The Crusaders were an American jazz group that were successful from the 1960s to the 1990s. The group were known as the Jazz Crusaders from their formation in 1960 until shortening their name in 1971. The Crusaders were comfortable playing a wide assortment of genres, from straight ahead jazz, to urban R&B, to R&B-based jazz, to even blues. The band reached a commercial apex in 1979 with their hit single "Street Life", featuring lead vocals by Randy Crawford, and their accompanying album of the same name.
The Crusaders album collection 1972-2003 (FLAC)
The Crusaders were an American jazz group that were successful from the 1960s to the 1990s. The group were known as the Jazz Crusaders from their formation in 1960 until shortening their name in 1971. The Crusaders were comfortable playing a wide assortment of genres, from straight ahead jazz, to urban R&B, to R&B-based jazz, to even blues. The band reached a commercial apex in 1979 with their hit single "Street Life", featuring lead vocals by Randy Crawford, and their accompanying album of the same name.
Peggy Lee - The Singles Collection (4 CD, 2002) [FLAC]
Peggy Lee was a renaissance woman, a multi-talented singer and composer who achieved popular as well as critical success. Short of a complete recordings box set, The Singles Collection is the best Peggy Lee career anthology yet, and a big improvement over the oddly compiled and sequenced 1998 box set Miss Peggy Lee. The Singles Collection isn't complete -- Lee released hundreds of singles -- and it doesn't come close to compiling all of her hits (in fact, it doesn't even compile all of her Top Ten hits), but it does offer a chronological journey through her catalog from her early days with Benny Goodman and Bob Crosby all the way up to the '70s when she recorded for A&M. Although Capitol Records produced the box set, the selections include cuts from other labels, including Lee's Decca Records period. Nearly half of the box's 110 tracks are new to CD, and collectors will appreciate the glimpse into the studio afforded by a handful of bonus tracks that include false starts and studio chatter. Lee may have enjoyed commercial success with "ethnic" novelties ("Mañana" being the foremost example) and upbeat pop songs, but it is her interpretations of serious jazz and pop tunes that have made her a contender for the title of Best Vocalist of the 20th Century. The Singles Collection follows her artistic growth and demonstrates the breadth of her interpretive abilities, which gives a better picture of Lee's artistry than any single album or inferior anthology could do.
Fats Waller - Chronogical Classics 1922-1940 (10 CD/FLAC)
Fats Waller seems never to have suffered from seasickness. Every
photograph and eyewitness account of his transatlantic nautical
adventures indicates a strong constitution, unfazed by rough seas even
if the rest of the passengers were hanging over the rails. When Waller
invaded London in August 1938, a team of Anglo and European musicians
were assigned the task of accompanying him through the grooves of six
phonograph recordings. Known for the rest of time as "Fats Waller &
His Continental Rhythm," this band hammered out one amazing performance
after the next. "Don't Try Your Jive on Me" and "Ain't Misbehavin'" both
feature the organ, cool at first but gradually gathering steam and
finishing grandly with horns in the air. "Music, Maestro Please" is
late-'30s sentimentality at its finest, with tinkling celeste and even a
bit of romantic violin. After Dr. Jekyll goes off to mope behind the
potted palms, Mr. Hyde bursts in on a riotous version of Slim Gaillard's
"Flat Foot Floogie" and an alarming ode to disappointed hopes with the
catchy title "Pent Up in a Penthouse." Here Waller threatens to "step
out the window and turn left," a frightening proposition for anyone
occupying a suite so many floors up from the street. Fats's maniacal
treatment of "A-Tisket A-Tasket" surpasses even the original version,
made famous by its composer Ella Fitzgerald. One week after this
combustible session, Fats placed himself at the console of a pipe organ,
that instrument so dear to his heart. It is a crying shame that no
recordings were made when Waller was granted access to the organ of the
Cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris. Fats later said he considered that to
have been the greatest moment of his life. Back in London, the organist
pointedly concentrated on spirituals, the music his father the Baptist
preacher would have preferred. "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot" is gorgeous.
Near the end the music, the song seems to become partially composed of
light as Waller's fingers create swirling tides of heavenly tonalities.
Before the session was over, Fats was given the opportunity to accompany
the lovely Adelaide Hall, famous for her wordless vocal on Duke
Ellington's original version of "Creole Love Call." Some music critics,
unable to enjoy Hall's diva approach, insist that she was "not a jazz
singer." This is a very odd assessment considering all the wonderful
jazz recordings she made throughout her long life, much of which was
spent in Scandinavia, where she always received respectful admiration.
Here Fats teases her with quips that help to spice up a very sweet pair
of love songs. Back in New York and bolstered by His Rhythm, Fats
wrestled with his repertoire, still saddled with droopy titles like
"I'll Never Forgive Myself." While "Two Sleepy People" is pleasant, it
pales when compared with Waller's lusty V-Disc version of 1943. Here in
the waning weeks of 1938, "You Look Good to Me" is the best of the vocal
tracks, second only to the bouncy instrumental "Yacht Club Swing."
Benny Carter - Anthology : The Deluxe Collection (Remastered) [3 CD,2020/FLAC]
Benny Carter was a major figure in every decade of the 20th century since the 1920s, and his consistency and longevity were unprecedented. As an altoist, arranger, composer, bandleader, and occasional trumpeter, Carter was at the top of his field since at least 1928, and in the late '90s, Carter was as strong an altoist at the age of 90 as he was in 1936 (when he was merely 28). His gradually evolving style did not change much through the decades, but neither did it become at all stale or predictable except in its excellence.
James "Blood" Ulmer discography [1977-2009]
Free jazz has not produced many notable guitarists. Experimental
musicians drawn to the guitar have had few jazz role models;
consequently, they've typically looked to rock-based players for
inspiration. James "Blood" Ulmer is one of the few exceptions --
an outside guitarist who has forged a style based largely on the
traditions of African-American vernacular music. Ulmer is an adherent of
saxophonist/composer Ornette Coleman's vaguely defined Harmolodic
theory, which essentially subverts jazz's harmonic component in favor of
freely improvised, non-tonal, or quasi-modal counterpoint. Ulmer plays
with a stuttering, vocalic attack; his lines are frequently texturally
and chordally based, inflected with the accent of a soul-jazz tenor
saxophonist. That's not to say his sound is untouched by the rock
tradition -- the influence of Jimi Hendrix on Ulmer is strong -- but
it's mixed with blues, funk, and free jazz elements. The resultant music
is an expressive, hard-edged, loudly amplified hybrid that is, at its
best, on a level with the finest of the Harmolodic school.
Duke Ellington - Never No Lament: The Blanton-Webster Band [3 CD, 2003]
Never No Lament: The Blanton-Webster Band is a 2003 three-disc compilation combining the master takes of all the recordings by Duke Ellington's Orchestra during
the years of 1940 to 1942 with an additional nine tracks, including
five alternative takes and four new masters. While essentially an
expanded re-release of 1990s The Blanton–Webster Band, the packaging,
sound and updated notes make this, according to Allmusic, "truly worth
either an initial investment or reinvestment". All About Jazz: New York
noted that these performances, from what is often considered "the band
in its prime", "not only set the standard for big bands and jazz
orchestras, but created an ideal near insurmountable to improve upon".
The Penguin Guide to Jazz selected this compilation as part of its
suggested "Core Collection."
Bassist Jimmy Blanton was only with the Ellington orchestra for two
years, retiring in 1941 due to tuberculosis, and dying the following
year at the age of 23. Despite this compilation's "Blanton-Webster Band"
subtitle, Blanton does not appear on the final 17 tracks of the
collection, having been replaced on bass by Alvin "Junior" Raglin.
Anita O'Day - The Complete Anita O'Day Verve-Clef Sessions (9 CD, 2019) [FLAC]
This collection presents everything Anita O'Day recorded for Norman Granz' Clef and Verve labels, including her reunion with Gene Krupa in 1956, and her cameo number in "The Gene Krupa Story". Except that one track is missing - "Get Out Of Town", from the album "Anita O'Day Swings Cole Porter With Billy May", which was track 9 on disc 6 of the original Mosaic box set, is not here. Nevertheless, 197 tracks for just over a tenner is astonishing value. You can find a review of the music in this set here: Anita was a real jazz singer and her interpretations of the great American songbook are much more original than many of the time.
Stan Getz - The Complete Roost Recordings 1950-1954 [3CD, 1997/FLAC]
The Complete Roost Recordings is a 1997 compilation 3-CD set of sessions led by saxophonist and bandleader Stan Getz recorded for the Roost Records label between 1950 and 1954.The compilation includes material previously released on Getz's Roost LPs The Sound, The Getz Age, the two volumes of Stan Getz at Storyville and the album with guitarist Johnny Smith - Moonlight in Vermont along with alternate takes and previously unreleased performances.
Norah Jones discography [2002-2020] (FLAC)
Vocalist and pianist Norah Jones developed
a unique blend of jazz and traditional vocal pop, with hints of bluesy
country and contemporary folk, due in large part to her unique
upbringing. The daughter of Ravi Shankar, Jones grew up in Texas
with her mother. While she always found the music of Billie Holiday and
Bill Evans both intriguing and comforting, she didn't really explore
jazz until attending Dallas' Booker T. Washington High School for the
Performing and Visual Arts. During high school, Jones won the Down Beat
Student Music Awards for Best Jazz Vocalist and Best Original
Composition in 1996, and earned a second Best Jazz Vocalist award in
1997. Putting her vocal talents on the back burner, Jones worked toward
earning a degree in jazz piano at the University of North Texas for two
years before accepting a friend's offer of a summer sublet in Greenwich
Village during the summer of 1999.
(2002) Norah Jones - Come Away With Me (CD + Enhanced BonusCD, Limited Edition)
(2004) Norah Jones - Feels Like Home (Deluxe Edition)
(2007) Norah Jones - Not Too Late
(2009) Norah Jones - The Fall (Deluxe Edition)
(2010) Norah Jones - ...Featuring
(2012) Norah Jones - Covers
(2012) Norah Jones - Little Broken Hearts (Deluxe Edition)
(2017) Norah Jones - Day Breaks
(2019) Norah Jones - Begin Again
(2020) Norah Jones - Pick Me Up Off The Floor
Dave Stryker - Blue to the Bone Vol. 1-4 (1996-2011/FLAC)
Dave Stryker (born March 30, 1957) is an American jazz guitarist. He has recorded over twenty-five albums as a leader and has been a featured sideman with Stanley Turrentine, Jack McDuff, and Kevin Mahogany.
Dave Stryker’s music is deeply rooted in blues, having performed with Jack McDuff in the 80s and Stanley Turrentine in the 90s. Dave’s special blend of jazz and blues culminated first time in 1996 in the form of “Blue To The Bone I”. Since then the project has become a popular on-going series.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)