctive presence felt as a true working band playing standards in the swing tradition. Louis Armstrong was more recognizable to the general public as a singer instead of the pioneering trumpet player he was. But popularity contests being the trend, Armstrong's newer fans wanted to hear him entertain them, so in retrospect it was probably a good move to feature his vocalizing on these tracks with Peterson's band and guest drummer Louie Bellson sitting in. The standard form of Armstrong singing the lead lines, followed by playing his pithy and witty horn solos based on the secondary melody, provides the basis for the format on this charming but predictable recording. What happens frequently is that Armstrong and Peterson play lovely ad lib vocal/piano duets at the outset of many tunes. They are all songs you likely know, with few upbeat numbers or obscure choices. It is, however, the familiarity of songs like the midtempo "Let's Fall in Love," with Armstrong's gravelly scat singing, and his marvelous ability to riff off of the basic songs, that make these offerings endearing. A classic take of "Blues in the Night" is the showstopper, while choosing "Moon Song" is a good, off-the-beaten-path pick as the trumpeter plays two solo choruses, and he leads out on his horn for once during the slightly bouncy, basic blues "I Was Doing All Right." Some extremely slow tunes crop up on occasion, like "How Long Has This Been Going On?," an atypically downtempo take of "Let's Do It," and "You Go to My Head," featuring Peterson's crystalline piano. There are the dependable swingers "Just One of Those Things," "I Get a Kick Out of You," and "Sweet Lorraine," with Peterson at his accompanying best. There's a ramped-up version of the usually downtrodden "Willow Weep for Me" and a duet between Armstrong and Ellis on the sad two-minute ditty "There's No You." All in all, it's difficult to critique or find any real fault with these sessions, though Peterson is subsumed by the presence of Armstrong, who, as Leonard Feather notes, really needs nobody's help. That this was their only collaboration speaks volumes to how interactive and communal the session really was, aside from the fairly precious music.

  • Bass – Ray Brown
  • Drums – Louis Bellson
  • Guitar – Herb Ellis
  • Piano – Oscar Peterson
  • Vocals, Trumpet – Louis Armstrong





A1 That Old Feeling
A2 Let's Fall in Love
A3 I'll Never Be the Same
A4 Blues in the Night
A5 How Long Has This Been Going On
A6 I Was Doing All Right
B1 What's New
B2 Moon Song
B3 Just One of Those Things
B4 There's No You
B5 You Got to My Head
B6 Sweet Lorraine


Lou Donaldson Quintet - Wailing With Lou (1957/2014/FLAC)


 Wailing With Lou is an appropriate title for this enjoyable set of straight-ahead bop. Whether he's riding the propulsive rhythms of 'Caravan' or settling down into a ballad, Donaldson takes the center stage with his surprisingly full alto tone. He still displays a clear Charlie Parker influence, but he is beginning to break free and develop his own style. In particular, he relies on bluesy runs more than Bird, which give his music a soulful edge. But what makes Wailing With Lou so enjoyable is the hot interplay between Donaldson, trumpeter Donald Byrd, pianist Herman Foster, bassist Peck Morrison and drummer Art Taylor. All five musicians give enthusiastic, infectious performances. There's nothing out of the ordinary here -- just hard-driving bop and sensitive ballads, which are sure to please fans of the style.





  • Lou Donaldson, alto saxophone
  • Donald Byrd, trumpet
  • Herman Foster, piano
  • Peck Morrison, bass
  • Art Taylor, drums

Recorded January 27, 1957 Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack
Produced by Alfred Lion
Engineered by Rudy Van Gelder
Digitally remastered

01. L.D. Blues (5:20)
02. Caravan (5:57)
03. Old Folks (6:20)
04. That Good Old Feeling (6:50)
05. Move It (5:53)
06. There Is No Greater Love (6:53)

John Handy - Mosaic Select 35 (3 CD, 2009/FLAC)

 

 John Handy is one of the unsung greats of modern jazz -- as saxophonist, composer/arranger and group leader -- especially for the series of four albums he recorded for Columbia between 1965 and 1968. This Mosaic Select is devoted to the three albums he made for the label that featured violin in the instrumentation -- Recorded Live At The Monterey Jazz Festival , The 2nd John Handy Album and Projections, plus a live Carnegie Hall performance.

Handy's playing, on alto sax in particular, is a wonder with a beautiful "legit" sound, perfect intonation and articulation, and an extraordinary control of the upper register which he uses quite often in building excitement and intensity in his solos. He utilizes all of these extraordinary attributes in frequent lengthy and compelling acappella solos. His unending flow of fresh ideas seemingly devoid of licks is another striking characteristic of his work.

The group heard here on all of discs 1 and 2 is unique in jazz history. The instrumentation of alto saxophone, violin, guitar, bass and drums has rarely, if ever, been used, and certainly not to this extent. Combining the nature of this instrumentation with the styles of the five players (Handy, Michael White, Jerry Hahn, Don Thompson and Terry Clarke) helps to create an open, expansive musical palette. This enables a musical range from Coltranesque long trance-like modal pieces, to tauter more direct and edgier rock-oriented pieces.





 

Clark Terry discography [1955-2004]

  
Clark Terry (December 14, 1920 – February 21, 2015) was an American swing and bop trumpeter, a pioneer of the flugelhorn in jazz, educator, NEA Jazz Masters inductee, and recipient of the 2010 Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. Only three other trumpet players in history have ever received the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award: Louis Armstrong (Clark's old mentor), Miles Davis (whom Clark mentored), Dizzy Gillespie (who often described Clark as the greatest jazz trumpet player on earth) and Benny Carter. Clark Terry was one of the most prolific jazz musicians in history, having appeared on 905 known recording sessions, which makes him the most recorded trumpet player of all time. In comparison, Louis Armstrong performed on 620 sessions, Harry "Sweets" Edison on 563, and Dizzy Gillespie on 501.

He has played with Charlie Barnet (1947), Count Basie (1948–1951), Duke Ellington (1951–1959) and Quincy Jones (1960), and has recorded regularly both as a leader and sideman. Terry's career in jazz spanned more than seventy years and he is among the most recorded of jazz musicians.





1955 - Clark Terry (1997)
1955 - Swahili
1957 - Clark Terry Quintet - Serenade to a Bus Set (1992)
1957 - Clark Terry, Paul Gonsalves - Daylight Express (1998)
1957 - Duke With A Difference
1958 - Clark Terry with Thelonious Monk - In Orbit
1959 - It's What's Happenin'
1959 - Top and Bottom Brass
1960 - Color Changes
1960 - Flutin' & Fluglin'
1960 - Supreme Jazz by Clark Terry
1961 - Cecil Payne & Clark Terry - Cool Blues
1963 - Coleman Hawkins & Clark Terry - Back In Bean's Bag (1998)
1964 - The Happy Horns Of Clark Terry
1965 - Wes Montgomery & Clark Terry - Straight, No Chaser (1992)
1965-67 - The Happy Horns of Clark Terry & It's What's Happenin' (2011)
1966 - Clark Terry & Chico O'Farrill - Spanish Rice
1966 - Clark Terry, Bob Brookmeyer - Gingerbread Men
1968 - Shirley Scott, Clark Terry - Soul Duo
1976 - Clark Terry's Big B-A-D Band - Live At Buddy's Place (1992)
1976 - Wham - Live At The Jazzhouse
1978 - Clark After Dark
1978 - Clark Terry & Chris Woods - Swiss Radio Days Jazz Series Lucerne 1978, vol.8 (1997)
1980 - Clark Terry Five-Memorie`s of Duke - Joe Pass, Ray Brown, Jack Wilson, Frank Severino
1981 - Yes, The Blues
1986 - Clark Terry & Red Mitchell - To Duke and Basie
1988 - Clark Terry & Red Mitchell - Jive At Five
1989 - Portraits
1990 - The Second Set - Live At Village Gate
1991 - Clark Terry & Bob Brookmeyer - The Power Of Positive Swinging
1991 - Live at the Village Gate
1992 - Clark Terry, Freddie Hubbard, Dizzy Gillespie Plus Oscar Peterson - The Alternate Blues
1993 - Clark Terry and George Robert - The Good Things In Life
1993 - What A Wonderful World For Louis & Duke
1994 - Metropole Orchestra
1994 - Remember The Time, Clark Terry 75th Anniversary
1995 - Clark Terry & Frank Wess - Big Band Basie
1996 - Express
1997 - Carol Sloane and Clark Terry - The Songs of Ella & Louise Sang
1999 - Dave Glasser, Clark Terry, Barry Harris Project - Uh! Oh!
2000 - One On One
2001 - Herr Ober - Live at Birdland Neuburg
2002 - Clark Terry & Max Roach - Friendship
2004 - Chilled & Remixed
2004 - Clark Terry with Jeff Lindberg & Chicago Jazz Orchestra - Porgy & Bess

VA - True Soul - Deep Sounds From The Left Of Stax Vol. 1 & 2 (2 CD, 2011/FLAC)


 Now-Again Records presents the release of True Soul: Deep Sounds from the Left of Stax , collection of rare and unreleased funk and soul music from the fabled Arkansas indie. Over twelve years in the making, this anthology will be presented over the course of two volumes and one four LP box set. 








True Soul: Deep Sounds from the Left of Stax Vol. 1

01. Thomas East - Slipping Around (45 Version) [03:00]
02. Albert Smith - Come Together [03:37]
03. John Craig - Doing My Own Thing [03:50]
04. York Wilborn's Psychedelic Six - Wheezin' [02:48]
05. Ren Smith - Smog (Full Version) [04:35]
06. Thomas East - Sister Funk (Original Full Version) [05:19]
07. York Wilborn's Psychedelic Six - Funky Football [04:08]
08. York Wilborn's Psychedelic Six - Psychedelic Hot Pants (Full Version) [04:13]
09. Classic Funk - Hard Times [03:10]
10. The Right Track - I Gotta Move With The Groove [03:43]
11. Thomas East - Funky Music [04:19]
12. The Conspiracy - The Real Thing [03:16]
13. The Leaders - (It's A) Rat Race (Instrumental) [04:11]
14. Thomas East - Follow The Rainbow (Alternate Mix) [03:28]


 True Soul: Deep Sounds from the Left of Stax Vol. 2

01. Albert Smith - The Thrill Is Gone [04:15]
02. Thomas East - Just A Trip [02:07]
03. Larry Davis - Down Home Funk (Full Version) [05:12]
04. Thomas East - Sister Funk (Instrumental) [02:50]
05. Classic Funk - The Funk's Gonna Fly [03:22]
06. York Wilborn's Psychedelic Six - Thank You [03:48]
07. The Conspiracy - Conspiracy [03:45]
08. The Right Track - Maybe Yes, Maybe No [02:45]
09. The Leaders - (It's A) Rat Race [04:18]
10. The Conspiracy - I Believe (Our Love Has Gone Away) [04:36]
11. John Craig - I Don't Want To Do It [02:56]
12. John Craig - Doing My Own Thing (Interlude) [01:07]
13. The Right Track - You For Me and Me For You [06:14]
14. Portrait - Springtime Smile [05:18]
15. Portrait - Love You For Now On [05:09]
16. Le'Chance - Get Down [05:06]
17. Le'Chance - Gigolo [07:01]
18. Soul Mind and Body - I Took Your Love (To Be True) (Full Version) [03:37]

Blue Note Works 4000-4100 series [4141-4150]

 
...The Modern Jazz Series continued into the 1970s with the LPs listed below. Many were issued in both monaural versions (BLP series) and stereo versions (BST 84000 series).  Most of the 4000 series have been reissued by Toshiba-EMI in Japan ("Blue Note Works 4000" series); the catalog numbers are TOCJ-4###



BN.4141- Jimmy Smith- 1963- Rockin' the Boat {RVG Remaster}
BN.4142- Blue Mitchell- 1963- Step Lightly
BN.4143- John Patton- 1963- Blue John
BN.4144- Johnny Coles- 1963- Little Johnny C
BN.4145- Don Wilkerson- 1963- Shoutin'
BN.4146- Dexter Gordon- 1963- Our Man In Paris {RVG Remaster}
BN.4147- Herbie Hancock- 1963- Inventions and Dimensions {RVG Remaster}
BN.4148- George Braith- 1963- Two Souls in One
BN.4149- Hank Mobley- 1963- No Room for Squares {RVG Remaster}
BN.4150- Stanley Turrentine- 1963- A Chip Off The Old Block {RVG Remaster}






Wayne Shorter - JuJu (1965/FLAC)


 JuJu is the fifth album by American jazz saxophonist Wayne Shorter. It was released in July 1965 by Blue Note Records. It features a rhythm section of pianist McCoy Tyner, bassist Reggie Workman and drummer Elvin Jones, all of whom had worked extensively with Shorter’s fellow tenor saxophonist John Coltrane. 

  •     Wayne Shorter – tenor saxophone
  •     McCoy Tyner – piano
  •     Reggie Workman – bass
  •     Elvin Jones – drums





Side One

  1.     "JuJu" – 8:30
  2.     "Deluge" – 6:49
  3.     "House of Jade" – 6:49

Side Two

  1.     "Mahjong" – 7:39
  2.     "Yes or No" – 6:34
  3.     "Twelve More Bars to Go" – 5:26

John Di Martino's Romantic Jazz Trio - The Beatles In Jazz 2 (2017/FLAC)

 

  • John Di Martino - piano
  • Boris Kozlov - bass
  • Alvin Atkinson - drums





01. For No One
02. Mother Nature’s Son
03. Something
04. You Never Give Me Your Money
05. If I Fell
06. She’s Leaving Home
07. Till There Was You
08. Hey Jude
09. I’ll Follow The Sun
10. Girl
11. You’ve Got To Hide Your Love Away
12. Oh! Darling
13. Why Don’t We Do It In The Road
14. Imagine

Johnny Dodds - Chronogical Classics 1926-1940 (4 CD/FLAC)

Johnny Dodds (April 12, 1892 – August 8, 1940) was an American New Orleans based jazz clarinetist and alto saxophonist, best known for his recordings under his own name and with bands such as those of Joe "King" Oliver, Jelly Roll Morton, Lovie Austin and Louis Armstrong. Dodds (pronounced "dots") was also the older brother of drummer Warren "Baby" Dodds. The pair worked together in the New Orleans Bootblacks in 1926.

Born in Waveland, Mississippi, United States, he moved to New Orleans in his youth, and studied clarinet with Lorenzo Tio. He played with the bands of Frankie Duson, Kid Ory, and Joe "King" Oliver. Dodds went to Chicago and played with Oliver's Creole Jazz Band, with which he first recorded in 1923. Dodds also worked frequently with his good friend Natty Dominique during this period, a professional relationship that would last a lifetime. After the breakup of Oliver's band in 1924, Dodds replaced Alcide Nunez as the house clarinetist and bandleader of Kelly's Stables. He recorded with numerous small groups in Chicago, most notably Louis Armstrong's Hot 5 and Hot 7, and Jelly Roll Morton's Red Hot Peppers.

Noted for his professionalism and virtuosity as a musician, and his heartfelt, heavily blues-laden style, Dodds was an important influence on later clarinetists, notably Benny Goodman.

Dodds did not record for most of the 1930s, affected by ill health. He died of a heart attack in Chicago, in August 1940.

In 1987, Dodds was inducted into the Down Beat Jazz Hall of Fame.
 




 

John Pizzarelli discography (1985-2021)


 John Paul Pizzarelli Jr. (born April 6, 1960, in Paterson, New Jersey) is an American jazz guitarist and vocalist. He has recorded over twenty solo albums and has appeared on more than forty albums by other recording artists, including Paul McCartney, James Taylor, Rosemary Clooney; his father, jazz guitarist Bucky Pizzarelli; and his wife, singer Jessica Molaskey. 





1985 Hit That Jive, Jack!
1990 My Blue Heaven
1991 All of Me
1993 Naturally
1994 Dear Mr. Cole
1994 New Standards
1994 The Best of John Pizzarelli - I Like Jersey Best
1996 After Hours
1996 Let's Share Christmas
1996 One Night With You - The John Pizzarelli Collection
1997 Our Love is Here to Stay
1998 Meets The Beatles
1999 P.S. Mr. Cole
2000 Kisses in The Rain
2000 Let There Be Love
2002 The Rare Delight of You
2003 Live at Birdland 2CD
2004 Bossa Nova
2005 Knowing You
2006 Dear Mr. Sinatra
2007 Blue Too (& Aaron Weinstein)
2008 With a Song in My Heart
2010 Rockin' in Rhythm - A Duke Ellington Tribute
2012 Double Exposure
2015 Midnight McCartney
2017 Sinatra & Jobim @ 50 (& Daniel Jobim)
2019 For Centennial Reasons- 100 Year Salute to Nat King Cole
2021 Better Days Ahead

VA - Boogie Woogie And Blues Piano (1935-41) [Mosaic Select 30] (3 CD, 2008/FLAC)


While most Mosaic limited-edition boxed sets concentrate on recordings by an individual bandleader or a single record label, Boogie Woogie and Blues Piano features sessions by a number of different artists from several labels active in the 1930s and early '40s, when boogie-woogie was very popular. Fifteen different pianists are featured (if one counts Lionel Hampton playing two fingered-duo piano in a band setting), though it is the giants of the genre, Meade "Lux" Lewis, Pete Johnson, Albert Ammons, and Jimmy Yancey who are given the most exposure. The first three are individually paired (Johnson and Ammons) and play together as a trio, occasionally accompanying blues vocalist Joe Turner or adding a superfluous rhythm section. Lewis is clearly the most inventive of them all, especially when performing his hit "Honky Tonk Train Blues" (revived in a big-band setting by rocker Keith Emerson during the '70s) or his lesser-known "Whistlin' Blues." Ammons has the strongest rhythmic sense, as displayed in the two takes of "Shout for Joy." Johnson is heard in several small group sessions as well, featuring Turner along with alto saxophonist Buster Smith and trumpeter Hot Lips Page. Yancey, who was recorded more sporadically than Lewis, Johnson, and Ammons, is extensively featured, playing solo, accompanying singer Faber Smith and occasionally singing himself. Yancey's slower, blues-drenched style is unmistakable for anyone else, highlighted by his own "Yancey Stomp" and the two takes of "Yancey's Bugle Call." There is a sampling of other pianists, including Joe Sullivan, Mary Lou Williams (who played nearly every style that appeared during her lifetime with authority), Teddy Wilson (who never considered himself a talented boogie-woogie player), Nat King Cole, and Sir Charles Thompson (each of whom duets with Hampton and the more commercial Freddie Slack. The blues piano sessions of Cripple Clarence Lofton wrap this enjoyable collection with a flourish. The sound restoration and Dan Morgenstern's excellent liner notes add to the value of this limited-edition compilation.  






 

Jimmy Raney - Woody Herman's Cool Guitar Player (1949-1955) (Quadromania 4 CD, 2005/FLAC)

 
Jimmy Raney was the definitive cool jazz guitarist, a fluid bop soloist with a quiet sound who had a great deal of inner fire. He worked with local groups in Chicago before spending nine months with Woody Herman in 1948. From then on he was in the major leagues, having associations with Al Haig, Buddy DeFranco, Artie Shaw, and Terry Gibbs. His work with Stan Getz (1951-1952) was historic, as the pair made for a classic musical partnership. Raney was also very much at home in the Red Norvo Trio (1953-1954) before spending six years primarily working in a supper club with pianist Jimmy Lyon (1954-1960). After playing with Getz during 1962-1963, he returned to Louisville and was outside of music until resurfacing in the early '70s. 





 

Blue Note Works 4000-4100 series [4126-4140]

 

 

...The Modern Jazz Series continued into the 1970s with the LPs listed below. Many were issued in both monaural versions (BLP series) and stereo versions (BST 84000 series).  Most of the 4000 series have been reissued by Toshiba-EMI in Japan ("Blue Note Works 4000" series); the catalog numbers are TOCJ-4###


BN.4126- Herbie Hancock- 1963- My Point Of View {RVG Remaster}
BN.4127- Kenny Dorham- 1963- Una Mas {RVG Remaster}
BN.4129- Stanley Turrentine- 1963- Never Let Me Go {RVG Remaster}
BN.4130- John Patton- 1963- Along Came John
BN.4131- Horace Silver- 1963- Silver's Serenade {RVG Remaster}
BN.4132- Grant Green- 1962- Feelin' The Spirit {RVG Remaster}
BN.4133- Dexter Gordon- 1962- A Swingin' Affair {RVG Remaster}
BN.4134- Horace Parlan- 1963- Happy Frame of Mind
BN.4135- Freddie Hubbard- 1962- Here To Stay {RVG Remaster}
BN.4136- Solomon Ilori- 1963- African High Life
BN.4137- Jackie McLean- 1963- One Step Beyond {RVG Remaster}
BN.4139- Grant Green- 1963- Am I Blue {RVG Remaster}
BN.4140- Joe Henderson- 1963- Page One {RVG Remaster}





Sphere discography [1982-1997/FLAC]

 

Sphere was an American jazz band which began as a tribute to pianist Thelonious Monk, whose middle name was "Sphere".

The band consisted of pianist Kenny Barron, bassist Buster Williams, and two members who had been Monk's bandmates, drummer Ben Riley and saxophonist Charlie Rouse. After Rouse died in 1988, Sphere disbanded but reunited ten years later with Gary Bartz taking Rouse's place.

Sphere recorded its first album on the day that Monk died, February 17, 1982. This was a tribute album of tunes by Monk. The band recorded several more albums which included jazz standards and original compositions.





1982 - Four In One
1983 - Flight Path
1985 - On Tour (Live)
1986 - Pumpkins Delight (Live At Umbria Jazz)
1987 - Four For All
1988 - Bird Songs
1997 - Sphere

Frank Rosolino & Conte Candoli - Just Friends (Live) [1977/2016 remaster/FLAC]

 

This album continues the quintet’s exciting impromptu dialogue at Munich’s Domicile jazz club, as the band plays classic jazz standards with a drive and exuberance indicative of the onstage comradery. Stella By Starlight is taken at a bright tempo with stellar solos by Candoli and Rosolino. Isla Eckinger’s masterful solo demonstrates why he is one of Europe’s outstanding bassists, and Frank and Conte trade dazzling eight and four bar passages before playing the theme out. The quintet maintains a scintillating tempo on Just Friends, and keeps the heat up on There Is No Greater Love. Thelonious Monk’s classic Well You Needn’t is played up-tempo. Rosolino and Candoli fluently maneuver their way through the changes, while pianist Rob Pronk tips his hat to Monk’s pianistic magic. There’s some incendiary four bar exchanges between the horns and drummer Todd Conedy on the 16 bars before the last theme. Jobim’s bossa Quiet Nights morphs into incandescent swing, while the band transforms the ballad My Funny Valentine into an infectious hard-swinging letter of love to the art of improvisation. 





Recorded May 1975 at Domicile Jazz Club in Munich, Germany

Frank Rosolino, trombone
Conte Candoli, trumpet
Rob Pronk, piano
Isla Eckinger, bass
Todd Canedy, drums

01 - Stella by Starlight 07:46
02 - Just Friends 07:22
03 - There Is No Greater Love 09:57
04 - Well You Neednt 08:10
05 - Quiet Nights 08:53
06 - My Funny Valentine 07:53

Cab Calloway - Chronogical Classics 1940-1949 (5 CD/FLAC)

 
Cabell "Cab" Calloway III (December 25, 1907 – November 18, 1994) was an American jazz singer, dancer, bandleader and actor. He was associated with the Cotton Club in Harlem, where he was a regular performer and became a popular vocalist of the swing era. His niche of mixing jazz and vaudeville won him acclaim during a career that spanned over 65 years.

Calloway was a master of energetic scat singing and led one of the most popular dance bands in the United States from the early 1930s to the late 1940s. His band included trumpeters Dizzy Gillespie, Jonah Jones, and Adolphus "Doc" Cheatham, saxophonists Ben Webster and Leon "Chu" Berry, guitarist Danny Barker, bassist Milt Hinton, and drummer Cozy Cole.

Calloway had several hit records in the 1930s and 1940s, becoming known as the "Hi-de-ho" man of jazz for his most famous song, "Minnie the Moocher", originally recorded in 1931. He reached the Billboard charts in five consecutive decades (1930s–1970s). Calloway also made several stage, film, and television appearances until his death in 1994 at the age of 86. He had roles in Stormy Weather (1943), Porgy and Bess (1953), The Cincinnati Kid (1965), and Hello Dolly! (1967). His career saw renewed interest when he appeared in the 1980 film The Blues Brothers.

Calloway was the first African American musician to sell a million records from a single and to have a nationally syndicated radio show. In 1993, Calloway received the National Medal of Arts from the United States Congress. He posthumously received the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2008. His song "Minnie the Moocher" was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1999, and added to the Library of Congress' National Recording Registry in 2019. He is also inducted into the Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame and the International Jazz Hall of Fame. 




 

Bill Evans - Complete On Verve [18 CD, 1993]

The 18 CDs in this exhaustive set provide a comprehensive picture of Bill Evans from 1962 to 1969, a period when the pianist was both consolidating his fame and sometimes taking his music into untested waters, from unaccompanied piano to symphony orchestra. His work with multitracked solo piano, originally released as Conversations with Myself and the later Further Conversations with Myself, was the most remarkable new format for his introspective music. It gave Evans a way to be all the pianists he could be at once--combining densely chordal, harmonically oblique parts with surprising, rhythmic punctuation and darting, exploratory runs. Two dates with drummer Shelly Manne, in 1962 and 1966, reveal the stimulus Evans could find in a new playing relationship, as does the final disc with flutist Jeremy Steig. Evans also revisited significant earlier musical relationships. The Village Vanguard recordings from 1967 reunite him with the great drummer Philly Joe Jones, whose extroverted, polyrhythmic approach always worked wonderfully with the pianist's more introverted style. Along with the virtuosic young bassist Eddie Gomez, they make up one of the most stimulating of the many trios that Evans led throughout his career. There's also a superb set of duets with guitarist Jim Hall, another of Evans's most closely attuned musical partners. Evans's recordings with a symphony orchestra are marred by conductor Claus Ogermann's ponderous arrangements, and some false starts and multiple takes will appeal only to completists, but there are tremendous musical riches here. The set is packaged in an unfinished metal box designed to rust into an original object, but Evans's own originality is apparent everywhere.

 


 

Bud Shank & Bob Cooper - Mosaic Select 10 (3 CD, 2004/FLAC)


 For hardcore West Coast jazz fans, this Mosaic Select volume will be a kind of treasure-trove, though for most it will simply be a compelling curiosity piece. The collaborations of saxophonist and flutist Bud Shank and arranger, saxophonist, and oboist Bob Cooper created some tumult in the mid-1950s, when they recorded four albums together with various-sized ensembles, and, to a lesser degree, on Shank's date with Bob Brookmeyer arranged by Cooper. All tolled, there are five albums on these three discs: Bud Shank and Bob Brookmeyer (along with the session's remaining tracks that showed up on Bud Shank and Three Trombones on Pacific Jazz), Jazz at Cal-Tech (Pacific Jazz), Flute and Oboe (World Pacific), Swing's to TV, as well as the cuts from Jazz Swings Broadway (World Pacific) and of course, the classic, Blowin' Country (World Pacific). The quark strangeness and charm of these recordings cannot be underestimated, and neither can their swing. With sidemen like pianist Claude Williamson, drummers Chuck Flores or Shelly Manne, bassist Don Prell and others, these dates have a kind of quaintness that dates them in that restless yet ultra-hip period in the 1950s when almost anything went as long as it swung, and that stood outside the entire hard bop scene. These sides are not for everyone, but they are priceless for the sheer sophistication and adventurousness of their arrangements and the interplay between Shank and Cooper, which was symbiotic. A very fine idea by the folks at Mosaic. 




 

The Bad Plus discography [2000-2019]

  
The Bad Plus is a jazz trio from the United States, consisting of pianist Ethan Iverson, bassist Reid Anderson, and drummer Dave King, originating from Minneapolis, Minnesota.


The trio's music combines elements of modern avant-garde jazz with rock and pop influences. The band have recorded versions of songs by Nirvana, Aphex Twin, Blondie, Pink Floyd, Ornette Coleman, Pixies, Rush, Tears for Fears, Neil Young, David Bowie, Yes, Interpol, and Black Sabbath. Blunt Object: Live in Tokyo includes a cover of Queen's "We Are the Champions" along with the jazz standard "My Funny Valentine". Suspicious Activity? contains a cover of the theme from "Chariots of Fire", while a version of "Karma Police" by Radiohead appeared on the 2006 album Exit Music: Songs with Radio Heads. The band has said that they changed their sound a little bit for their sixth album, For All I Care.





The Bad Plus.2000- The Bad Plus
The Bad Plus.2003- These Are The Vistas
The Bad Plus.2004- Give
The Bad Plus.2005- Suspicious Activity
The Bad Plus.2006- Blunt Object - Live In Tokyo
The Bad Plus.2007- Prog
The Bad Plus.2008- For All I Care
The Bad Plus.2009- For All I Care
The Bad Plus.2011- Never Stop
The Bad Plus.2012- Made Possible
The Bad Plus.2014- Inevitable Western
The Bad Plus.2014- The Rite Of Spring
The Bad Plus.2015- The Bad Plus Joshua Redman
The Bad Plus.2016- It's Hard
The Bad Plus.2018- Never Stop II
The Bad Plus.2019- Activate Infinity

Blue Note Works 4000-4100 series [4111-4125]

 
...The Modern Jazz Series continued into the 1970s with the LPs listed below. Many were issued in both monaural versions (BLP series) and stereo versions (BST 84000 series).  Most of the 4000 series have been reissued by Toshiba-EMI in Japan ("Blue Note Works 4000" series); the catalog numbers are TOCJ-4###


BN.4111- Grant Green- 1962- The Latin Bit {RVG Remaster}
BN.4112- Dexter Gordon- 1962- GO! {RVG Remaster}
BN.4113- Freddie Roach- 1962- Down To Earth {RVG Remaster}
BN.4114- Ike Quebec- 1962- Boss Nova. Soul Samba {RVG Remaster}
BN.4115- Freddie Hubbard- 1962- Hub-Tones {RVG Remaster}
BN.4116- Jackie McLean- 1962- Jackie McLean Quintet (not released)
BN.4117- Jimmy Smith- 1960- Back at the Chicken Shack {RVG Remaster}
BN.4118- Donald Byrd- 1961- Free Form {RVG Remaster}
BN.4119- Charlie Rouse- 1962- Bossa Nova Bacchanal
BN.4121- Don Wilkerson- 1962- Elder Don
BN.4122- Stanley Turrentine - 1962-  Jubilee Shout!!!
BN.4123- Kenny Burrell- 1963- Midnight Blue {RVG Remaster}
BN.4124- Donald Byrd- 1963- A New Perspective {RVG Remaster}
BN.4125- Lou Donaldson- 1963- Good Gracious!





Eric Vloeimans - V-Flow (5 CD, 2010/FLAC)


Eric Vloeimans is an award-winning jazz trumpeter, songwriter, and record producer. With his crisp attack and rich tone, he is arguably the most famous jazz trumpeter in the Netherlands. Throughout his long career, Vloeimans has consistently colored outside defined genre lines. He continually melds jazz with influences ranging from classical, pop music, folk, and even electronica by using a wide array of effects on his horn.

V-Flow is a limited distribution box that compiles some of the trumpeter's best work as a leader, alongside significant sideman sessions. Even those who have his twelve Challenge releases, from 1994's First Floor through to 2009's Heavens Above! will likely find a few previously unheard gems on V-Flow, most significantly the more than half of his debut as a leader, No Realistics (Art in Jazz/Via, 1992), previously out of print and now remastered for a chock-full collection that's clocks in at just under six hours.

Since graduating from the Rotterdam Conservatorium with honors in the late 1980s, in addition to time spent at the prestigious New School in New York, Vloeimans has gradually but inexorably and inevitably become one of the best-known of Holland's next generation of jazz musicians, a small but potent collective that also includes guitarists Jesse van Ruller and Anton Goudsmit, saxophonists Benjamin Herman and Yuri Honing, and keyboardist Michiel Borstlap. Vloeimans has comfortably married a clear knowledge and reverence of the American jazz tradition to hints of European classicism, occasional shots of futuristic electronic, and no shortage of the absurdity endemic to the New Dutch Swing of musicians like internationally known drummer Han Bennink and pianist Misha Mengelberg, both part of the first wave of their homeland's jazz in the 1960s, when it began to shake off its largely imitative approach and assert its own distinctive personality and aesthetic. 






 

Don Wilkerson - The Complete Blue Note Sessions (1962-63) (2 CD, 2001/FLAC)


Don Wilkerson
was a saxophonist in the mold of Gene Ammons and Willis Jackson, a big-toned, booting Texas tenor player who mixed blues, swing, and bop into a joyous, soulful brew. A mainstay of Ray Charles's band, he contributed tenor solos to hits such as "I Got a Woman" but never achieved the enduring fame of band-mate David Newman. He recorded three sessions for Blue Note in 1962 and 1963, all collected on this two-CD set. It's classic soul jazz, riff-based and driving, with Wilkerson touching on a variety of bases, from bar-walking roadhouse shuffles to the rolling gospel of "Camp Meeting" and some gorgeous sweet-toned balladry on "Poor Butterfly" and "Easy Living." Guitarist Grant Green is present on all three sessions, playing with a grittier edge than usual, and there are strong contributions from other Blue Note regulars as well. Hard-bop pianist Sonny Clark and drummer Billy Higgins take some real delight in getting back to basics on the first session, while organist John Patton lays down a carpet of sounds both sanctified and funky on the third. The second session, with drummer Willie Bobo, has Wilkerson touching on the Latin and western sides of his Texas background, even mixing them together on Bob Wills's "San Antonio Rose." 





 

Jimmie Noone - Chronogical Classics 1923-1940 (5 CD/FLAC)

 
Jimmie Noone (or Jimmy Noone; April 23, 1895 – April 19, 1944) was an American jazz clarinetist.


Noone was born in Cut Off, Louisiana, and started playing guitar in his home town; at the age of 15, he switched to the clarinet and moved to New Orleans, where he studied with Lorenzo Tio and with the young Sidney Bechet, who was only 13 at the time. By 1912, he was playing professionally with Freddie Keppard in Storyville, and played with Buddy Petit, Kid Ory, Papa Celestin, the Eagle Band, and the Young Olympia Band, before joining the Original Creole Orchestra in Chicago, Illinois in 1917. The following year, he joined King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band, then in 1920 joined Keppard in Doc Cook's band which he would remain with for six years, and make early recordings with. In 1926, he started leading the band at Chicago's Apex Club. This band, Jimmie Noone's Apex Club Orchestra, was notable for its unusual instrumentation—a front line consisting of just Noone and alto saxophonist/clarinetist Joe Poston, who had worked with Noone in Doc Cook's band. The influential Pittsburgh-born pianist Earl Hines was also in the band for a time.

Noone signed with Brunswick in May, 1928 and was assigned to their Vocalion label. From his first session yielded "Four or Five Times" b/w "Every Evening (I Miss You") (Vocalion 1185), which was a best seller. He continued recording for Vocalion prolifically through February, 1935. He then signed with Decca in early 1936 and one session each for Decca in 1936, 1937 and 1940. He did one session for Bluebird also in 1940.

In 1935, Noone moved to New York City to start a band and a (short-lived) club with Wellman Braud. He then returned to Chicago where he played at various clubs until 1943, when he moved to Los Angeles, California. Shortly after he joined Kid Ory's band, which was featured for a time on a radio program hosted by Orson Welles. Noone played a few broadcasts with the band, but died suddenly of a heart attack. The Ory band, with New Orleans-born clarinetist Wade Whaley, played a blues (titled "Blues for Jimmie" by Welles) in his honor on the radio, and the number eventually became a regular feature for the Ory band. He died, aged 48, in Los Angeles, California.




 

VA - Jazz Classic Songs Vol. 1 & 2 (2007/FLAC)









VOLUME 01
1. I`m Beginning To See The Ligh[ Joe Williams With Count Basie] 3:09.
2. Top Hat, White Tie And Tails [ Louis Armstrong] 4:14
3. Tenderly [Billie Holiday] 3:45
4. Stockholm Sweetin` [Jon Hendricks]3:50
5. The Touch Of Your Lips [Chet Baker]2:45
6. It Ain`t So Honey It Ain`t So [Jack Teagarden] 2:45
7. Is You Is Or You Ain`t (Ma Baby) [Louis Jordan] 3:25
8. I Could Have Told You [Artur Prysock] 3:47
10 Too Close For Comfort [Mel Torme] 4:05
11. It Was A Very Good Year [Wes Montgomery] 3:48
12. Please Don`t Talk About Me When I`m Gone [Billie Holiday] 4:23
13. Squatty Roo [Ella Fitzgerald] 1:16
14. Crazy He Calls Me [Dinah Washington] 4:52
15. Only Trust Your Heart [Stan Getz & Astrud Gilberto] 4:31
16. Don`t Explain [Nina Simone] 4:22
16. If You Could See Me Now [Morgana King] 3:23
17. A Child Is Born [Oscar Peterson] 2:36

VOLUME 02
1. Too Darn Hot [Mel Torme ] 2:49
2. Easy To Love [Charlie Parker With Strings ]3:34
3. I Wish I Were In Love Again [Ella Fitzgerald] 2:40
4. Little Girl Blue [Louis Armstrong ]5:46
5. Ten Cents A Dance [Anita O'Day ]3:41
6. Dancing On The Ceiling [Erroll Garner ]3:41
7. I Didn't Know What Time It Was [Billie Holiday] 6:01
8. Thou Swell [Count Basie & Joe Williams] 2:26
9. It Never Entered My Mind [Coleman Hawkins & Ben Webster] 5:51
10. Falling In Love With Love [Helen Merrill] 3:57
11. Everything I've Got [Tal Farlow] 3:34
12. Nobody's Heart [Mel Torme] 1:53
13. Things Are Looking Up [Ella Fitzgerald] 3:09
14. Summertime [Charlie Parker With Strings] 2:50
15. I Was Doing All Right [Louis Armstrong] 3:23
16. I Got Rhythm [Oscar Peterson] 3:25
17. They All Laughed [Fred Astaire] 3:01
18. Someone To Watch Over Me [ Roland Kirk] 3:41
19. Love For Sale [Billie Holiday ]3:00
20. Let's Do It [Dinah Washington] 2:39 

John Patton - Mosaic Select 6 (3 CD, 2003/FLAC)

 

The Mosaic Select treatment has deservedly been given to Big John Patton. There are those who argue that Patton's entire catalog should have been the subject of a Mosaic box set proper. There was easily enough material for five, if not six, CDs. There are five albums collected here. His first three, Along Came John, The Way I Feel, and Oh Baby!, were recorded in 1963, 1964, and 1965, respectively. The last two on this set are That Certain Feeling and Understanding, from 1968.



 Missing are Blue John, his proper second album from 1963 and unreleased until 1986, Let 'Em Roll, and Got a Good Thing Goin', released in 1965 and 1966, and his post-1968 work, Accent on the Blues, Memphis to New York Spirit (unreleased until 1996), and Boogaloo. Quibbling aside, of the material included here, only Along Came John is currently available domestically, making this set a necessary purchase for Patton fans who have not shelled out the big bucks for Japanese pressings. Virtually every one of these outings is important, the first because it showcased Patton outside of his stead in Lou Donaldson's great early-'60s combo, accompanied by tenors Fred Jackson and Harold Vick with Grant Green and Ben Dixon. The band changed only slightly for The Way I Feel, when Vick was replaced by trumpeter Richard Williams. On Oh Baby!, Jackson was replaced by Vick and Williams by Blue Mitchell. These three dates are all very much of a piece. The band stays deep in the funky blues groove while nodding to the waning days of hard bop. And while the horns are generally regarded as strictly meat and potatoes on these sides, a close listen will correct that erroneous perception.

In the late '60s, Patton's sound became more lean, yet also more expansive and spacious. With Junior Cook on saxophone, Clifford Jarvis on drums, and Jimmy Ponder on guitar, Patton embarked on That Certain Feeling, one of his most illustrious dates as a leader. Ponder's fluid and edgy runs nicely complemented Patton's now arpeggio-heavy manner of playing. Cook's smoky tone that came out of both Ben Webster and Coleman Hawkins added depth, dimension, and ambience to the band's sound. On the final session here, Understanding, the sound cut even closer to the bone: Harold Alexander was enlisted on tenor and flute, with drummer Hugh Walker the only other musician involved. The trio played all around the groove jazz sound, while turning it inside out in Alexander's out-ish honking solos. Patton's organ is way up in the mix, shape-shifting time signatures inside a 2/4 meter. The pace is aggressive, deep, and at times dissonant, making an excellent case for reappraisal here, as it dates better than anything else on this set. All in all, this is a deep, sometimes mystifying collection featuring Patton as a composer, bandleader, and arranger. His sense of rhythmic dynamics is among the most sophisticated in the history of the jazz B-3. There isn't a weak second on any of this material and it should be snapped up before Mosaic's copies go -- they do not reissue. Blue Note should take the cue, do the entire catalog in 24-bit audio, and hustle it out there.



♦ CD1 (01:11:44)


01. The Silver Meter [05:40]
02. I'll Never Be Free [05:03]
03. Spiffy Diffy [06:00]
04. Along Came John [06:02]
05. Gee Gee [06:02]
06. Pig Foots [05:44]
07. The Rock [07:29]
08. The Way I Feel [08:38]
09. Jerry [06:45]
10. Davene [07:25]
11. Just 3/4 [06:51]

♦ CD2 (01:02:14)


01. Fat Judy [07:40]
02. Oh Baby [06:17]
03. Each Time [05:39]
04. One To Twelve [07:52]
05. Night Flight [06:35]
06. Good Juice [06:31]
07. String Bean [05:42]
08. I Want To Go Home [08:36]
09. Early A.M. [07:17]

♦ CD3 (00:58:47)


01. Dirty Fingers [06:09]
02. Minor Swing [06:38]
03. Daddy James [06:47]
04. Ding Dong [05:34]
05. Congo Chant [09:11]
06. Alfie's Theme [04:41]
07. Soul Man [06:11]
08. Understanding [06:56]
09. Chitlins Con Carne [06:36]

Personnel: Big John Patton (organ); Grant Green, Jimmy Ponder (guitar); Fred Jackson (tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone); Harold Vick, Junior Cook (tenor saxophone); Richard Gene Williams , Blue Mitchell (trumpet); Clifford Jarvis, Hugh Walker, Ben Dixon (drums).