Max Roach - The Complete Mercury Max Roach Plus Four Sessions [7 CD, 2000]


This seven-CD box set features 95 tracks from legendary drummer Max Roach's small group, consisting of the 1956-1960 recordings for Emarcy and Mercury Records, as these noteworthy sessions also represent the drummer's post Max Roach-Clifford Brown Quintet output. In 1956 the jazz world witnessed the tragic and untimely deaths of the great trumpeter Clifford Brown and pianist Ritchie Powell. Within these seven CDs, we find Roach maintaining his assault on jazz along with trumpeter Kenny Dorham, pianist Ray Bryant, and the drummer's bandmates from the Clifford Brown years, tenor saxophone giant Sonny Rollins and bassist George Morrow.

Clifford Brown - Brownie: The Complete EmArcy Recordings [11 CD, 1989]

  


The remarkable but short-lived trumpeter Clifford Brown has the second half of his career fully documented (other than his final performance) and he is showcased in a wide variety of settings. The bulk of the numbers are of Brownie's quintet with co-leader and drummer Max Roach, either Harold Land or Sonny Rollins on tenor, pianist Richie Powell, and bassist George Morrow (including some previously unheard alternate takes), but there is also much more. Brown stars at several jam sessions (including a meeting with fellow trumpeters Clark Terry and Maynard Ferguson), accompanies such singers as Dinah Washington, Helen Merrill, and Sarah Vaughan, and is backed by strings on one date. Everything is here, including classic versions of "Parisian Thoroughfare," "Joy Spring," "Daahoud," "Coronado," a ridiculously fast "Move," "Portrait of Jenny," "Cherokee," "Sandu," "I'll Remember April," and "What Is This Thing Called Love?"

Steve Gadd Band - At Blue Note Tokyo [2021/FLAC]

 It should come as no surprise that the Steve Gadd Band’s latest album is tasteful and deeply grooving, as that’s been the 75-year-old drummer’s M.O. since the 1970s. Recorded one evening in December 2019 during a four night booking at the Blue Note Tokyo, it follows on from the previous year’s Steve Gadd Band studio release which won a Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Instrumental Album.


The major difference this time is the presence of guitarist David Spinozza deputising for Michael Landau who was unable to make the tour. An old friend and colleague of Gadd, ‘Spin’ fits in perfectly and brings another dimension to the band. And what a band this is – there’s bassist Jimmy Johnson and trumpeter Walt Fowler who both played with Gadd in James Taylor’s band, and keyboard player Kevin Hays.

Allan Holdsworth - Wardenclyffe Tower [1992, FLAC]

 

This 1992 release features Holdsworth in conversation with usual compatriots Jimmy Johnson, Chad Wackerman, and Gary Husband. Keyboards are provided not only by Steve Hunt, but also by both Wackerman and Husband. Husband in particular demonstrates that his facility on the keyboards is equal to his skill on the drums.


  • Allan Holdsworth – electric guitar, SynthAxe, production
  • Naomi Star – vocals
  • Steve Hunt – keyboard (tracks 1–2, 4–5)
  • Gordon Beck – keyboard (tracks 9–11)
  • Chad Wackerman – drums (tracks 1, 3, 5, 7, 9–11), keyboard (track 7)
  • Gary Husband – drums (tracks 2, 4), keyboard (track 3)
  • Vinnie Colaiuta – drums (track 6)
  • Jimmy Johnson – bass guitar
  • Joel Schnebelt – spoken vocals

Art Tatum — The Art Tatum Solo Masterpieces (8 CD, 1992)

 Art Tatum was among the most extraordinary of all jazz musicians, a pianist with wondrous technique who could not only play ridiculously rapid lines with both hands (his 1933 solo version of "Tiger Rag" sounds as if there were three pianists jamming together) but was harmonically 30 years ahead of his time; all pianists have to deal to a certain extent with Tatum's innovations in order to be taken seriously. Able to play stride, swing, and boogie-woogie with speed and complexity that could only previously be imagined, Tatum's quick reflexes and boundless imagination kept his improvisations filled with fresh (and sometimes futuristic) ideas that put him way ahead of his contemporaries.             

Miles Davis - Out Of The Blue [10 CD, 2010]

 

A rich collection with 157 remastered original recordings of the legendary jazz musician covering the period 1945-1957. The superb sound of Miles' trumpet with a great variety of jazz ensembles like Charlie Parker's, Billy Eckstine's, Lee Konitz's, Gil Evans' and of course, his own quintet, sextet and nonet. Also enjoy Davis, backing the unique Sarah Vaughan in six ballads. A jazz gem in perfect sound quality.

Paul Desmond - The Complete Paul Desmond RCA Victor Recordings ft. Jim Hall [5 CD, 1997]

  

THE COMPLETE RCA VICTOR RECORDINGS includes the five solo albums Desmond released on RCA's Bluebird imprint in the early 1960s: DESMOND BLUE, TAKE TEN, GLAD TO BE UNHAPPY, BOSSA ANTIGUA and EASY LIVING. Between 1962 and 1964 Paul Desmond , Dave Brubeck's alto saxophonist (and composer of "Take Five"), recorded five remarkable albums for RCA with guitarist Jim Hall. (Listeners might recall that the inimitable Hall also recorded with Sonny Rollins for RCA during the same period.) Luckily, RCA has seen fit to reissue the Desmond-Hall sessions in an attractive 5-CD box. Of these, only the first session, DESMOND BLUE, was arranged for strings. Otherwise it's just Desmond and Hall, a few good bass players and the great MJQ drummer Connie Kay, whom Desmond long revered for his subtle touch.

The Ravi Coltrane Quartet featuring Alice Coltrane - Live At Joe's Pub [2002]

 

Recorded for WBGO radio live in performance, 12 November 2002 Joe's Pub, New York City


The Ravi Coltrane Quartet:
  • Ravi Coltrane, ts; 
  • Luis Perrambo, p; 
  • Darryl Hall, bs; 
  • EJ Strickland, ds
  • Oran Coltrane, as (6, 7)
  • featuring Alice Coltrane, piano (5,6,7)

Paul Robeson - The Complete EMI Sessions 1928-1939 [7 CD, 2008]

 

Paul Robeson remains as well known as an actor and athlete as for his musical activities, and in general is a "big name" whose music most listeners have sampled only in bits and pieces. For that reason alone, this seven-disc compilation of Robeson's EMI recordings, made in Britain, would be worth a place in libraries and collections; it presents music by the great African-American bass not in bits and pieces but in collections that show the full range of his activities and capture a whole arc of his career. Missing among the types of music Robeson recorded are only his explicitly leftist workers' anthems, which generally date from years later than the 1939 cutoff point of this set. Beyond that, the first thing to strike the listener may be the vast range of music with which Robeson was comfortable. He is best known for African-American spirituals and for the artful quasi-spiritual language of Jerome Kern's "Ol' Man River" and similar items. But even a quick Internet sampling of this set will reveal much more. A partial list would include early African-American musical theater (Robeson's several versions of Will Marion Cook's "Down de Lovers Lane" convey perhaps the best idea yet of what these shows sounded like in their time); minstrel and "plantation" songs like Dixie, from both white and black composers (some of them irredeemably racist by today's standards); pop songs including a glorious set by Hoagy Carmichael; operetta; folk songs from Russia and elsewhere; parlor-room classics by Ethelbert Nevin and Carrie Jacobs Bond; country and western music (which were separate genres at the time); and American and British art songs. Robeson sounds as natural singing of "England's green and pleasant land" in Hubert Parry's Jerusalem (CD 7, track 6) as in a spiritual like Steal Away. The British origin of the recordings results in a few ridiculous moments, but Robeson spent years in Britain (especially in Wales, whose industrial struggles played a key role in the development of his activist consciousness), and in general the box represents the mainstream of Robeson's career in the late '20s and 1930s, not one of its tributaries. The remastering is superb, and the original recordings, with the later ones supervised by legendary producer Walter Legge, were impressive enough in their own time. The booklet notes, in English, French, and German, basically present a brief Robeson biography with a slight emphasis on the European phases of his career, but the track list is detailed and informative in itself. A major historical release that is highly listenable in itself.

Martin Kratochvíl & JAZZ Q - Martin Kratochvíl & JAZZ Q [8 CD, 2007 ]

 


Jazz Q was formed in 1964 by Martin Kratochvil (piano) and Jiri Stivin (woodwinds) in Prague, CZE. In their early years, they were inspired by the late 50s free jazz happening in America. By the late 60s though, after becoming familiar with the English rock scene, Kratochvil decided to go in a more electric and groove-based direction. Jiri Stivin wasn't keen on playing this style and left shortly after recording their debut LP from 1970 "Coniunctio", which was a collaboration with a severed line-up of Blue Effect, and stylistically was a mish-mash of rock, fusion and free jazz. Kratochvil completely revamped the line-up with guitarist Lubos Andrst (Framus 5, Energit), bassist Vladimir Padrunek (Energit, ETC) and drummer Michal Vrbovec.


In this line-up they recorded what may be their best known album "Watchtower". Frantisek Francl replaced Andrst and the band also worked with the English singer Joan Duggan on their next LP, "Symbiosis" from 1974. Amongst the scores of sound-alike jazz-rock bands present at the time, Jazz Q really found their own voice, although it could be argued that later stuff was more stylistically definable. Jazz Q was also one of the few long-lasting Czech fusion bands, being active from 1964 till 1984. In 2004 they have regrouped in a classic lineup, although Francl is substituted by Zdenek Fiser, another jazz-rock veteran from the Impuls fame.