The Bad Plus - The Bad Plus Joshua Redman (2015) [24-96]


The Bad Plus Joshua Redman is a 2015 album by jazz trio The Bad Plus and saxophonist Joshua Redman.

The record is the group's eleventh studio album and the first one in collaboration with Joshua Redman. It only contains original compositions, except for "Dirty Blonde" and "Silence is the Question" which already appeared on previous albums.

  •     Reid Anderson – bass
  •     Ethan Iverson – piano
  •     David King – drums
  •     Joshua Redman – saxophone


  1.  As This Moment Slips Away 06:53
  2.  Beauty Has it Hard 07:01
  3.  County Seat 03:03
  4.  The Mending 04:11
  5.  Dirty Blonde 05:32
  6.  Faith Through Error 03:18
  7.  Lack the Faith But Not the Wine 07:13
  8.  Friend or Foe 08:36
  9.  Silence is the Question 13:31



Tommy Dorsey & Frank Sinatra - The Song Is You (5 CD, 1994/FLAC)


 This five disc box set contains every studio recording Frank Sinatra performed with Tommy Dorsey and his orchestra, a few tracks of alternate recording takes, and a full disc of mostly-unreleased radio broadcasts. It is considered a definitive look at the first years of what would become a half-a-century long career. 



Grant Green — Retrospective 1961-66 [4CD, 2002/FLAC]


 Simply put, this is a very decent four-disc collection of the work of guitarist Grant Green. It features tracks from his many albums as a leader and some as a sideman with others, such as Lee Morgan, John Patton, Baby Face Willette, and Sonny Clark. His early-'60s sides are here along with most of his defining cuts from the '60s, from hard bop to soul-jazz to ballads to gospel -- everything most fans would ever want is here, including his late blues sides recorded in the bars of Detroit in 1970. While Green's own albums can never be replaced, this is a solid portrait of one of the most influential jazz guitarists in history. 


The Complete Tony Bennett/Bill Evans Recordings (2 CD, 2009/FLAC)


The Complete Tony Bennett/Bill Evans Recordings is a two-CD box set released in 2009 compiling the two recording sessions by singer Tony Bennett and pianist Bill Evans which produced The Tony Bennett/Bill Evans Album in 1975 and Together Again in 1976, including twenty alternate takes and two bonus tracks not released on the original albums.

  •     Tony Bennett – vocals
  •     Bill Evans – piano



Miles Davis Quintet - The Complete Columbia Studio Sessions 1965-68 (6 CD, 1998/FLAC)

 

By 1965 Miles Davis had gone through a handful of stages, from the Birth of the Cool nonet's multihued orchestrations to the development of a hard-bop sound keeled on Davis's midregister wooziness and the band's driving backbone in the "first" great quintet (featuring John Coltrane), to the modal freedom of Kind of Blue. So when the solidly established Davis convened a new quintet, known as his "second" great one, and hired youngsters Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, and Tony Williams, it seemed a skewed move. 

These six CDs show just how creatively and intelligently skewed the move really was. The material here, which has also been reissued on expanded single CDs of the main full-length original LPs (E.S.P., Miles Smiles, Sorcerer, Nefertiti, Miles in the Sky), is immediately and unceasingly startling. Davis & Co. were quickly discarding their live performance practice of playing loads of standards and were further discarding traditional melodic structures for more rigorous harmonic exercises. Shorter in particular, at times the most prolific composer in the band, was advancing his tunes and his solos in equal proportion. The tunes are increasingly sharp-edged and, with Williams driving the band with a categorical balance of abandon and control, loopily energized. Miles blows with tighter and tighter control of his tone even while the band seems to be finding all kinds of expressive freedoms that easily elongate into lengthier studies. Toward the end of this box, you'll hear the seeds of the Miles that went on to unloose Bitches Brew. Even though the roots of the aggressively electric Miles are in these sessions, there are uncategorizable points of beauty strewn all over the tunes.




 

Paco de Lucía - The Montreux Years (Live) [FLAC-HD]


Beautifully restored and remastered: A showcase of Paco De Lucia’s mesmerising Montreux Jazz Festival live performances between 1984 to 2012. One of the world’s most celebrated flamenco guitarists, Paco De Lucía helped legitimize flamenco music across the world and was one of the first flamenco guitarists to have successfully crossed over into other genres of music including classical and jazz. Described by Eric Clapton as a ‘titanic figure in the world of flamenco music’, De Lucía was noted for his fast and fluent picados and was known for adding abstract chords and scale tones to his compositions with jazz influences. These innovations saw him play a key role in the development of traditional flamenco and the evolution of new flamenco and jazz fusion. At the age of 18 De Lucía recorded his first album ‘La Fabulosa Guitarra’ in Madrid. One of his greatest musical partnerships was with the Spanish singer Cameron de la Isla in the 1970s. Together the two men recorded 10 albums, which inspired a New Flamenco movement.


1. Vámonos (Live - Montreux Jazz Festival 2012) (10:54)
2. La Barrosa (Live - Montreux Jazz Festival 2006) (6:29)
3. Solo Quiero Caminar (Live - Montreux Jazz Festival 1984) (9:24)
4. Alta Mar (Live - Montreux Jazz Festival 1984) (10:29)
5. El Tesorillo (Live - Montreux Jazz Festival 2006) (9:48)
6. Buana Buana King Kong (Live - Montreux Jazz Festival 1984) (8:34)
7. Variaciones de Minera (Live - Montreux Jazz Festival 2012) (9:19)
8. Zyryab (Live - Montreux Jazz Festival 2006) (17:03) 




George Benson - Good King Bad (1976/FLAC)


Good King Bad
is the thirteenth studio album by American guitarist George Benson featuring performances recorded in 1975 and released by CTI Records in 1976. 

Recorded: Van Gelder Studio in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey on July 1 (track 3), July 8 (track 6), Dec 4 (tracks 1 & 2) & Dec 5 (tracks 4 & 5), 1975



The Phil Woods Six - Live From The Showboat (2 CD, 1976/2014/FLAC)

 

Recorded at the Showboat Lounge, Silver Spring, MD.,

 November 1976.


  • Phil Woods - alto, soprano sax
  • Mike Melillo - piano
  • Harry Leahey - guitar
  • Steve Gilmore - bass
  • Bill Goodwin - drums
  • Alyrio Lima - percussion



 Disc 1

01. A Sleepin' Bee (7:38)
02. Rain Danse (8:20)
03. Bye Bye Baby (7:56)
04. Django's Castle (All Mine Almost) (5:55)
05. Cheek To Cheek (11:51)
06. Lady J (5:32)
07. Little Niles (13:04)

Disc 2

01. A Little Peace (8:24)
02. Brazilian Affair (Intriga Amorosa) (21:35)
03. I'm Late (7:26)
04. Superwoman (5:54)
05. High Clouds (5:55)
06. How's Your Mama (Phil's Theme) (5:32)




Eddie Harris - The Tender Storm (1966/2012) [24-192]

The Tender Storm is an album by American jazz saxophonist Eddie Harris recorded in 1966 and released on the Atlantic label.


  • Eddie Harris - tenor saxophone, varitone
  • Ray Codrington - trumpet (track 5)
  • Cedar Walton - piano
  • Ron Carter - bass
  • Billy Higgins (track 5), Bobby Thomas (tracks 1-4 & 6) - drums


01 - When a Man Loves a Woman 06:18
02 - My Funny Valentine 06:03
03 - A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square 05:29
04 - On a Clear Day 07:11
05 - A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square 04:28
06 - If Ever I Would Leave You 07:56




Tony Bennett & Dave Brubeck - The White House Sessions, Live 1962 (2013/FLAC)


Since both were performing their own sets at the White House Seminar American Jazz Concert on the Sylvan Theater grounds on August 28, 1962, Tony Bennett and Dave Brubeck decided to perform an impromptu collaborative set together that day, and although one song from it was eventually released, a version of "That Old Black Magic," the rest of the hour-or-so-long tape ended up lost in the vast Sony catalog vault, filed, as it turned out, with several classical tapes, until it surfaced again shortly after Brubeck's death in 2012. Now finally available, it reveals two master performers at the very top of their respective games. Bennett's signature song, "I Left My Heart in San Francisco," had been released only a couple of weeks before the concert, while Brubeck's "Take Five" had just begun to take on its iconic significance. Brubeck and his quartet, Paul Desmond on alto sax, Eugene Wright on bass, and Joe Morello on drums, played a four-song set, followed by a six-song set from Bennett and his band, with Ralph Sharon on piano, Hal Gaylor on bass, and Billy Exiner on drums. Then came an unrehearsed and impromptu four-song set from Bennett and Brubeck, with Wright on bass and Morello on drums (alto saxophonist Desmond sat out) that included versions of "That Old Black Magic" (the only track previously released before this), "Lullaby of Broadway," "Chicago (That Toddlin' Town)," and "There Will Never Be Another You," each of which purveys a loose, fun elegance that makes this archival find a true treasure. Bennett and Brubeck would not perform together again until both appeared and briefly reunited on-stage at the 2009 Newport Jazz Festival.