Toshiko Akiyoshi-Lew Tabackin Big Band - Mosaic Select 33 (3 CD, 2008/FLAC)


 The Toshiko Akiyoshi-Lew Tabackin Big Band was the premier recording and touring ensemble of its time in the mid- to late '70s, recording five albums for the RCA Victor label, and stunning audiences with sheer virtuosity and the charts of the Japanese born pianist. A symmetry between Asian culture and American bop made this orchestra most unique, exciting, and above all, highly original.

 This three-CD set contains the quintuple RCA studio recordings that set a high bar for all others to follow, and gave stiff competition to people like Gil Evans. Akiyoshi wrote music well suited to her rising stars and established veterans, while Tabackin was given more than ample opportunity to express himself on tenor sax, and especially his vibrant flute. This band also grew talent that would go on to become leaders, including Bobby Shew and Gary Foster, those who developed into section leaders like Phil Teele, Bill Reichenbach, and Dick Spencer, and trusted veterans Britt Woodman, Bill Perkins, Don Rader, and King Errison.

If you do not already own these recordings and are a progressive big-band fan, it is in your interest to search for this quintessential collection. Mosaic Select has hit a grand slam with this reissue, featuring a band in their early years that has hit on all cylinders since its inception, and never lets off the gas. It comes with an absolute highest recommendation.




Freddie Redd - The Complete Blue Note Recordings Of Freddie Redd (2 CD, 1989/FLAC)

 

Available in a box set as either three LPs or two CDs, this limited-edition release has all of the music recorded at pianist Freddie Redd's three Blue Note sessions. In addition to the selections originally included on the LPs Music From the Connection and Shades of Redd, there is a completely unissued date that adds to the fairly slim Freddie Redd discography. Altoist Jackie McLean (who is on all three sets) and tenor saxophonist Tina Brooks (a key soloist on two) co-star with the pianist; trumpeter Benny Bailey is also heard from the later date. The music is comprised mostly of Redd's originals (including seven songs written for the stage play The Connection) and fits into the style of the mainstream hard bop of the day, although with a few personal touches. Straight-ahead fans and Blue Note collectors can consider this set to be essential. 

 


Disc I

01. Who Killed Cock Robin (5:22)
02. Wigglin' (5:59)
03. Music Forever (5:57)
04. Time To Smile (6:25)
05. Them For Sister Salvation (4:46)
06. Jim Dunn's Dilemma (5:39)
07. O.D. (4:47)
08. The Thespian (7:00)
09. Blues, Blues, Blues (5:59)
10. Shadows (7:26)
11. Melanie (Alt. Tk) (5:25)

Disc II

01. Melanie (5:05)
02. Swift (4:01)
03. Just A Ballad For My Baby (4:13)
04. Ole (6:29)
05. Ole (Alt. Tk) (7:41)
06. Now (7:14)
07. Cute Doot (6:17)
08. Old Spice (7:05)
09. Blues For Betsy (5:02)
10. Somewhere (5:56)
11. Love Lost (7:10)

Blue Note Works 4000-4100 series [4031-4040]

 

...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.4031- Hank Mobley- 1960- Soul Station {RVG Remaster}
BN.4032- Sonny Red- 1960- Out Of The Blue
BN.4033- Dizzy Reece- 1960- Soundin' Off {RVG Remaster}
BN.4034- Lee Morgan- 1960- Lee-Way {RVG Remaster}
BN.4035- Duke Pearson- 1959- Tender Feelin's {RVG Remaster}
BN.4036- Lou Donaldson- 1960- Sunny Side Up
BN.4037- Horace Parlan- 1960- Us Three
BN.4038- Jackie McLean- 1960- Capuchin Swing {RVG Remaster}
BN.4039- Stanley Turrentine- 1960- Look Out! {RVG Remaster}
BN.4040- Freddie Hubbard- 1960- Open Sesame {RVG Remaster}

Michal Urbaniak discography [1970-2009]

 

Michał Urbaniak (born January 22, 1943) is a Polish jazz musician and composer born in Warsaw, Poland, playing mainly the violin, lyricon and saxophone during concerts and recordings. He played a central role in the development of jazz fusion in the 1970s and 1980s, and has introduced elements of folk, R&B, hip hop, and symphonic music to jazz.

Once Poland's most promising import in the jazz-rock 1970s, Michal Urbaniak's chief value in retrospect was as a fellow traveler of Jean-Luc Ponty, a fluid advocate of the electric violin, the lower-pitched Violectra, and the Lyricon (the first popular, if now largely under-utilized wind synthesizer). Like many Eastern European jazzmen, he would incorporate elements of Polish folk music into his jazz pursuits, and his other heroes range from the inevitable Miles Davis to Polish classicist Witold Lutoslawski. His electric violin was often filtered with a gauze of electronic modifying devices, and on occasion, he could come up with an attractively memorable composition like "Satin Lady."

Urbaniak began playing the violin at age six, followed by studies on the soprano and then tenor saxophones. His interests in jazz developed chronologically from Dixieland to swing to bop as he grew up, and he studied at the Academy of Music in Warsaw while working in various Polish jazz bands and playing classical violin. In 1965, he formed his own band in Scandinavia with singer Urszula Dudziak (later his wife), returning to Poland in 1969 to found Constellation, which included pianist Adam Makowicz. Having won a scholarship to the Berklee College of Music upon being voted Best Soloist at the 1971 Montreux Jazz Festival, Urbaniak made the U.S. his home in 1973. He soon formed a popular jazz-rock group called Fusion, recording for Columbia and Arista in a Mahavishnu Orchestra/Ponty fashion, with Dudziak adding darting, slippery scat vocals. This group lasted until 1977, and Urbaniak's profile would never be as high again, although he performed with Larry Coryell in 1982-1983, led the new electric group Urbanator in the 1990s, and has performed and recorded in other styles ranging from bop to free jazz into the 21st century.

 
Michal Urbaniak.1970- Paratyphus B
Michal Urbaniak.1971- Inactin
Michal Urbaniak.1971- Live Recordings (Polish Jazz)
Michal Urbaniak.1972- We'll Remember Komeda
Michal Urbaniak.1973- Constellation In Concert
Michal Urbaniak.1974- Atma
Michal Urbaniak.1974- Fusion
Michal Urbaniak.1975- Funk Factory
Michal Urbaniak.1975- Fusion III
Michal Urbaniak.1976- Body English
Michal Urbaniak.1977- Smiles Ahead
Michal Urbaniak.1977- Urbaniak
Michal Urbaniak.1978- Ecstasy
Michal Urbaniak.1978- Heritage
Michal Urbaniak.1980- Serenade For The City
Michal Urbaniak.1982- Solo's, Duo's & Trio's (w.Larry Corryel)
Michal Urbaniak.1984- Burning Circuits
Michal Urbaniak.1989- Songs For Poland
Michal Urbaniak.1990- Milky Way
Michal Urbaniak.1992- Manhattan Man
Michal Urbaniak.1993- Urbanator
Michal Urbaniak.1994- Some Other Blues
Michal Urbaniak.1996- Code Blue
Michal Urbaniak.1996- Live In Holy City
Michal Urbaniak.1996- My One And Only Love
Michal Urbaniak.1996- Urbanator II
Michal Urbaniak.2001- Sax, Love & Cinema
Michal Urbaniak.2005- Urbanator III
Michal Urbaniak.2007- Jazz Legends 2
Michal Urbaniak.2009- Miles Of Blue 2CD

Billy Eckstine – I Ain't Like That {Quadromania} [4 CD, 2005/FLAC]

 

William Clarence Eckstine (July 8, 1914 – March 8, 1993) was an American jazz and pop singer and a bandleader during the swing era. He was noted for his rich, almost operatic bass-baritone voice. His recording of "I Apologize" (MGM, 1948) was given the Grammy Hall of Fame Award in 1999. The New York Times described him as an "influential band leader" whose "suave bass-baritone" and "full-throated, sugary approach to popular songs inspired singers like Earl Coleman, Johnny Hartman, Joe Williams, Arthur Prysock and Lou Rawls." 

 


Andrew Hill - Solo : Mosaic Select 23 (3 CD, 2006/FLAC)


 Mosaic Select presents a limited edition containing all of the solo piano recordings made by Andrew Hill at the Fantasy studios in Berkeley, CA during August and October 1978. Only a fraction of this material -- the first two titles on the third disc -- had ever seen the light of day prior to this collection's release in the spring of 2007. Having operated throughout the '60s as an innovative composer, pianist and bandleader, Hill spent the first half of the following decade exercising his creativity by composing and instructing at Colgate University in Hamilton, NY, performing internationally, and making records for Freedom, East Wind and Steeplechase. In 1976 he moved to San Francisco with his wife, composer and organist Laverne Hill. The move was motivated by the fact that Laverne had recently learned that she was afflicted with an incurable ailment that would eventually deprive her of her life. Needing more peace and quiet than San Francisco offered, the Hills settled in Pittsburg, a small town east of Oakland. The music on this compilation is very personal, peaceful, ruminative and intimate. It was recorded during a time when Andrew Hill was performing regularly not too far from home, usually as a soloist in spaces better suited for the presentation of chamber music rather than in night clubs. "From California with Love" and "Reverend Du Bop" appeared on Artists House LP AH9, "From California with Love" was released in 1979. All of the rest of this music -- more than two hours of additional solo piano improvisations -- languished in Hawaii until the people behind Mosaic unearthed it and Michael Cuscuna produced this beautiful three-disc set. Readied for release during the summer of 2006, it was made available to the public in a limited edition only weeks after the passing of Andrew Hill in April 2007.

 


Disc I
01. Moonlit Monterey (16:03)
02. 17 Mile Drive (12:22)
03. Gone With The Wind (6:07)
04. I Remember Clifford (4:30)
05. Moonlit Monterey (alt take) (9:01)

Disc II
01. California Tinge (11:46)
02. Napa Valley Twilight (10:13)
03. Above Big Sur (15:59)
04. An Afternoon In Berkeley (12:15)
05. California Tinge (first version) (24:38)

Disc III
01. From California With Love (20:03)
02. Reverend Du Bop (18:43)
03. Pastoral Pittsburg (11:01)
04. Pittsburg Impasse (5:55)

VA - The Savory Collection 1935-1940 (6 CD, 2018/FLAC)


 Certain collections of music are so rich and deep that it feels like a listener could almost swim in them. This six-disc, 108-track set feels bottomless. It also represents one of the greatest provenance accounts in all of jazz. Someone ought to write a short story about it.

Bill Savory was a reticent New York recording engineer in the 1930s and 1940s who had a cool nocturnal habit: While transcribing radio broadcasts for foreign distribution, he liked to multitask, flipping on his recorders and capturing what was going out over the airwaves from live jazz-club performances that were only meant to be heard once. That is, if there had been no Bill Savory.

We could order a lot of beers and have a lot of passionate talks about what’s best and most valuable here. Here’s a whistle-wetter: a version of Coleman Hawkins’ “Body and Soul” cut seven months after its jazz epoch-shaping studio counterpart, and frankly better. At the earlier date, Hawkins had hit upon something, but now what was hit upon has been refined, sacrificing none of its immediacy as it extends its domain, roots plunging deeper into soil.

Given where jazz was played and where Savory was at, most of the recordings come from NYC, but there are others from the nightclub temples of Boston and Chicago. Fats Waller blazes at the charmingly billed The Yacht Club, as if a regatta were simultaneously unwinding outside. He had no idea this was being recorded, he’s playing only for the patrons of the evening, but his set selections underscore an epiphany central to the artistry of these men and women: The workaday gig is also the all-timer gig, the next entry in a progression of them. Nothing is throwaway, all can last. That is some doozy art.

Speaking of which: A WNEW jam session features Basie tenor sax stud Herschel Evans a mere month before his death, and when you hear the power coming through his horn, you wonder how the Reaper got up the balls to approach him. Rival/partner Lester Young, meanwhile, blows a blues so pure on “Lady Be Good” with the Basie band that you just about giggle that these two cats were somehow in the same unit. These players always belong to their moment entirely even as they transcend it, with Savory acting as recording scribe for a kind of jazz Bible.

Swing is the ostensible core of the collection, but what we’re hearing is jazz morphing, nightly. Drummer Chick Webb’s case as a sticksman and prime mover par excellence is furthered, Ella Fitzgerald is moving swing singing into an era of vocal Modernism, and if you don’t think the John Kirby sextet could hold its own in a battle of the bands versus Coltrane’s quartet or either Miles quintet, well, let’s line up these recordings with theirs and have everyone throw down. Thank you, Mr. Savory, for your hobby. You have provided a plunge into a lost sea of history. And you have done every corner of our human condition a massive solid.

 
 

Jack Teagarden - The Complete Roulette Sessions (4 CD, 2003/FLAC)

 

Jack Teagarden's output for Roulette between 1959-1961 had been out of print for decades until reissued in a lavishly packaged comprehensive box set by Mosaic in early 2003, half of which comes from a single night at the Roundtable. With trumpeter Don Goldie, pianist Don Ewell, clarinetist Henry Cuesta, bassist Stan Puls, and Ronnie Greb or Barrett Deems on drums, the trombonist leads his working sextet, with the added bonus of 25 previously unreleased tracks. Teagarden is in top form throughout every session. His matchless trombone seems effortless in chestnuts such as "That's a Plenty," "Basin Street Blues," and "St. James Infirmary"; he also plays euphonium on a record for the only time in his career during "Ol' Man River." His lyrical solos are matched by his vocals, especially the warm "One Hundred Years from Today" and the spirited "St. Louis Blues." Ewell, who plays consistently at the leader's level and also wrote the arrangements, is featured without the front line in swinging treatments of "Honeysuckle Rose" and "Atlanta Blues." Goldie is frequently an excellent soloist and ensemble player, though he falters by adding distracting codas to his ballad features. Puls and Greb are showcased in an unusual take of "Big Noise from Winnetka," where both musicians whistle in unison, as well as play their instruments, in this mostly visual crowd-pleasing favorite. Only two selections are duds; both the re-creation of Teagarden's classic duet with Louis Armstrong of "Rockin' Chair" and an overdone take of "When the Saints Go Marching In" are marred by Goldie's mimicry of Satchmo's gravelly vocals, which quickly gets tedious. But the beautifully remastered sound of these mostly exceptional performances, the detailed liner notes, and the rare photos make this limited-edition set an essential purchase.

 

 

McKinney's Cotton Pickers - Chronogical Classics 1928-1931 (3 CD)


William McKinney was a drummer who by 1923 had retired from playing in favor of conducting and managing a big band. In 1926 his outfit became known as McKinney's Cotton Pickers, and the following year they scored a major coup by hiring arranger/altoist/vocalist Don Redman away from Fletcher Henderson. As the band's musical director, Redman put together an outfit that competed successfully with Henderson and the up-and-coming Duke Ellington. The lineup of musicians by the time they started recording in 1928 included Langston Curl, Claude Jones, George Thomas, and Dave Wilborn, but it was the advanced arrangements, the tight ensembles, and the high musicianship of the orchestra on the whole that was most impressive. There were a few special all-star sessions with such players as Joe Smith, Sidney DeParis, Coleman Hawkins, Fats Waller, and Lonnie Johnson making appearances, and James P. Johnson sat in on one date. Among the more rewarding recordings overall were "Four or Five Times," "It's Tight like That," "It's a Precious Little Thing Called Love," and four future standards that Redman introduced: "Gee Baby Ain't I Good to You," "Baby Won't You Please Come Home," "I Want a Little Girl," and "Cherry."

It was a major blow in 1931 when Don Redman departed to form his own band. Benny Carter took over as musical director, but despite the presence of such fine players as Doc Cheatham, Hilton Jefferson, and holdovers Quentin Jackson, Rex Stewart, and Prince Robinson, there would only be one final recording session. The Depression eventually did the band in and after much turnover in 1934, the classic group broke up. McKinney organized later versions of the Cotton Pickers but without making an impression.

 
 

Bill Evans (sax) collection [1983-2016]

 

William D. "Bill" Evans (born February 8, 1958 in Clarendon Hills, Illinois) is an American jazz saxophonist who was a member of the Miles Davis group in the 1980s and the fusion band Elements. Evans plays tenor and soprano saxophones. He has recorded over 17 solo albums and received two Grammy Award nominations. He recorded an award-winning album called Bill Evans – Vans Joint with the WDR Big Band in 2009.

He has played a variety of music with his solo projects, including bluegrass, jazz, and funk. His style is influenced by Sonny Rollins, Joe Henderson, John Coltrane, Stan Getz, Steve Grossman, and Dave Liebman.

 


Bill Evans & WDR Big Band Cologne-(2010)- Vans Joint
Bill Evans, Randy Brecker-(2004)- Soul Bop Band Live (2 CD)
Bill Evans-(1983)- Living in the Crest of a Wave
Bill Evans-(1986)- The Alternative Man
Bill Evans-(1989)- Summertime
Bill Evans-(1994)- Push
Bill Evans-(1996)- Escape
Bill Evans-(1999)- Touch
Bill Evans-(2000)- Soul Insider
Bill Evans-(2007)- The Other Side Of Something
Bill Evans-(2012)- Dragonfly
Bill Evans-(2016)-Rise Above