Art Pepper - Blues for the Fisherman: Unreleased Art Pepper Vol VI [4 CD, 2011/FLAC]

  

The four sets recorded over two evenings reflect Pepper's late period aesthetic of kicking things off with a mid- to up-tempo blues, typically introduced by an alto flourish followed by a driving walk in the double bass. These sets are no exception. All originals: "Blues for Blanche," "True Blues" and the twice played "Untitled #34" demonstrate, in microcosmal fashion, Pepper's compositional and performance paradoxes, his coexistent selfishness and generosity. Late in his life, Pepper preferred the quartet format over those implying a second horn. This was his prerogative. Like Beethoven, Pepper believed himself an artist and afforded himself that luxury. He wrote difficult and challenging charts and expected much from his sidemen. He rewarded them with praise and plenty of solo time. The result was this music.

  • Art Pepper - alto sax with
  • Milcho Leviev - Piano,
  • Tony Dumas - Bass,
  • Carl Burnett - Drums.

Sylvain Luc - Original Album Classics (3 CD, 2010/FLAC)

 

French guitarist Sylvain Luc has honed his jazz improvisations since the 1980s, when he first discovered jazz as a teenager. He studied at the prestigious Academy de Bayonne as a child, mastering the guitar, cello, violin, and mandolin, but jazz shed a different light on Luc's musical ambitions. He spent time with the Bubble Quartet, discovering an appreciation for South African music in his twenties. Luc combined his love for jazz with worldbeat sounds and carved a career for himself. He issued his first album, Duet, in 2000. Sud followed shortly thereafter. A third album, Trio Sud, was issued in spring 2002 and featured collaborations with Jean-Marc Jafet and Andre Ceccarelli. 

CD1 - Trio Sud (2002) 
CD2 - Joko (2006) 
CD3 - Solo Ambre (2003) 

Blue Note Works 1500 series Vol.1501-1510

  

Blue Note Records is an American jazz record label, owned by Universal Music Group and currently operates in conjunction with Decca Records. Established in 1939 by Alfred Lion and Max Margulis, it derives its name from the characteristic "blue notes" of jazz and the blues. Originally dedicated to recording traditional jazz and small group swing, from 1947 the label began to switch its attention to modern jazz. While the original company did not itself record many of the pioneers of bebop, significant exceptions are Thelonious Monk, Fats Navarro and Bud Powell.

VA - A Night Out With Verve (4 CD, 2000)


 A Night Out With Verve highlights five decades of remarkable jazz taken from the Verve catalog, spread out over four discs titled "Wining," "Dining," "Dancing," and "Romancing." This box set includes 65 performances from jazz luminaries including Oscar Peterson, Sonny Rollins, Michel Legrand, Sarah Vaughan, Stan Getz, Louis Armstrong, Count Basie, Billie Holiday, Miles Davis, Duke Ellington, and Shirley Horn. Whether it's a night out on the town or a simple romantic evening, A Night Out With Verve has a great deal to offer die-hard jazz fans and casual listeners alike. 

Willie "The Lion" Smith - The Chronogical Classics (1925-1953) [5 CD/FLAC]


 William Henry Joseph Bonaparte Bertholoff Smith (23 November 1893 – 18 April 1973), a.k.a. "The Lion", was an American jazz pianist and one of the masters of the stride style, usually grouped with James P. Johnson and Thomas "Fats" Waller as the three greatest practitioners of the genre from its Golden Age, c. 1920–1943.

Cecil Taylor - The Complete Remastered Recordings on Black Saint & Soul Note (5 CD, 2011/FLAC)


 The five discs that make up Cecil Taylor's Complete Remastered Recordings on Black Saint & Soul Note include four recordings released in the 1980s, beginning with the stellar Winged Serpent (Sliding Quadrants) from 1984. Among the bunch, this album is the true standout for Taylor fans. Its personnel include altoist Jimmy Lyons, Frank Wright and John Tchicai on tenor saxophones (the latter also plays bass clarinet), Gunter Hampel on baritone saxophone and bass clarinet, Enrico Rava and Tomasz Stanko on trumpets, Karen Borca on bassoon, bassist William Parker, and drummer Rashid Bakr -- everyone chants. Two medium-length and two longer pieces reflect a free jazz intensity without sacrificing any of Taylor's more disciplined attitude toward improvisation during the decade. 

The second two discs in this set contain the Historic Concerts, taken from duet shows Taylor played with drummer Max Roach in 1979 but unissued until the '80s. Mostly this works: there is much beautiful interplay and communication; Roach's alternately strident and dancing styles on the kit engage Taylor as a true equal. That said, the pianist sometimes loses the frame and goes on flights that cannot be resolved in this setting. When it works, it's brilliant; when it doesn't, it's mildly annoying. 

The last two albums in this set are both from 1986. For Olim is a live solo recording and Taylor was on fire. This is a much more refined and spacious Taylor. With only the title track being of any real length, the shorter pieces reveal, without obscuration, the profound influence of Duke Ellington's pianism. The final offering, Olu Iwa, features Taylor leading a sextet with Peter Brötzmann and Frank Wright on tenor saxes, Parker on bass, Thurman Barker on marimba and percussion, and Air's Steve McCall on drums. There is a terrific sense of give and take in these pieces, with Taylor allowing plenty of solo space for his sidemen, but the ensemble aspects are engaged and lively, and touch on virtually every aspect of the pianist's career to that time, and even point forward to what he would be doing in Europe in the 1990s. Given the price tag and the stellar sound -- far better than the original LPs, which were sometimes pressed badly, and the first-generation CDs, which were mastered in an age before engineers knew how to really use the format -- this is a prime pick for Taylor fans.

Tommy Flanagan Trio - Complete Original Recordings [2 CD, 2007/FLAC)

 
2007 two CD release featuring, for the first time on a single collection, the complete output by the Tommy Flanagan Trio up to his 1978 albums. This release contains the first three sessions by the Tommy Flanagan Trio (issued as Overseas, Lonely Town, and The Tommy Flanagan Trio) in their entirety, plus all studio and live trio selections from other albums and a bonus quartet track with Kenny Burrell added on guitar.

Antonio Carlos Jobim - Original Album Series (5 CD, 2011/FLAC)

 



CD1 - The Wonderful World Of Antonio Carlos Jobim 1964 
CD2 - Love, Strings And Jobim 1966 
CD3 - A Certain Mr. Jobim 1967 
CD4 - Urubu 1976 
CD5 - Terra Brasilis 1980 

Chet Baker - Chet Baker Sings - The Complete 1953-62 Vocal Studio Recordings (3 CD, 2014/FLAC)

 

This collection compiles, for the first time ever on a single set, all existing studio recordings of Chet Baker singing from 1953 (his earliest vocal recordings) until 1962. The music on this set put Chet Baker on the scene not just as a brilliant trumpeter, but also as a talented singer. These songs were a revelation at the time and won Baker new fame and a new audience, which was less familiar with jazz than with pop music. The reasons are quite clear: Chet’s voice is tender and beautiful, and at the same time his phrasing always swings and surprises. Among the contents of this set are the complete original albums Chet Baker Sings and Chet Baker Sings It Could Happen to You, plus all other existing vocal sides within that period.

Lee Morgan - The Complete Live At The Lighthouse (8 CD, 2021/FLAC)


Blue Note Records has released Lee Morgan The Complete Live at the Lighthouse, an expansive collection that presents for the very first time all 12 sets of music the legendary trumpeter’s quintet with saxophonist Bennie Maupin, pianist Harold Mabern, bassist Jymie Merritt, and drummer Mickey Roker recorded during their historic engagement at The Lighthouse in Hermosa Beach, California from July 10-12, 1970. Originally released 50 years ago in 1971 as a 2-LP set, and later expanded to a 3-CD set in 1996, this definitive edition of Morgan’s only live album produced by Zev Feldman and David Weiss is available as an 8-CD set and a limited-edition 12-LP all-analog 180g vinyl set that encompasses 33 performances including more than 4 hours of previously unreleased music that lets the listener relive the experience of being in the club for every exhilarating moment.

  • Lee Morgan – trumpet, flugelhorn
  • Bennie Maupin – tenor saxophone, flute, bass clarinet
  • Harold Mabern – piano
  • Jymie Merritt – Ampeg bass
  • Mickey Roker – drums

Jack DeJohnette – drums (on “Speedball” from Friday, July 10, Set 4)