Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Shirley Scott - Soul Song (1969) [vinyl.flac,24b/48k]


A nice late 60s effort by Shirley - and one that's been pretty hard to find over the years! Soul Song actually has a bit more of a funk groove than earlier work, and a little bit more of a soul jazz sound than some of her Prestige albums. The record features Eric Gale playing some nice guitar, plus Stanley Turrentine blowing tenor on a number of cuts, and Shirley on organ, and even singing on one track. The tracks are a bit longer than usual, too - and titles include a cover of "Think", plus "Soul Song", "Mr. Businessman", "When A Man Loves A Woman", and "Like A Lover". ~ Dusty Groove, Inc.

Atlantic Records, SD 1515, 1969
Recorded 9th (#B2) & 10th (#A2) September at Atlantic Studios, New York City;
6th (#A3,B1) & 7th (#A1,B3) November, 1968 at RCA Studios, New York City

Musicians:
Shirley Scott - Organ, Vocals (#B3)
Stanley Turrentine - Tenor Saxophone (#A1-B2)
Eric Gale - Guitar (#A1,A2,B2,B3)
Bob Cranshaw - Fender Bass (#A3,B1)
Roland Martinez - Fender Bass (#A2,B2)
Bernard Purdie - Drums (#A2,B2)
Ray Lucas - Drums (#A3,B1)
Specs Powell - Drums (#A1,B3)

Track Listing:
A1. Think {Lowman Pauling} (7:57)
A2. When A Man Loves A Woman {Calvin Lewis, Andrew Wright} (6:51)
A3. Mr. Businessman {Ray Stevens} (3:08)
B1. Blowin' In The Wind {Bob Dylan} (6:17)
B2. Soul Song {Shirley Scott} (5:24)
B3. Like A Lover {Alan & M. Bergman, Danilo Caymmi, Nelson Motta} (4:00)

Credits:
Producer - Joel Dorn
Recording Engineers - Adrian Barber, Paul Goodman
Cover Illustration & Design - Stanislaw Zagorski
Liner Notes - Bernard Drayton

Monday, August 3, 2015

Xanadu At Montreux Volume One [24/48 vinyl]


A fresh 24/48 rip from my copy of the LP.

Xanadu At Montreux, Vol. 1 : During one night at the 1978 Montreux Jazz Festival, enough music was performed and recorded by Xanadu's artists to result in four LPs. The first volume has features for trumpeter Sam Noto ("Get Happy"), baritonist Ronnie Cuber ("Vamping") and drummer Frank Butler, who takes an extensive drum solo on a 20-minute version of "So What." In the supporting cast are flutist Sam Most, guitarist Ted Dunbar, pianist Dolo Coker and bassist Sam Jones. All four of these sets (which have different and overlapping personnel) are worth picking up. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi

Tracks:

1. Vampin'
2. Afternoon in Paris
3. But Not for Me
4. Get Happy
5. So What

Sam Noto (tp) Sam Most (fl)Ronnie Cuber (bar) Dolo Coker (p) Ted Dunbar (g) Sam Jones (b) Frank Butler (d)

Sunday, August 2, 2015

Coleman Hawkins and his friends at a Famous Jazz Party Vol 1 (1958) [vinyl

From the danair vinyl collection. I posted Vol2 recently.

First Session - Side 1 tracks 1-4:

1. Indian Summer -C.Hawkins
2. I Can´t Get Started -Ch.Shavers & ens.parts
3. *Mean To Me -L.Young
4. *Jumpin´ With Symphony Sid -full group

25 Sept. 1958: Charlie Shavers (t) J.C.Higginbotham (tb) Pee WeeRussell (cl) Coleman Hawkins (ts) Lester Young (*ts) Willie"The Lion"Smith (p) Harry Shepherd (vib) Dick
Thompson (g) Vinnie Burke (b) Sonny Greer (d) Mae Barnes (v)

Second Session - Side1 track5 and side 2:

16 October 1958 Cootie Williams (t) Nat Adderley (cnt) Kai Winding (tb) Rolf Kuhn (cl) Julian Cannonball Adderley (as) Coleman Hawkins (ts) Harry Sheppard (vib) Billy Taylor (p) Roy
Gaines (elg) Vinnie Burke (b) Bert Dahlander (d)
Possibly Earl May (b) & Ed Thigpen (d) replace Burke & Dahlander on some items.
Lil Greenwood (v)

Fine And Dandy
Body And Soul -Hawkins Feature
Cootie's Blues (Cootie'´S Big Time Blues) -Williams Feature
I Got It Bad And That Ain't Good -vLG With Williams & Rhythm Only
Airmail Special
Bugle Call Rag

Saturday, August 1, 2015

Roy Eldridge At Jerry Newman's (1940) [vinyl]

From the danair vinyl collection.

Side A
1. Sweet And Brown....................3:49
2. Body And Soul*......................3:42
3. Lemon House........................3:10
4. Jazz Rose*...........................3:48
5. Sweet Lorraine.......................3:34
6. I Can't Give You Anything But Love . .. 3:15

Side B
1. I Surrender Dear (Take 1)...............5:16
2. I Surrender Dear (Take 2)...............4:24
3. The Way You Look Tonight (Take 1).....3:39
4. The Way You Look Tonight (Take 2).....3:16
5. The Way You Look Tonight (Take 3).....2:56
6. Rags (Take 1)..........................3:37
7. Rags (Take 2)..........................3:37


Roy Eldridge, Trumpet; Willie Smith, Alto Sax; Herbie Fields, Tenor Sax; Tony D'amore, Piano; Buddy Weed, Piano*;
Mike Bryan, Guitar; Tony D'amore, Drums*; George T. Simon, Drums; Margie Harris, Vocal

(Recorded November 19,1940)

Chet Baker - Smokin' and Groovin'

The first 2 releases from Baker's short lived 'hard bop' band that recorded 5 albums in 3 days and then apparently disbanded. These are some of my personal favorites amongst Chet recordings. George Coleman had just been let go by Miles and plays like he has something to prove. These were also the first time I recall hearing Kirk Lightsey although he may well have recorded prior to these sessions and I just don't know it. The great drummer Roy Brooks and bassist Herman Wright were the other two 5ths of the quintet. The crush of recordings in 3 days and the subsequent album titles are clearly an echo of the October 1956 Miles Davis sessions that yielded Workin', Steamin, Cookin' and Relaxin'. Given that both groups of recordings were done for Prestige, the similarities are pretty obviously intentional.

The final album of the series [Boppin'] along with most of the 4th [Cool Burnin'] are currently over at Bolden's thanks to grumpy - I'll do the 3rd [Comin' On] and the complete 4th album in a day or two. As mentioned on the other post, Chet plays all flugelhorn here. The recordings were pretty much unprecedented in Baker's discography before or after.

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

A Tribute to Harold Battiste - The A.F.O. Box, 4LP's [24/48 vinyl rip]

A loving tribute to the late, great Mr. Harold Battiste..,a true giant of New Orleans music. This lovely copy of the box was retrieved from the nether regions of my friend Guitar Scott's closet. The box itself is tore up but the albums were nearly perfect!

"In 2011, African-American-owned record labels are not news. Motown is the best-known example, and New Orleans has had No Limit and Cash Money Records. In 1961, the notion of African-Americans owning a record label was a radical one, but it was Harold Battiste’s vision. AFO (All For One) Records was not only Black-owned but a collective—more unusual still—and it celebrates its 50th anniversary this year.

In person today, Battiste’s gentle temperament makes him seem like an unlikely radical. Health concerns have slowed him some, but his autobiography Unfinished Blues and interviews he has given throughout his career show him to be a humble man, self-effacing about his accomplishments. Reflecting on 50 years of AFO, he says, “I’m impressed now that it has existed for 50 years. I think that that is success for what we started out as, to last as long as we have in this environment. To look at it in retrospect, there were no black companies at all. The record companies that were around, like Minit and Instant, about four or five back then, they’re not here now.”

Battiste took the first step toward the creation of AFO in 1960 on a train from Los Angeles to New Orleans. He’d been working in both cities as an A&R man for Art Rupe’s Specialty Records, but had become frustrated with the music business. As he says in Unfinished Blues, “I had begun to formulate the concept of a musicians’ cooperative to start a record company. When the train stopped in El Paso, Texas, who should board but Earl King? He would become the first person to hear my idea.”

The idea had been germinating for several years. Battiste had produced such sessions as Art Neville’s “Cha Dooky Doo,” Jerry Byrne’s “Lights Out,” and Larry Williams “Bad Boy” for Specialty. He had been a producer and talent scout talent for $150/week and a quarter percent royalty on everything that was produced. He had also become a member of the Nation of Islam and was aware of how little money the Black musicians who played on records made, even when such records sold huge quantities. Battiste writes in Unfinished Blues, “I’d been listening to speeches from the eligible Elijah Muhammad, messages that often spoke to the need for our people to create wealth through ownership. It seemed that every ethnic group was identified with a product or service that they owned and controlled, and it seemed that the product generally attributed to us was music: jazz, blues, R&B, gospel.”


Once back in New Orleans, Batiste found several like-minded musicians to round out the collective. He approached trumpeter Melvin Lastie, who was the union rep for Local 496. They found drummer John Boudreaux, bassist Peter “Chuck” Badie, guitarist Roy Montrell, pianist Allen Toussaint, and tenor saxophonist Alvin “Red” Tyler, who had been a part of the J&M Studio band that had played on the hits of Little Richard, Fats Domino, Shirley and Lee, and many more. Due to contractual obligations, Toussaint had to bow out, but the rest of the musicians became AFO Records Inc. in May 1961. The idea of a Black-owned record label was so new that the city licensing agencies kept thinking they were starting a retail record store.

After incorporating, things started to fall into place for AFO. Juggy Murray, owner of Sue Records in New York, had called up Battiste looking for an A&R man in New Orleans. When Murray found out what AFO was, he caught a plane to New Orleans and agreed to finance the production and distribution of AFO’s records nationally. Battiste was surprised to find out Murray was a black man when he met him, but that fit well into his overall philosophy.

Lastie and Battiste auditioned artists. Jessie Hill, Lastie’s nephew, brought a 19-year-old singer named Barbara George and a guitar player named Prince La La to audition. Prince La La, a.k.a. Lawrence Nelson, was the younger brother of Walter “Papoose” Nelson, a well-known guitarist who had played with Professor Longhair and Fats Domino. George couldn’t get the hang of the rhythm of Nelson’s “She Put the Hurt on Me,” so they let Nelson record that and combined lyrics she had written to the chords of the gospel tune “Just A Closer Walk With Thee” and came up with “I Know (You Don’t Love Me No More).”

AFO Executives
“I Know” was a monster hit. It reached number one on the R&B charts and number three on the pop charts. Melvin Lastie’s cornet solo, written out by Battiste, became as famous as the song, and started
a new trend of trumpet or cornet solos. Chuck Badie says, “That solo that Harold wrote for Melvin? I was told that Miles Davis heard it and said, ‘Who the fuck is that?’”

When Barbara George traveled to New York to play at the Apollo, things started to unravel. George wanted to buy out her contract with AFO because she and Juggy Murray had started a relationship. Murray had bought her a Cadillac and a mink coat, “using her royalty money to do it,” said Battiste in an interview with Charles Gillet. Battiste and Lastie tried to convince her to stay with them, but to no avail. George left, and her first hit became her last. Murray was never able to get anything else going with her.

Tami Lynn & Harold Battiste
In his autobiography, Battiste writes, “I had entrusted my dream to a man who had a Black face on face value alone. That experience in no way dimmed my vision of my people nor the principles upon which my hopes were founded. It did, however, teach me the fallacy in judging a book by its cover.” AFO persevered and got back to making music. The people and songs that they recorded all had great appeal, but none of the songs had the legs nor distribution to become anything more than local hits. Such tracks as the AFO Executives’ “Olde Wyne,” Willie Tee’s “Always Accused,” Tami Lynn’s “Mojo Hannah,” and Johnny Adams’ “A Losing Battle” have become New Orleans classics, but were little heard beyond Louisiana.

AFO also recorded several jazz sessions that were some of the first non-traditional jazz recordings in New Orleans and some of the only New Orleans non-traditional jazz recordings from the 1960s. These include the American Jazz Quintet’s In the Beginning, the AFO Executives with Tami Lynn’s Compendium, and Ellis Marsalis Quartet’s Monkey Puzzle. All of these recordings have a New Orleans flavor, but they also are of the time in the same way that records released by more famous jazz labels such as Blue Note, Impulse, and Prestige were. Of these, only Monkey Puzzle and Compendium were released then. Battiste recalls, “I wanted to record some of the cats who were playing jazz, who would never be widely known and might lose that thing they had…I didn’t care if those records sold, but they should be recorded for posterity.”

Harold with Red Tyler
AFO continued in New Orleans until the summer of 1963. Battiste thought that moving to a major metropolis would help the company, so he and the other AFO members returned to Los Angeles in hope of finding success as a label and a band. Once there, Battiste renewed his association with Sam Cooke. Battiste had worked with Cooke several years before, providing additional lyrics and the arrangement for Cooke’s first crossover hit, “You Send Me.” Cooke helped fund the creation of a small rehearsal studio called Soul Station No. 1 where artists on Cooke’s SAR label could prepare for sessions and AFO could audition talent. However, Cooke’s untimely death in 1964 put the brakes on Soul Station No. 1. It was also difficult for the musicians to find work due to the Los Angeles Musicians Union restrictions that mandated that new members could not accept steady gigs during the first six months that they joined the union. Chuck Badie remembers, “I got taken off a bandstand. I was playing with Erskine Hawkins and a short, white fellow walked in. He said, ‘Who’s the bass player? He sounds good, but he’s got to come down from there.’ I put the cover on my bass and came down. The band couldn’t hang around for the six months to end.”

Harold Battiste. Photo by Greg Miles
Badie, Lastie, Lynn, and Tyler left soon after, but Battiste stayed in Los Angeles and started working with Sonny and Cher. He arranged their hit “I Got You Babe,” and that led to other arranging, producing and movie scoring. Battiste went on to conceptualize Dr. John with Mac Rebennack and produce his first two albums, as well as being Sonny and Cher’s music director. Lastie worked with Aretha Franklin and Willie Bobo in New York. Badie went on the road with various jazz bands, including Lionel Hampton. Tyler became a liquor salesman by day and tenor player by night. Drummer John Boudreaux stayed in Los Angeles doing sessions and touring with Dr. John. Lynn did sessions for Dr. John and the Rolling Stones and had a hit in Britain with “I’m Gonna Run Away.”

With all that activity, AFO Records took an extended hiatus. In the next decades, Battiste put out records in the AFO vein, including a duo record with Melvin Lastie and the jazz recordings of the American Jazz Quintet, Ellis Marsalis Quintet, and the AFO Executives with Tami Lynn in 1976. Other gigs and sessions followed, including work with the Fifth Dimension, concerts with New Orleans expatriate musicians in Los Angeles’ Club Lingerie in 1984, and occasional trips back to New Orleans. When UNO decided to start a jazz studies program in 1989 with Ellis Marsalis at the head, Battiste came back to New Orleans permanently.

AFO never left his thoughts, and in 1991, he found the time ripe for restarting it. As he says in his autobiography, “I believed now more than ever a record company with a commitment to and concern for music and musicians was needed in New Orleans.” With the help of writer and producer Kalamu Ya Salaam, Battiste reissued Monkey Puzzle and leased much of the AFO catalog to Ace Records in the United Kingdom, who put them out as Gumbo Stew, More Gumbo Stew, and Still Spicy Gumbo Stew. Then he released new recordings of Germaine Bazzle, Philip Manuel, and David Morgan. In an effort to record younger New Orleans jazz musicians and some of the great compositions of Alvin Battiste, Ellis Marsalis, James Black, and others, he released two CDs of “Harold Battiste presents the Next Generation,” which have featured such great musicians as John Ellis, Nicholas Payton, Brice Winston, Derek Douget and Jesse McBride.

AFO Records has a substantial legacy. “I Know” is still played and sung across the planet, and several of the other AFO R&B singles have become favorites of Northern Soul and Deep Soul fans. Jazz compositions such as “Nevermore,” and “Nigeria,” James Black’s tunes “Magnolia Triangle,” “Monkey Puzzle,” “Dee Wee,” and Ellis Marsalis’ “Swinging at the Haven” and “12’s It” have become New Orleans’ jazz standards.

AFO’s latest release is a compilation of Batiste’s performances over the years called The Sound of Harold’s Horn. It’s a sound we hear little these days because health issues limit Battiste’s playing. It presents his musical voice, just as Unfinished Blues tells the story of a sensitive, hard-working musician who is responsible for several careers that were established at expense of his own.

“I read a proof of the book and said, ‘Damn, I didn’t realize that I had done all this stuff,’ Battiste says.”But I didn’t go looking for it. It all found me.”" David Kunian, Offbeat Magazine

Mr. Battiste passed away June 19th, 2015

Friday, July 24, 2015

Don Patterson - Tune Up! (1964-1969) [vinyl>flac]

An enjoyable set of stretched organ/tenor grooves. This LP is made up of four different sessions from Patterson's Prestige days; including the title track, all given the strong early groove of organist Don at a time when some of his contemporaries were tightening things up on the B-3, going for shorter tunes aimed at the jukebox and radio crowd. Don Patterson was a great reminder that the organ was best used on lengthier jamming tracks, on tunes that stretched out nicely with a style that was heard best in the clubs, and where an organ player could really do his thing. The album kicks off  with "Just Friends'', Patterson uses a cut down trio format; Billy James on drums and tenorist Booker Ervin,  another player who always knows what to do with plenty of space! The other titles include versions of "Flyin' Home", "Tune Up" a Miles Davis tune featuring Sonny Stitt on Varitone and Grant Green, listed on the album cover as Blue Grant! The album finishes up with "Blues For Mom", Don's own composition, showcasing a dual tenor line-up of George Coleman & Houston Person plus Virgil Jones on trumpet. Overall this LP is quite a magnificent soul jazz package.

Prestige Records, PR 7852, 1971
Recorded 10th July, 1964 (#A1); 25th August, 1964 (#A2);
15th September, 1969 (#B1) and 2nd June, 1969 (#B2)
at Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey

Personnel:
Don Patterson - Organ
Booker Ervin - Tenor Saxophone (#A1,A2)
Sonny Stitt - Tenor Saxophone (#A2,B1)
Grant Green - Guitar (#B1)
Virgil Jones - Trumpet (#B2)
Houston Person - Tenor Saxophone (#B2)
George Coleman - Tenor Saxophone (#B2)
Billy James - Drums (#A1,A2,B1)
Frankie Jones - Drums (#B2)

Tracks:
A1. Just Friends {John Klenner, Sam M. Lewis} (5:56)
A2. Flyin' Home {Lionel Hampton, Benny Goodman} (10:12)
B1. Tune Up {Miles Davis} (4:24)
B2. Blues For Mom {Don Patterson} (12:52)

Credits:
Producers - Ozzie Cadena (Side A), Bob Porter (Side B)
Recording Engineer - Rudy van Gelder
Liner Notes - Joe Segal (January, 1971)

Thursday, July 23, 2015

Charles McPherson - Today's Man [24/48 vinyl rip]

A great document of the more soulful shift made by Charles McPherson in the 70s – and an album that features his moody alto work set amidst a slightly larger group – filled with great players that include Chris Woods on flute, Richard Williams and Cecil Bridewater on trumpet, Frank Wess on tenor sax, Garnett Brown on trombone, and Barry Harris on piano. The tracks are deceptively easygoing, but swing with a nice spiritual soul jazz undercurrent – and McPherson blows in some warm, open modes that really grab us on the best tunes. Includes a great version of "Naima", plus the tracks "Bell Bottoms", "Cheryl", "Invitation", and "Charisma". © 1996-2015, Dusty Groove, Inc.

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Max Roach - Award Winning Drummer [24/48 vinyl rip]

"An obscure set from Max Roach – but right up there with his best work of the late 50s on Mercury and other labels! The album features the "award winning" drummer in a quintet with Booker Little on trumpet, Ray Draper on tuba, George Coleman on tenor, and Art Davis on bass – a cool piano-less group that hits some really unusual notes! Draper's horn provides a deep bottom to the record, mixing with Davis' exotic tones nicely – and the album represents Roach's increasing penchant for experimentation in the post Clifford Brown years – tunes with an offbeat edge that's really great. Titles include "Pies Of Quincy", "Tuba De Nod", "Milano", and "Sadiga"." © 1996-2015, Dusty Groove, Inc.

Saturday, July 18, 2015

Buddy Tate - Hard Blowin' [24/48 vinyl rip]

AllMusic Review by Scott Yanow

Muse has released at least six albums of material recorded at Sandy's Jazz Revival in Massachusetts during a week in 1978. This is veteran tenor Buddy Tate's most rewarding album from the engagement and a fine all-around showcase. Accompanied by pianist Ray Bryant, bassist George Duvivier, and drummer Alan Dawson, Tate stretches out on four familiar standards and shows listeners that he really had one of the more distinctive tenor sounds of the swing era.

Recommended.

Monday, July 13, 2015

Charlie Parker - Rappin' With Bird [vinyl


Another from the danair vinyl collection.
No information other than what's on the front cover (the back is blank).

However thanks to Luis once again:

Interview
1950 05 01, unk bc by Marshall Stearns & john Maher

Salt Peanuts
1946 01 24 Dizzy Gillespie Rebop Six, Billy Berg bc, Los Angeles

Rocker/Jumpin' With Symphony Sid
1951 NYC, Birdland

Chasin' The Bird/Out Of Nowhere/How High The Moon
1948 12 18 NYC, Royal Roost

Embraceable You
Little Willie Leaps
52nd Street Theme
1950 06 30 NYC, Birdland

Sunday, July 12, 2015

Eddie Cleanhead Vinson - Hold It Right There [24/48 vinyl rip]

After years of neglect, Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson was finally receiving long overdue recognition at the time of this live session -- one of six albums recorded during a week at Sandy's Jazz Revival. Two of these albums featured tenors Arnett Cobb and Buddy Tate in lead roles. While Vinson has fine blues vocals on "Cherry Red" and "Hold It," it is his boppish alto solos on "Cherokee," "Now's the Time" and "Take the 'A' Train" (the latter also having spots for Cobb and Tate) that make this set recommended to blues and bop fans alike.

The fifth of six records!

Ralph Towner - Open Letter (1992)

It might be tempting to dismiss this Ralph Towner effort as New Age fluff, but the music is so gorgeous that any such considerations fall to the wayside. Yet the wayside is precisely where Towner sets his sights, which is to say that his interest lies in edges where musical idioms meet. He explores these lines, not unlike the blotted cover, with an ease of diction at the fret board that is recognizable and comforting. Drummer Peter Erskine shares the bill, but Towner adds a few synth touches for broader effect, as in “The Sigh,” which opens the session in a cleft of fluid energy. There are two sides to this album. One is resplendent, exemplified in the congregation of 12-string and cymbals that is “Adrift.” This resonant vessel shares waters with “Magic Pouch” and “Alar” (a tympani-infused concoction that is one of Towner’s finest), both of which blossom in a tropical climate and funnel their tide-swept secrets into “Magnolia Island.” Any possible tourist traps therein are elided by Towner’s ever-imaginative picking. The other side comes through Towner’s solos. The jazzy riffs of “Short’n Stout” pair well with the intimate geographies of “Waltz For Debby,” while the blissful “I Fall In Love Too Easily” lobs us into the goodness of “Nightfall.” Towner is as astute as ever in his execution. Whether it’s a standard or his own musical vision, we get the feeling that everything he plays is an open letter. ~ ECM Reviews

"Ralph Towner's a difficult case. The snoozy noodlings of his former band Oregon can be downright stupefying, but his solo work is often, though not always, quite a bit more interesting. Open Letter walks both sides of the line, but succeeds more often than it fails. ~ by Rick Anderson, AMG.

ECM Records, ECM 1462, 1992
Recorded July 1991 and February 1992 at Rainbow Studio, Oslo, Norway

Musicians:
Ralph Towner - Classical & 12-String Guitars, Synthesizer
Peter Erskine - Drums

Track Listing:
A1. The Sigh {Ralph Towner} (5:09)
A2. Wistful Thinking {Ralph Towner} (3:49)
A3. Adrift {Ralph Towner} (6:06)
A4. Infection {Peter Erskine, Ralph Towner} (3:15)
A5. Alar {Ralph Towner} (7:10)
B1. Short 'N Stout {Ralph Towner} (3:01)
B2. Waltz For Debby {Bill Evans} (4:10)
B3. I Fall In Love Too Easily {Sammy Cahn, Jules Styne} (4:11)
B4. Magic Pouch {Ralph Towner} (5:01)
B5. Magnolia Island {Ralph Towner} (4:28)
B6. Nightfall {Ralph Towner} (6:24)

Credits:
Producer - Manfred Eicher
Engineer - Jan Erik Kongshaug
Design - Dieter Rehm
Photography [Cover] - Gabor Attalai

Friday, July 10, 2015

Coleman Hawkins and his Friends at a Famous Jazz Party Vol 2 (1958) [vinyl]



From the danair vinyl collection.

Enigma is a very apposite name for this record label: Personnel : unknown apart from indicated above, Recording date & location: unknown
But then the producer of the album "took great delight in confounding collectors and discographers, whom he regarded as the bean counters of jazz." Try googling "Boris Rose" for more information.

So many thanks to Luis for supplying this:

SIDE 1:
Art Ford's Jazz Panty : Theme Harlem 1928-1938 : Henry "Red" Allen (tp,vcl) Dicky Wells (tb) Buster Bailey
(el) Coleman Hawkins (ts) Willie "The Lion" Smith (p,vcl) Danny Barker (g,bj-l,el-g-2) Vinnie Burke (b)
Sonny Greer (d) Mae Barnes (vcl)
"Art Ford's Jazz Party", Newark, N.J., November 6, 1958

Running wild
Stompin' at the Savoy
Somebody loves me
St. James infirmary (hra + band vcl)
Solitude
Memphis blues
Love is just around the corner

SIDE 2:
5 June 1958 Rex Stewart (c) Charlie Shavers (t) Wilbur De Paris(tb) Woody Herman (cl,v)
Georgie Auld (ts) Joe Roland (vib) Marty Napoleon (p) Chuck Wayne (elg) Chubby Jackson
(b) Don Lamond (d) Jimmy Rushing (v), ADD: Barry Miles (vib,d)-1

Bugle Call Rag -Shavers & Stewart feature, with Auld & rhythm only
Boy Meets Horn -Stewart feature
The Best Things In Life Are Free -Shavers feature
Goin' To Chicago/I'm Gonna Move To The Outskirts Of Town -1 -vJR

Sept.1958 Red Allen (t) J.C.Higginbotham (tb) Ed Hall (cl) King Curtis (ts) Stan Freed (p) Dick
Thompson (g) Vinnie Burke (b) Joe Tarto (bb on (2+10)) Sonny Greer (d) Teddy Charles (vib)
Chris Connors (v) Art Ford(narr) all on RA-CD-32

Sweet Georgia Brown
Basin Street Blues feat. Higginbotham

Recording quality is definitely not hi-fi but perfectly acceptable.

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Arnett Cobb - More Arnett Live At Sandy's [24/48 vinyl rip]

One of six albums recorded at Sandy's Jazz Revival in Beverly, Massachusetts during a two-day period and the second one led by Arnett Cobb has plenty of exciting music. Cobb takes "Smooth Sailing" as his feature, teams up with fellow tenor Buddy Tate on "Go Red Go" and "Flyin' Home #2," and welcomes both Tate and altoist Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson to "Blues for Lester" (a blues version of "Lester Leaps In"). With assistance from pianist Ray Bryant, bassist George Duvivier and drummer Alan Dawson, Cobb's enthusiastic and extroverted tenor wins honors on this jam session-style set. Fortunately all of the music in this LP (and four of the five songs from the first Cobb set) has been reissued on CD.

Bill Hardman – Home (1978) [vinyl 24/48]

Newly ripped from the danair vinyl collection.

Review by Mike Hennessey, Jazz Journal, November 1980:
Bill Harman has spent a good part of his musical career with various editions of Blakey's Jazz Messengers and in more than 30 years on the jazz scene has scant opportunity to record under his own name. This Muse album is thus a welcome release — the more so because Hardman probably comes closer than most trumpet players of his generation to capturing the spirit and attack of his great idol, Clifford Brown.
This is a fine album. Hardman has assembled an excellent team of musicians and the soloists have a good chance to stretch out. Victor Jones isa splendid drummer, and with forceful and ever-creative Hampton storms through the date with tremendous zest; Junior Cook can rarely have been heard to better effect, Mickey Turner comps and solos with unflagging energy and invention and Hardman crackles away on trumpet and flugel horn in the best Brownie tradition.
Samba Do Brilho — the sort of music to play in your pad? — has excellent solos from the front line; Jones's driving drums give tremendous lift to Once I Loved and there is magnificent solo work from Hardman, a powerful contribution from Cook, playing in what could be described as a "Rolltrane" style, and a fluent, vigorous solo from Hampton.
My Pen Is Hot (a Tucker original whose title may or may not be connected with the fact that the band includes a Hampton and a Hardman) doesn't quite work as a jazz vehicle because the chord sequence is too tricky and militates against continuity of line. The solos are nevertheless impressive again, with Tucker in distinctly Silverish mood.
Rancho Cevarro is another Tucker composition with rapid changes of texture and rhythmic foundation. Tucker certainly has a flair for unexpected changes and the horn players cope remarkably well.
I Remember Love is a forgotten Dameron song which features Hardman on flugel horn — though still with that crackling, biting tone. He gives it a moving reading and sets a lustrous seal on a very fine album.

1. Samba Do Brilho
2. Once I Loved
3. My Pen Is Hot
4. Rancho Cevarro
5. I Remember Love

Bill Hardman It, flhl; Junior Cook Its); Slide Hampton (tb); Mickey Tucker (p); Chin Suzuki (b); Victor Jones (d); Lawrence Killian (perc).
RVG. New Jersey, January 10, 1978.
(Muse MR 5152)

Friday, July 3, 2015

Art Hodes & Milt Hinton - Just The Two Of Us (1981) [vinyl>flac]

Art Hodes, jazz pianist, who played with such greats as Louis Armstrong and Benny Goodman and in the 1940s had his own record label, radio show and magazine. Born in Nikoliev, the Ukraine, Hodes came to Chicago as an infant and spent most of his life performing there. But during the 1940s, he lived in New York, presenting a weekly radio program for WNYC, founding his own record label, JazzRecord, and editing a critically acclaimed magazine of the same title. He also organized and led his own bands. Hodes was host of a television series called "Jazz Alley" in the 1960s, taught at the Lake Forest Conservatory, and throughout his career did much to popularize traditional jazz styles.

"Throughout his long career, Art Hodes was a fighter for traditional jazz, whether through his distinctive piano playing, his writings (which included many articles and liner notes), or his work on radio and educational television. Renowned for the feeling he put into blues, Hodes was particularly effective on up-tempo tunes, where his on-the-beat chordings from his left hand could be quite exciting. Born in Russia, he came to America with his family when he was six months old and grew up in Chicago. Hodes had the opportunity to witness Chicago jazz during its prime years in the 1920s, and he learned from other pianists. In 1928, he made his recording debut with Wingy Manone, but spent most of the 1930s in obscurity in Chicago until he moved to New York in 1938. He played with Joe Marsala and Mezz Mezzrow before forming his own band in 1941. Hodes recorded for Solo Art, his Jazz Record label, Signature, Decca, and Black & White during 1939-1942, but he made more of an impression with his heated Dixieland recordings for Blue Note during 1944-1945 (all of which have been reissued on a Mosaic box set). During 1943-1947, Hodes edited the important magazine the Jazz Record, had a radio show, and became involved in the moldy fig versus bebop wars with Leonard Feather and Barry Ulanov; jazz on a whole lost to the latter. In 1950, he returned to Chicago, where he remained active locally and made occasional records. Hodes hosted a television series, Jazz Alley, for a time in the 1960s, wrote for Downbeat, and was a jazz educator. Art Hodes recorded frequently during the 1970s and '80s, and was widely recognized as one of the last survivors of Chicago jazz. His later recordings were for such labels as Audiophile, Jazzology, Delmark, Storyville, Euphonic, Muse, Parkwood, Candid, and Music & Arts. ~ Scott Yanow"

01 - Willow Weep For Me
02 - Winin'
03 - I Would Do Most Anything
04 - Low Down N' Below
05 - Bye & Bye
06 - Down Home Blues
07 - Randolph Street Blues
08 - Here Comes Cow Cow
09 - Miss Otis Regrets
10 - Milt Jumps

Art Hodes (p) Milt Hinton (b)
The Cabbage Patch, Nyc, August 26, 1981

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Richie Cole and Art Pepper - Return To Alto Acres (1982) [vinyl 24/48]

From the danair vinyl collection.

Review by Scott Yanow:
On his first LP for Palo Alto, Richie Cole got to meet up for the only time on record with altoist Art Pepper. Together with pianist Roger Kellaway, bassist Bob Magnusson and drummer Billy Higgins, Cole and Pepper play four basic originals, "Things We Did Last Summer" (Cole's feature) and "Broadway." What is particularly unusual about this date is that Cole not only plays alto but tenor and baritone while Pepper also gives listeners a taste of his clarinet. The historic bebop encounter has unfortunately been long out-of-print since Palo Alto is long defunct.

Return To Alto Acres
The Things We Did Last Summer
Art's Opus #2
A&R
Palo Alto Blues
Broadway

Art Pepper (alto saxophone, clarinet) Richie Cole (alto,baritone saxophone) Roger Kellaway (piano) Bob Magnusson (bass) Billy Higgins (drums)
Los Angeles, CA, February 16, 1982

Monday, June 29, 2015

Vic Juris - Roadsong (1978) [vinyl>flac]

Here's another bit of Muse Magic!

A great album by 24-year old guitarist Vic Juris which was released on Muse Records in 1978, his first as a leader, players are Barry Miles on keyboards, Terry Silverlight on drums, Rick Laird and John Burr on bass and Richie Cole on alto saxophone. Six of the eight selections are Juris originals (the other two songs include Wes Montgomery's "Road Song" and drummer Terry Silverlight's "Vic's Theme". Richie Cole plays on two tracks and John Burr on bass substitutes Laird on another. The album was produced by Richie Cole and engineered by Rudy Van Gelder. This rip is from an LP as this album is yet to be reissued on CD.

Another of my favourite guitarists, the Canadian Vic Juris; this disc, 1978 brings Vic in his (awesome) early years, a musician of a melodic talent and virtuosity that still scares me. Much influence of bop but still contains the fusion typical seventies innovations (at a time when the Pat Metheny still playing timidly in his Metheny Group). There's nothing to discuss: Stunning an Animator! Production is Richie Cole and the mix of the magician Rudy van Gelder (which pros uninitiated was the guy behind several of the most classic jazz recordings). Along with Vic are Barry Miles, Richard and Rick Laird Silverlight and Richie Cole. ~ A Minha Confusão...

“Roadsong” touches several basses, but it's hardly an exercise in untrammelled eclecticism; the sure, clear direction that Vic Juris exercises on each tune insures that. It also ties the album together with a sense of completeness that many established musicians strive for in vain. There are some who may find that a preternatural quality for a 24-year old guitarist that they've never heard of, but, as your ears will prove, it's anything but science fiction. In fact, don't be all that surprised if the next generation's guitar corps features a few clones of Vic Juris himself. ~ Extract from Liner Notes by Neil Tesser.

Muse Records, MR 5150, 1978
Recorded 19th & 21st September, 1977 at Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey

Personnel:
Vic Juris - Guitar
Richie Cole - Alto Saxophone (#B1,B4)
Barry Miles - Keyboards
Rick Laird - Bass
John Burr - Bass (#A3)
Terry Silverlight - Drums

Track Listing:
A1. Roadsong {Wes Montgomery} (5:46)
A2. Portabelo Market {Vic Juris} (7:21)
A3. Leah {Vic Juris} (4:46)
A4. Vic's Theme {Terry Silverlight} (3:17)
B1. In Between {Vic Juris} (4:00)
B2. One For Sonny {Vic Juris} (4:48)
B3. Free Bird {Vic Juris} (4:54)
B4. Two Lovely People {Vic Juris} (5:27)

Credits:
Producer - Richie Cole
Recording Engineer - Rudy van Gelder
Art Direction and Photography - Carol Friedman
Liner Notes - Neil Turner

Brazilian Adventure


Friday, June 26, 2015

Eddie Cleanhead Vinson - Live at Sandy's [24/48 vinyl rip]

"Muse recorded six albums during one week at Sandy's Jazz Revival, a club in Beverly, MA; two of them (this one and Hold It Right There) feature the blues vocals and alto solos of Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson. Some of the songs also have the tenors of Arnett Cobb and Buddy Tate in a supporting role but this album is largely Vinson's show. Backed by a superb rhythm section (pianist Ray Bryant, bassist George Duvivier and drummer Alan Dawson), Vinson takes four fine vocals and plays many swinging alto solos including one on "Tune Up," a song he wrote that has been mistakenly credited to Miles Davis for decades." Yanow

Arnett Cobb - Live at Sandy's [24/48 vinyl rip]

New 24/48 vinyl rip
Arnett Cobb - Live at Sandy's
Muse 5191 (1978)

01 - Just a Closer Walk With Thee
02 - Blue and Sentimental
03 - On the Sunny Side of the Street
04 - September Song
05 - Broadway

During a two-day period in 1978, Muse Records fully documented a jam session featuring the tenors of Arnett Cobb and Buddy Tate, altoist Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson, pianist Ray Bryant, bassist George Duvivier and drummer Alan Dawson. Six records resulted, two apiece headed by the three saxophonists. On this first LP, (which except for "Broadway" has been reissued on CD), Cobb has four features with the trio (highlighted by "Just Aa Closer Walk with Thee" and "September Song") before welcoming his fellow saxophonists to participate in a rousing version of "Broadway." All of the sets in this rewarding series are recommended to straightahead and mainstream jazz fans.
Review by Scott Yanow

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Walt Barr ‎– East Winds (1979) [vinyl 24/48]

A1 Cafe De La Rue 5:37
A2 Always Tomorrow 6:10
A3 East Winds 6:11
A4 Postlude 1:43
B1 Zamba 4:13
B2 Last Night Out 5:06
B3 Free Spirit 5:18
B4 Creepin' 4:47

Guitar, Arranged By – Walt Barr
Piano – Steve Haberman
Synthesizer – Roy Braverman
Bass – Bill Kuhne
Drums – Mark Leon
Percussion – Jack LeCompte
Vocals – Julie Long (tracks: B3, B4)
Westworld Recorders, March 1979.

I know nothing about Barr apert from this being his second album for Muse. To my inexpert ear a very skillful guitarist playing very much in the jazz-fusion style so redolent of the 70s.
With thanks to danair for providing the LP for me to rip.

Buddy Tate - Live At Sandy's [24/48 vinyl rip]

"One of the six Muse albums recorded at Sandy's Jazz Revival in Massachusetts during an engagement in 1978, this is essentially tenor veteran Buddy Tate's set although altoist Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson and tenor Arnett Cobb join in on the closing blues "She's Got It." Tate is in fine form on the other four songs which includes an outing on clarinet for "Blue Creek," a warm version of the ballad "Candy" and two lengthy jams with pianist Ray Bryant, bassist George Duvivier and drummer Alan Dawson. Consistently swinging music and one of the better Buddy Tate recordings currently available." Yanow

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Woody Shaw Quintet - Seattle 1979: Live At Parnell's

Here's a really exciting live show from the zenith of Shaw's legendary quintet.  It's a bootleg, but of considerable quality.  The mix is fantastic and as far as bootlegs go, excellent.  The original uploader is unknown, as are the details surrounding the recording - it was an FM broadcast.  I was able to capture the audio in full WAV format, and then transferred it to FLAC 16/44.1.  This concert is another example of how not only Woody Shaw, but his entire quintet came to be masters of the form.  The musicianship is second to none while the band interaction is almost psychic in its depth.  This is jazz at its finest... enjoy!!!








Parnell's,
Seattle, WA USA
November 21, 1979

01. Intro
02. Rosewood
03. Why
04. Body and Soul
05. Stepping Stones
06. In Your Own Sweet Way

Personnel:

Woody Shaw - trumpet
Onaje Allan Gumbs - piano
Carter Jefferson - tenor sax
Clint Houston - bass
Victor Lewis - drums

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Ran Blake - Film Noir [24/48 vinyl rip]

"Ran Blake's dark piano style and dramatic improvisations make for a perfect match with the mood of film noir. This memorable set not only has Blake performing vivid explorations of six songs from films (including melodies from All About Eve, Pinky, A Streetcar Named Desire and The Pawnbroker), but five originals that somehow musically sum up the plots of other films (including Spiral Staircase and Touch of Evil). Blake is heard in a variety of settings ranging from solo and a duet with trumpeter Ted Curson up to an 11-piece band. Utterly fascinating interpretations that add up to a memorable gem." Scott Yanow

Sunday, June 14, 2015

Chet Baker - In New York (1958) [vinyl>flac, 24-bit/48khz]

Chet Baker's West Coast cool comes to the Big Apple on Chet Baker in New York. The project would be Baker's first -- in a four album deal -- with the Big Apple-based Riverside Records. The bicoastal artist incorporates his decidedly undernourished sound and laid-back phrasing into the styling of Al Haig (piano), Johnny Griffin (tenor sax), Paul Chambers (bass), and Philly Joe Jones (drums). The results are uniformly brilliant as Baker's cool-toned solos fly and bop with authority around the equally impressive supporting soloists. Conversely, the same cohesive unity continues on the introspective numbers that are more akin to Baker's California cool. Undoubtedly one of the charms of this collection is the distinct choice of material. Running the gamut from the relaxed and soothing "Polka Dots and Moonbeams" and equally serene "Blue Thoughts" at one end of the spectrum to the percolating and driving intensity of "Hotel 49" on the other. This track features each quintet member taking extended solos corralling together at the head and again at the coda for some intense bop interaction. Especially ferocious is Philly Joe Jones, who could easily be mistaken for Keith Moon, Ginger Baker, or even Gene Krupa with his cacophonous solo that never strays from the beat or loses its sense of swing. Perhaps the best meshing of styles can be heard on the Miles Davis composition "Solar." This "best-of" candidate refers to both Chambers' and Jones' concurrent involvement with Davis. The churning backbeat likewise propels the melody and ultimately the performers into reaching beyond their individual expertise and into an area of mutual brilliance. Chet Baker in New York is a highly recommended entry into Baker's catalog. It should also be noted that these same sides were issued in 1967 as Polka Dots and Moonbeams on the Jazzland label. ~ by Lindsay Planer, AMG.

One of my favourite Chet Baker LPs, all players are marvellous, Enjoy in HD sound.

Riverside Records, RLP 12-281, 1959
Riverside Records, 888072359116, 2014
Recorded September, 1958 at Reeves Sound Studios, New York

Personnel:
Chet Baker - Trumpet
Johnny Griffin - Tenor Saxophone (#A1,A3,B2)
Al Haig - Piano
Paul Chambers - Bass
Philly Joe Jones - Drums

Track Listing:
A1. Fair Weather {Benny Golson} (6:55)
A2. Polka Dots And Moonbeams {Jimmy Van Heusen, Johnny Burke} (7:55)
A3. Hotel 49 {Owen Marshall} (9:50)
B1. Solar {Miles Davis} (5:50)
B2. Blue Thoughts {Benny Golson} (7:34)
B3. When Lights Are Low {Benny Carter, Spencer Williamson} (6:51)

Credits:
Producer, Liner Notes - Orrin Keepnews
Recording Engineer - Jack Higgins
Cover Photo - Paul Weller
Design - Paul Bacon
Bill Grauer Productions Inc., New York City

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Mike Nock Almanac 1967 [24/48 vinyl rip]

When you consider that this little post-bop miracle was recorded in 1967, you can't help but be impressed with how modern this music sounds. Perhaps that is why Improvising Artists, a label thoroughly devoted to free jazz, would have bought an already finished album that did not fit their profile at all. Nock and Marshall would soon be 1/2 of The Forth Way, Bennie would soon be with Miles and Herbie, and Cecil would soon be making countless superior recordings at Strata East, ECM and more. This album serves as a lovely snap-shot of a Bay Area jazz scene in the period just months before the Summer of Love.

I came across an near mint copy of this one a couple weeks ago!

Monday, June 8, 2015

Count Basie - Dance Along With Basie

Hey gang!!  More from our look at the "Atomic Band"... Basie during his Roulette years.  This offering is interesting for a few reasons, but overall, it's a solid and excellent album.

Looking at the tracklist, it's easy to deduce that this record is tackling pop/dance tunes of the day.  Unlike many of the other albums we've listened to thus far, there's no guest arranger here.  So the first "interesting" item is the fact that Basie himself has interpreted these songs, with input from Teddy Reig presumably.

I would say the other difference on Dance Along is the clear absence of that blues influence that is a staple of this band's sound.  The swing is always there, and heavy at times, but there's really no blues approach to this material.  I will let you ponder the reasons for that.  That said, there's a ton of extended and incredible soloing throughout all of these tunes.  The mood manages to stay upbeat, even through a ballad like Misty.

My record is near mint, and luckily, in glorious mono.  The dynamics and soundstage are everything they should be on a Basie album - HUGE!!!  I know you guys are gonna love this one.  Ripped at 24/48 and transferred to FLAC for your convenience... enjoy!!!

Roulette Records R-52036
1960


Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Liebman, Beirach, Mraz & Foster - Quest (24/48 vinyl rip)

Came across a sealed copy of this one!

"Quest was the name of the quartet that Dave Liebman (who is heard here on soprano and alto flute) had with pianist Richie Beirach, bassist George Mraz and drummer Al Foster.

"Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," Foster's tribute to Miles Davis, sounds nothing like the trumpeter's music but builds up expertly in passion and intensity with Liebman's soprano taking honors. Mraz's "Wisteria" is a memorable ballad, Lieb's soprano is explosive on "Softly s in a Morning Sunrise" and Beirach's tender ballad "Elm" (a tribute to the late violinist Zbigniew Seifert) gets fairly adventurous during its latter half. Liebman's hyper "Napanoch" and an atmospheric and floating version of Ornette Coleman's "Lonely Woman" complete this superior postbop release." Yanow