Friday, September 06, 2013

NEW RELEASES - MAYA AZUCENA, RICHARD ELLIOT, CHRISTIAN ROBINSON

MAYA AZUCENA - BLACK BUTTERFLY

To begin with, Maya’s remake of Black Butterfly is clearly inspired by Trayvon Martin. As such, 100% of the proceeds will go to support the Trayvon Martin Foundation and mission – in particular, “to create awareness of how violent crime impacts the families of the victims, and to provide support and advocacy for those families…(and) to increase public awareness of all forms of racial, ethnic and gender profiling” and build sustainable solutions. Maya’s truest desire for this song is for it to reach the ends of the earth and have the greatest possible exposure to do so. She intends for this song to impact all listeners to know their value and to strive for their greatest potential. She also thinks this song, Black Butterfly, has the potential to promote healing around the loss of Trayvon, and healing for other families with lost loved ones, as well as to set focus and energy toward nurturing the positive growth of young boys like Trayvon. At times circumstances feel very bleak, and hope is a powerful tool for impacting social change. We move when we are inspired. Black Butterlfy is a remake of the song intially recorded by Deniece Williams back in the early '80s.

RICHARD ELLIOT - NUMBER ONES

This 2013 collection is from the Scottish-born Smooth Jazz saxophonist and former Tower Of Power member. Number Ones features 12 tracks, taken from six top-selling albums. Making his solo debut in 1986, the Scottish born saxophonist blew into the 1990s with several releases that sold over 100,000 copies and he landed his fourth #1 album with 1997's 'Jumpin' Off.' In addition to the studio recordings of "Island Style" and "Inner City Blues", Number Ones includes live versions of both tracks. Elliot was still on the road with Tower of Power when he released his debut album Trolltown in 1986. Embarking upon one of instrumental music’s most dynamic and multifaceted careers, he has scored four #1 albums (On The Town, Soul Embrace, After Darkand Jumpin’ Off) and a growing number of #1 airplay singles. In addition to his participation in all-star tours like Groovin’ For Grover and Jazz Attack, in the mid-‘90s he helped launch another of the genre’s annual franchises, the Guitars & Saxes tours, which he has participated in on and off ever since. At his peak, Elliot was doing over 100 tour dates a year, but he has scaled it back as his family has grown to include five children over the years.

CHRISTIAN ROBINSON - ON THE C SIDE

"On The C Side" is the debut album release of the multi-talented Guitarist, Writer, Producer Christian Robinson. This project features 10 melodic smooth jazz hits written and performed by Christian Robinson on the indie label Digital Phunc Entertainment. The album fuses an array of musical styles including Dance, Hip-Hop, Jazz, Funk, Blues and R&B. With Christian’s very unique and different style of playing the album is the essence of smooth jazz and contemporary jazz music. This album gives you a cross between up-tempo, upbeat dance tracks, to slow, mellow and mid tempo lounge music.~ amazon.com



BOARDWALK EMPIRE PRESENTS SOUNDS OF THE ONYX: PROHIBITION ERA JAZZ REMIXED

HBO's Boardwalk Empire recently returned for its fourth season and  Giant Step has partnered with HBO, ABKCO Records and Sony Music Entertainment for a special music project entitled Sounds of The Onyx that features rare jazz recordings from the Prohibition Era remixed by some of the best contemporary urban music producers. Vibe kicked things off today with the release of Vince Giordano & The Nighthawks’ "Sugarfoot Stomp” remixed by Pete Rock. It is available for free download via facebook.com/abkco. The entire project will be available for stream only on September 16th.

While the other remixes utilize vintage 1920’s recordings, Pete Rock was the only collaborator tasked to remix one of the new recordings from the official soundtrack: a cover version of the classic composition performed by Giordano and the NYC jazz ensemble, who serve as the Boardwalk Empire house band. Volume 2 of the show’s official soundtrack is available now and features all new recordings from a wide range of vocalists - from Elvis Costello and Patti Smith to St. Vincent and The National's Matt Berninger - singing timeless standards and forgotten gems from the 1920s. It's available for download on iTunes.

Sounds of The Onyx
1. Vince Giordano & The Nighthawks "Sugarfoot Stomp" (Pete Rock Remix)
2. Eva Taylor & Clarence Williams’ Blue Five “Red Hot Flo From Kokomo (Jazz Vampires)” (DJ Jazzy Jeff Remix)
3. Ethel Waters “One Sweet Letter From You” (Om’Mas Keith Remix)
4. Lloyd Scott & His Orchestra “ Happy Hour Blues” (Shafiq Husayn Remix)
5. Jim Jackson “Bootlegging Blues” (JayCeeOh & B-Sides Remix)

6. Charlie Johnson’s Paradise Ten Orchestra “You Ain’t The One” (Tall Black Guy Remix)



~ giantstep.net

DAVID BUCHBINDER & ODESSA/HAVANA - WALK TO THE SEA

Once again, Jewish music standout trumpeter David Buchbinder and Cuban piano master Hilario Durán bring their award-winning compositional prowess to create a unique musical landscape inspiring the virtuosic performances captured on this disc.

The group's self-titled debut CD (Tzadik) was lauded with dozens of rave reviews and won the Canadian Folk Music Award for Best World Music Group/Recording. The CD was praised for its "...delicately textured and dazzlingly tuneful [compositions], and powerful, swinging and lyrical playing..." that is "passionate, dancing and completely irresistible." Since its release the band has toured across North America, playing to sold-out houses at festivals, concerts and clubs.

Now, Buchbinder and his musical compatriots have upped the ante with a renewed focus on the actual musical sources that flow through the cultures in common, sources that lead directly to the music of Andalusia, the polyglot culture of southern Spain. While the first CD was all original instrumental music, Buchbinder has opened the sound up with the inclusion of four vocal tracks, all coming from the Ladino (Judeo-Spanish) tradition; two are traditional melodies and texts completely reimagined by Durán and two are post-war Ladino poems set to original music by Buchbinder. Both composers have managed to include the voice with no sacrifice in the band's much-lauded power and drive.

Odessa/Havana is a who's who of award-winning jazz and world music masters. Buchbinder was the leader of the Flying Bulgar Klezmer Band and his own eponymous jazz ensemble and is known for creating music-centered, multidisciplinary spectacles. Durán was the musical director and pianist for Arturo Sandoval and leads both an award-winning trio and big band. Other standouts are bassist and producer Roberto Occhipinti (Jane Bunnett, Gorrilaz) and vocalist Michal Cohen (Meredith Monk, Uri Caine, Frank London), though all of the band members and the guest artists are widely traveled powerhouse musicians.

Buchbinder sees this genre-bending project in an interesting light: as an example of what he calls "post-multicultural creation, a process where two composers grounded in complementary cultures drew on the sonic essence of each to create a truly new sound that is definitely not a mash-up." In fact, the creation of the Odessa/Havana project has been part of the inspiration for the founding of Diasporic Genius, a Toronto-based initiative whose mission is empowering people to make real, positive change in their lives, their communities and their cities, by teaching and applying the power of the creative imagination and activating the hidden resource of diversity.





ED REED - I'M A SHY GUY: A TRIBUTE TO THE NAT KING COLE TRIO

Ed Reed pays homage to the King Cole Trio on his album with 13 songs the group recorded during the 1940s, plus the post-trio Nat King Cole favorite "Unforgettable" from 1951. The song selection includes Reed's distinctive treatments of the trio hits "That Ain't Right," "I'm Lost," "Straighten Up and Fly Right," "I Just Can't See for Lookin'," "It's Only a Paper Moon," and "I'm a Shy Guy," as well such lesser-known trio gems as "Baby, Baby All the Time," "Is You Is or Is You Ain't My Baby," "Meet Me at No Special Place," "'Tis Autumn," and "This Will Make You Laugh."

In choosing the repertoire for I'm a Shy Guy, his fourth album, the acclaimed Bay Area jazz vocalist Ed Reed reached way back to an early inspiration and musical hero: Nat King Cole and the King Cole Trio. "Nobody else sounded like that," Reed recalls, "and the musicianship was just fantastic." Reed's affinity with the material is obvious from the first notes of the new CD, which will be released by the singer's Blue Shorts label on October 1. "I revisited over 200 tunes recorded by the Trio," says Reed, now 84, "and it was difficult trying to narrow them down to just a few."

"Once Ed got settled in on that first day in the studio, the 'first takes' started coming one after the other," says vocalist and educator Laurie Antonioli, who co-produced the date with Ed and his wife, Diane Reed. "He'd do a song and my comment was: "That's as good as I can imagine the song sounding. Let's move on while you're on a roll!' And so he did. The end result is a recording that is completely fluid and swinging."
Empathetic support is supplied by Reed's longtime accompanists of choice: pianist Randy Porter, guitarist Jamie Fox, bassist John Wiitala, drummer Akira Tana, and tenor saxophonist Anton Schwartz.

As a teenager in Los Angeles, Reed was an ardent fan of the King Cole Trio and had the opportunity to see them perform at his school, Jordan High in Watts. "I wanted to be just like him," Ed recalls. But after the concert, "seeing Nat in person, I was filled with such awe that when he spoke to me and held out his hand, I was too shy to even say hello, and I couldn't even shake his hand."

Reed's path to his current profession as a jazz vocalist was circuitous, even torturous. A 40-year heroin addiction undermined attempts to launch a singing career. He was in and out of prison during much of the 1950s and '60s, yet managed to continue singing. During his last of his three stretches at San Quentin, he performed with the Warden's Band, a 17-piece jazz orchestra that also included saxophonist Art Pepper.
He got into recovery from alcohol and other drugs in 1986, and by the early '90s had started singing again in public. In 2005 he attended JazzCamp West, where instructor Peck Allmond heard student Reed at a fireside jam session. The singer made such a strong impression on Allmond that the multi-instrumentalist, along with drummer Bud Spangler, ended up producing Ed Reed Sings Love Stories in 2007.

The following year came The Song Is You, along with expanded touring opportunities, a guest spot on Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz, and a Wall Street Journal profile by Nat Hentoff. Reed has also regularly placed in the "Rising Star Male Vocalist" category of the DownBeat Critics Poll since 2008.

His 2011 release, Born to Be Blue, was praised for "possess[ing] all the distilled emotion and narrative coherence of a jazz masterpiece" (Andrew Gilbert, San Jose Mercury News). In a DownBeat Editors' Pick review of the disc, Frank Alkyer wrote: "When Ed Reed sings, don't expect scat -- instead look for an intimate story every time."



Ed Reed's CD release show for I'm a Shy Guy will take place 11/4 at Yoshi's Oakland, with members of the recording band. Reed will also be appearing 10/6 at Jazz at Peace, Peace Lutheran Church in Danville (5-7pm) and 2/7 at Piedmont Piano Co. in Oakland. He'll be interviewed by Alisa Clancy on KCSM.org 10/30 at 9am.

MACK AVENUE SUPERBAND - LIVE FROM THE 33RD ANNUAL DETROIT JAZZ FESTIVAL

Mack Avenue SuperBand is an all-star ensemble comprising many of the label's most acclaimed artists. Live From The Detroit Jazz Festival - 2012, documents the SuperBand's unveiling at the 33rd annual edition of the Motor City label's hometown jazz festival during 2012's Labor Day weekend.The brainchild of Mack Avenue president Denny Stilwell, the SuperBand is a fiery, celebratory conglomeration, the sort of chemistry experiment whose success is predicated on its combustibility. 

The group brings together legends and label mainstays including vibraphonist Gary Burton, guitarist Kevin Eubanks, alto saxophonist Tia Fuller, trumpeter Sean Jones, and guitarist Evan Perri, with rising stars like pianist Alfredo Rodríguez and vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant. The band is anchored by the house rhythm section of pianist Aaron Diehl, drummer Carl Allen, and bassist Rodney Whitaker (who also serves as musical director). Al Pryor, Mack Avenue EVP of A&R and the record's producer, acknowledges the challenge inherent in bringing such a loaded roster together on one stage, calling the impressive result "a team effort." 

Emphasizing the tight-knit dynamic and Detroit pride of the Mack Avenue team and the experience of the Detroit Jazz Festival's skilled crew, Pryor says that the concert's ultimate success was due to the musicians' passion. "The artists were all enthusiastic when we first approached them," he says, "and all brought something special to the table." The diversity of the material reflects the equally wide-ranging Mack Avenue roster, but this cohesive and captivating live recording is representative of the label's ambitions, the vitality of its artists, and the electricity of one September evening in Detroit. 



NEW RELEASES - NATE WOOLEY SEXTET, MULATU, CYRUS CHESTNUT

NATE WOOLEY SEXTET - SIT IN THE THRONE OF FRIENDSHIP

Nate Wooley's got a great group here – a sextet who can easily move between more arranged moments and freer ones – at a level that recalls some of the best recent underground work coming from Chicago! Matt Moran makes a very strong appearance on the set on vibes – ringing out with tones and chromes that really deepen the album strongly, and give it a sense of humanity, too – providing a bridge between the bolder horn moments and some of the more subtle rhythmic inflections. In addition to Wooley on trumpet and Moran on vibes, the set also features Josh Sinton on bass clarinet and baritone, Eivind Opsvik on bass, Dan Peck on tuba, and Harris Eisentadt on drums. Titles include "Plow", "The Berries", "Old Man On The Farm", "Make Your Friend Feel Loved", and "Executive Suites". ~ Dusty Groove

MULATU - SKETCHES OF ETHIOPIA

A brilliant new recording from Mulatu – one that shows that the Ethiopian legend hasn't lost a bit of his edge in recent years! The sound here is still very strong and bold – that crucial blending of African roots and jazzy inflections that's made Mulatu one of the most influential musicians of the latter few decades of the 20th Century – an artist who's only finally getting his due in recent years, as a range of different artists help to transform his sound. Yet there's still nothing better than Mulatu himself – as you'll hear on this wonderful set of tracks played with the Step Ahead band, with the leader on vibes, piano, and keyboards. There's a bit of vocals on a few tracks – sung by Tesfaye – but most of the record is focused on the instrumental passages, which are filled with lots of wonderful exotic inflections. Titles include "Gmuz", "Assosa Derache", "Azmari", "Gamo", "Hager Fiker", and "Surma". ~ Dusty Groove

CYRUS CHESTNUT - SOUL BROTHER COOL

A really hard-hitting set from pianist Cyrus Chestnut – wrapped up here in a cover that's an homage to Max Roach in the 60s, and served up with a groove that definitely evokes the best jazz of that decade too! The group's a very sharp quartet – with Chestnut handling piano, plus Freddie Hendrix on trumpet, Dezron Douglas on bass, and Willie Jones II on drums – and also acting here as producer, given that the set's issued on his own label! The team of Douglas and Jones is mighty deft – and really adds a bristle to the rhythms right from the start – providing a perfect place for Hendrix to show off his tight skills on trumpet, while Chestnut mixes things up with lyrical moments and some harder punch on his piano. All tunes are originals by Cyrus, which furthers the fresh feeling of the record – and titles include "The Raven", "Stripes", "Soul Brother Cool", "Piscean Thought", "Spicey Honey", and "Dawn Of The Sunset". ~ Dusty Groove



Thursday, September 05, 2013

LEE HAZLEWOOD BOX SET TO INCLUDE 17 ALBUMS DUE IN NOVEMBER

After 7 intense years in the making, Light In The Attic have announced their most expansive and lavishly packaged project to date: There’s A Dream I’ve Been Saving, commemorating the complete legacy of Lee Hazlewood Industries from 1966-1971. For more than a year now, Light In The Attic has been reissuing the solo work of this true American moustachioed maverick. Beyond restored versions of Lee’s debut Trouble is a Lonesome Town and the soundtrack A House Safe for Tigers, the lid has also been lifted on the rich, little-explored archives of the label Lee Hazlewood Industries (LHI), when Hazlewood was svengali and super-producer to a stable full of brilliant artists.

This landmark box set is the ultimate artifact for Lee Hazlewood heads new and old, containing a lavishly packaged, expansive 172-page LP sized hard cover book. But every good book deserves a soundtrack and in this case it comes in the form of a four-CD anthology of the LHI label, along with the never-before-released 1970 film Cowboy in Sweden on DVD. The CDs feature Hazlewood songs familiar and less so; surprising covers, doleful duets and little heard LHI gold.

One of the most impressive aspects of the LHI box set is the gorgeous 12”x12” LP sized book , packed with rare beautiful pictures of Lee, his artists (and the occasional horse). The pages roll out the full story of the LHI label, including interviews with Lee and Suzi Jane Hokum, re-assessments of key Hazlewood albums, and artist profiles for the label’s roster, lovingly written by renowned L.A. music journalist/novelist Jessica Hundley. In the illuminating text, a picture of Hazlewood emerges – fiercely talented, brutally independent, a rare, ornery, ruthless and visionary man.

A Deluxe Edition of the box set contains all of the above housed in a cloth-bound clamshell box with reproductions of LHI-era artifacts including press photos and a reproduction plane ticket used by Hazlewood back in ‘70. But the true icing on the cake is three data discs which include just about every 45 single and every LP ever released on LHI — in both WAVand MP3 formats. At around 17 albums and 72 singles (totaling 305 songs!), that’s a whole lot of Lee.
The set includes:

A 172 Page Hard Cover Book with over 150 rare and unseen photos, plus in depth essays,
LHI history, album breakdowns, 27 artist profiles, LHI timeline, and interviews with Lee & dozens of label alum.

Cowboy in Sweden The Film, on DVD (1970, 60 mIns): first time available. New digital transfer from the original 16mm master negative at the Swedish Broadcasting Co. Fully restored in HD with re-mastered sound. Region Free.

4 CDs (107 Tracks): all meticulously Re-mastered. Analog transfers captured at 24-bit/96-kHz. 95% of transfers from original analog master tapes (remainder transferred from mint vinyl).
- DISCS 1 & 2: Everything Lee recorded for LHI, including every 45 single and album (Cowboy in Sweden, Forty, The Cowboy & The Lady, and Requiem For an Almost Lady), plus a handful of unreleased tracks.
- DISCS 3 & 4: Key tracks from the LHI stable
 of artists, including Suzi Jane Hokom, The Kitchen Cinq, Ann-Margret, Honey Ltd., The International Submarine Band, Arthur, The Aggregation, Sanford Clark, Lynn Castle, The Surprise Package, Virgil Warner, and Hamilton Streetcar, amongst many others.
- 14 unreleased tracks
From Lee’s Personal ‘Stache:
- Flexi disc featuring unheard Lee ‘studio chatter’ (“Play it like a cowboy song”)
- Reproduction of Lee’s original embossed LHI business card
- 5 random copies include a “Golden Ticket” for a free subscription to Light In The Attic’s Lee Hazlewood Archive Series

DELUXE EDITION EXTRAS:
(Note: Deluxe Edition includes everything above from Standard Edition plus the below extras)
3 DVDs (305 Tracks):
- LHI catalog as both WAVs & MP3s (320 Kbps) – covering 17 albums and 140 A&B sides. DVDs exclude The International Submarine Band.
- Meticulously re-mastered
- DISC 1: LHI catalog (MP3 w/ cover art)
- DISC 2: LHI LPs (WAV w/ cover art)
- DISC 3: LHI 45 Singles (WAV w/ label art)
Cloth Bound Clamshell Box:
- Gold foil stamped and debossed silhouette of Lee
From The LHI Vault:
- 6 glossy LHI promo photos


- 1970 Hazlewood Airlines ticket


GRAMMY AWARD-WINNING SINGER/SONGWRITER MELISSA MANCHESTER TO RECORD 20TH ALBUM VIA INDIEGOGO CROWDFUNDING

Legendary recording artist Melissa Manchester has begun work on her 20th album, with an entirely new twist for the singer/songwriter; rather than working through a major record label as she has always done, Melissa is producing the album herself, and releasing via a fan funding effort. She is assisted on several songs by jazz guitarist and WAVE radio favorite Terry Wollman. This is Melissa's first crowd funding project in a career that spans some 40 years. Fans can be a part of the new project by contributing via Indiegogo at http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/melissa-manchester-you-gotta-love-the-life. Contributors can select premiums ranging from hand-written lyrics to Manchester hits to an in-home concert by the artist

"I had no idea what fan funding was or how to go about it until some of my students turned me on to the idea," said Manchester, who teaches at USC's Thornton School of Music, and is Artist in Residence at Citrus College in Southern California. "I have students bringing in their own CDs for me to hear, and I'm thinking 'how are these kids getting this done without a label behind them?' I am thrilled to be diving headfirst into these waters with my first new album in nine years, and with the support of loyal fans, I can't wait to share what we've accomplished together."

After graduating from New York's High School of the Performing Arts, Melissa enrolled in a songwriting class at NYU that was taught by Paul Simon. She then landed a staff writing job at Chappell Music and performed as a solo singer/pianist in the Greenwich Village club scene. There, she met Barry Manilow, who introduced her to Bette Midler, and Melissa became one of the founding members of Bette's backup group, the Harlettes.

A brilliant solo career followed, with more than 200 recorded songs spanning 19 albums and various film and television soundtracks, multiple Grammy nominations and the 1982 Grammy Award for Best Female Vocalist, Oscar nominations for her movie themes, and recordings of her compositions by such noted artists as Barbra Streisand, Dusty Springfield, Alison Krauss, Roberta Flack, Johnny Mathis, Kathy Mattea, Peabo Bryson, Cleo Laine and Barbara Cook, among others. She has composed for numerous films, including "Lady and the Tramp II: Scamp's Adventure" and "Dirty Girl." She collaborated with Kenny Loggins to co-write his 1978 hit duet with Stevie Nicks, "Whenever I Call You Friend."

As an actress, Melissa was a series regular in the TV hit "Blossom," and performed with Bette Midler in the film "For The Boys." She co-wrote the stage musical "I Sent a Letter to My Love," co-starred with Kelsey Grammer in Stephen Sondheim's "Sweeney Todd," and starred in Andrew Lloyd Webber's "Song and Dance."

NEW RELEASES - THE RIDES, STEVE DALACHINSKY / JOELLE LEANDRE, NANA, DORI & DANILO CAYMMI

THE RIDES - CAN'T GET ENOUGH

The Rides, the new blues-rock supergroup featuring legendary songwriter Stephen Stills, guitar slinger Kenny Wayne Shepherd and venerable Electric Flag keyboardist Barry Goldberg, are celebrating their stellar first week chart debut @ #42 of their album "Can’t Get Enough" on the Billboard Top 200 Albums chart. The album is also dominating several blues charts with a #2 debuts on Billboard and Amazon's blues charts and #1 at iTunes. They have built an amazing buzz with phenomenal radio support, rave reviews, exclusive premieres and national touring.  Says American Songwriter Magazine: "The unbridled energy that shoots out of this live in-studio recording…is obvious from the opening swampy riff." which The multi-generational outfit's debut album, "Can't Get Enough"  on CD, digital, and vinyl was released August 27 on 429 Records.  Featuring four co-written originals, a handful of covers, and a vintage, previously unrecorded Stills gem, Can't Get Enough was inspired by—and is an homage to—the now-classic 1968 album Super Session, which featured Stills on guitar on one side, and the late Mike Bloomfield on the other (Bloomfield had founded Electric Flag with Goldberg, who also played on Super Session, as did Blood, Sweat & Tears keyboardist Al Kooper). The Rides "Can't Get Enough" landing at #42 is 429 Records third Billboard Top 200 debut release this year. It follows the smash success of Boz Scaggs' "Memphis" and LL Cool J's "Authentic."  

STEVE DALACHINSKY / JOELLE LEANDRE - THE BILL HAS BEEN PAID

A strong pairing of the voice of Steve Dalachinsky and bass of Joelle Leandre – laid out here in a spare setting that may well make the album one of Steve's best so far! Dalachinsky is way more than just your regular jazz singer – more of a writer and a speaker, yet still with a sense of timing that makes his place in the recording studio really necessary – as his words really have a sense of illumination on the space of a record, one that takes them way past their presence on a page! Steve's presentation of the words is never overdone, and makes for a great pairing with Leandre's always-sensitive work on bass – and the set features a few instrumental passages that have Joelle stepping out on her own. Titles include "Vocalise", "Interlude 1", "Son Of The Sun", "Sweet & Low", and "Interlude 3".  ~ Dusty Groove

NANA, DORI & DANILO CAYMMI - CAYMMI 

The Caymmis do a great job of summing up their family legacy here – working on a set of tunes mostly written by the elder Dorival Caymmi, but given a set of youthful arrangements by Dori Caymmi – and sung beautifully by all three members of the family! Vocals alternate nicely – so that Nana's dusky style is in the lead at some times, Danilo's jazzier approach dominates at others, and Dori's soulful sound holds the whole thing together. Dori produced and arranged the set, and also plays acoustic guitar – and titles include "Retirantes", "Acaca", "Cantiga De Cego", "Fiz Uma Fiagem", "Roda Piao", "Historia Pro Sinhozinho", "Caminhos Do Mar", and a few "pot pourri" tracks".  ~ Dusty Groove


Wednesday, September 04, 2013

MILES DAVIS - THE ORIGINAL MONO RECORDINGS, A COLLECTION OF NINE ALBUMS SET FOR RELEASE ON NOVEMBER 12, 2013

Nine of Miles Davis' earliest albums on Columbia Records, encompassing music that he recorded for the label in monaural sound from 1956 to 1961 (and released from 1957 to 1964), will be issued together on CD for the first time as Miles Davis: The Original Mono Recordings.  

This box set, comprising nine CDs in mini-LP replica jackets, will be available everywhere November 12, 2013. On November 29th in celebration of Record Store Day, Columbia/Legacy will follow up with vinyl mono editions of Kind Of Blue, Miles & Monk At Newport, and Jazz Track—capping a series of recently released mono LPs including 'Round About Midnight, Miles Ahead, Milestones, Porgy and Bess, Sketches of Spain, and Someday My Prince Will Come.

Miles Davis: The Original Mono Recordings is a true landmark collection, with every album newly remastered in 2012-13, from the original analog master tapes.  CD consumers will be able to hear Miles' early music in mono, the way virtually all popular music was recorded, marketed and intended to be heard in the 1950s and early 1960s.  Mono was the norm before the home, broadcast and film stereo era began to develop fully in the mid-'60s, leading to stereo's all-encompassing takeover by the early '70s.

The Original Mono Recordings by Miles Davis includes:

•The six albums that trace the development of Miles' "first great quintet" at Columbia, all notably featuring John Coltrane, namely 'Round About Midnight, Milestones, Jazz Track, Kind Of Blue (at 4-times RIAA platinum, the greatest selling jazz album of all time), Someday My Prince Will Come, and Miles And Monk At Newport; and

•The three albums that placed Miles (and various group members) in sophisticated orchestral settings at Columbia, all notably arranged and conducted by Gil Evans, namely Miles Ahead, Porgy And Bess, and Sketches Of Spain.

Two of the albums included in The Original Mono Recordings are exciting rare editions that have never appeared in any Miles Davis CD collection in the U.S., and have not been generally available for many years:

•Jazz Track, presenting 10 improvised tracks that Miles recorded in Paris with European musicians in 1957, for director Louis Malle's film Ascenseur pour l'echafaud (Elevator To the Gallows), combined with three tracks by Miles' own sextet in New York—featuring Davis, John Coltrane, Cannonball Adderley, Bill Evans, Paul Chambers, and Jimmy Cobb—from their only other studio recordings of 1958, prior to the Kind Of Blue sessions in '59; and

•Miles And Monk At Newport, featuring four jazz classics recorded live by the Miles Davis Sextet at the jazz festival in 1958, followed by two classics recorded at the festival in 1963 by Columbia's newly-signed Thelonious Monk Quartet.

The Original Mono Recordings will be housed in a slipcase similar to Bob Dylan's The Original Mono Recordings box released in 2012.  The new box will contain a fully-annotated 40-page booklet with complete discographic information including personnel and production details, plus a 2,000-word essay by author and Wall Street Journal writer Marc Myers.  The liner notes add in-depth, album-by-album comments on the new remastering processes, as told to Myers by three-time Grammy Award®-winning mastering engineer Mark Wilder.

Over the course of these nine albums, whose principal recording spanned barely a half decade (from June 1956 to March 1961), The Original Mono Recordings presents a clear vision of Miles' evolution as musician and bandleader, and as a composer graduating from hardbop to modal creations.  He was famously signed to Columbia Records by George Avakian in the summer of 1955, after the A&R staff producer witnessed Miles' showstopping solo on a jam session of "'Round Midnight" at the Newport Jazz Festival.  Jazz critics acclaimed the performance as the "return of Miles," who was considered a difficult artist to work with, who did not even have a regular working group at the time.

Taking Avakian seriously, Miles assembled a group around bassist Paul Chambers and drummer "Philly" Joe Jones, with Red Garland on piano and, after several early contenders (Sonny Rollins, Hank Mobley), Philadelphian John Coltrane on tenor saxophone.  This lineup cut four LPs' worth of material in late '55 and '56 to satisfy Miles' contractual obligations to Prestige Records.  They also began to record the first Columbia LP, 'Round About Midnight, named for the paraphrased Monk title tune.  The LP, produced by Avakian, consisted of jazz and popular standards done in Miles' inimitable style.

Most significantly, in terms of The Original Mono Recordings, Myers writes, "the word 'mono' did not appear on the cover.  Instead, the jacket announced that the music inside was '360º Sound, Guaranteed High Fidelity.'  Stereo technology wouldn't be in place at Columbia until 1958, so there was no need to add the word 'mono' to delineate a difference. 'Mono has always been truer to the studio sound and the original intent,' said Avakian.  'Mono featured less audio trickery and fewer audio distractions, so you can actually hear the musical conversation between Miles and the other musicians as it occurred in the studio.'"

For the second album, Avakian realized his intention to feature Miles in the presence of a jazz orchestra: horns, trumpets, trombones, bass trombone, tuba, alto sax, bass clarinet, flutes, and clarinets, along with bassist Chambers and drummer Art Taylor.  Most significantly, Miles Ahead by Miles Davis + 19 reunited Miles with his late-1940s Birth of the Cool collaborator, arranger Gil Evans.  With the exception of the title track, composed by Miles and Evans, the program again consisted of jazz and popular standards done Miles' way.

Although the third album, Milestones, was recorded in two productive days of sessions in February and March 1958, it proved to be Avakian's final LP with Miles.  It reintroduced the quintet (Coltrane, Garland, Chambers, Jones) along with a new member from Florida, former schoolteacher Julian "Cannonball" Adderley on alto sax.  Some of Miles' most iconic music is heard on Milestones: the quintet (sextet's) versions of Jackie McLean's "Dr. Jekyll," Dizzy Gillespie's "Two Bass Hit," and Monk's closing "Straight, No Chaser."  At the same time, the album upped the ante of Miles' originals with two, "Miles" and the 13-minute "Sid's Ahead," which hinted at things to come from the inspired young (32-year old) artist.

Two months after the Milestones sessions, the quintet (sextet) was back in the studio for a day of recording with a new Columbia staff producer, Cal Lampley.  The session yielded four classics, three of which, due to length, made Side B of Jazz Track: Miles' original "Fran-Dance," and two American Songbook standards, "On Green Dolphin Street" and "Stella by Starlight." (The fourth, "Love for Sale," running over 11 minutes, is included on Columbia/Legacy's Kind Of Blue 50th Anniversary sets.)  The year before (December 1957), Miles had temporarily disbanded his group and gone to Paris to perform.  There he was hired to create a soundtrack for French film director Louis Malle's suspenseful murder mystery Ascenseur pour l'echafaud (Elevator To the Gallows in the U.S.).  Miles and several European jazz musicians improvised the music while seeing the film on a screen.  The music, barely 25 minutes, was issued on LP in France in 1958, and was subsequently coupled with the three Lampley tracks on Columbia as the cleverly titled Jazz Track, one of Miles' most elusive and collectible LPs.

In between, Miles got back together with Gil Evans in July and August 1958, for the jazz orchestral masterpiece, the Gershwins' Porgy And Bess, the final LP with Lampley.  The scene was then set for the March-April 1959 Kind Of Blue sessions, with Columbia's Irving Townsend historically attributed as having overseen the recording, with a slightly revamped quintet (sextet) lineup, as Jones was replaced by Jimmy Cobb on drums, and Garland was replaced on piano by Bill Evans (on "So What," "Blue In Green," "All Blues," and "Flamenco Sketches") and by Wynton Kelly ("Freddie Freeloader").  The impact of Kind Of Blue, not only on jazz but on popular (even classical) music in general, continues to reverberate.  It is part of the Library Of Congress National Recording Registry, it is #12 on the Rolling Stone list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, and it was even honored by the U.S. House of Representatives in 2009, the album's 50th anniversary.

Kind Of Blue's closing track, "Flamenco Sketches," might have hinted at the next project, the jazz orchestral Latin-tinged modal masterwork, Sketches Of Spain, the third of Miles' collaborations with Gil Evans.  Under Columbia's staff producer Teo Macero (who would remain Miles' exclusive producer at Columbia through the 1980s), two standards of the Spanish national repertoire, Rodrigo's "Concierto de Aranjuez" and de Falla's Will o' the Wisp (from "El amor brujo") were juxtaposed with three Evans originals, "The Pan Piper," "Saeta" and "Solea."  Myers characterizes the conceptual framework as, "Davis' piercing, crying solos supported by Evans' sighing, sophisticated orchestrations that both provoked and mirrored Davis' lines." 

The quintet lineup was again fine-tuned in 1961 for Someday My Prince Will Come, Coltrane's final Columbia recording with Miles (on the opening title track, from Disney's Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs, and a Miles original, "Teo").  Tenor saxophonist Hank Mobley actually doubles with Trane on the title track, but has the tenor chair to himself on the other tracks, Miles originals ("Pfrancing," "Drad-Dog"), and American Songbook staples "Old Folks" and Johnny Mercer's closing "I Thought About You." 

Though separated in time by five summers, the Newport Jazz Festival performances by Miles' sextet in 1958 (Adderley, Coltrane, Evans, Chambers, Cobb), and Thelonious Monk's quartet in 1963, as heard on Miles And Monk At Newport, are remarkably seamless.  As Mark Wilder told Myers, "I originally assumed that this album was going to need the most work to capture the original mono sound.  After all, the Davis cuts were recorded in 1958, Monk's in 1963, and both were recorded outdoors.  Surprisingly, though, the master tapes were exactly like the original LP pressing and needed no fine-tuning."

"For the producers and engineers who toiled on Davis' albums between 1955 and 1963, mono was considered the purest and most unadulterated recorded expression of the trumpeter's genius," Myers writes.  "Stereo versions of Davis' albums weren't made available until Kind of Blue in August 1959, and even then mono continued to be a priority since stereo LPs were marketed initially only to the small number of upscale consumers with stereo systems."

The Original Mono Recordings follows in the tradition of the eight-time Grammy Award®-winning Miles Davis Series of multiple-CD box sets that began in 1996.  The series culminated in the 2009 box set of 52 mini-LP replica jacketed albums, The Complete Miles Davis Columbia Album Collection, whose contents were all heard in stereo.

The Original Mono Recordings was produced for release by multiple Grammy Award®-winners Steve Berkowitz and mastering engineer Mark Wilder, who have overseen the Miles Davis Series since its inception more than 18 years ago, and the Miles Davis Bootleg Series since it was introduced in 2011.

The Original Mono Recordings by Miles Davis:

Disc One:
'Round About Midnight by The Miles Davis Quintet (originally issued March 4, 1957, as Columbia CL 949)  Selections:  1. 'Round Midnight (recorded 9/10/56) * 2. Ah-Leu-Cha (10/27/55) * 3. All of You (9/10/56) * 4. Bye Bye Blackbird (6/5/56) * 5. Tadd's Delight (6/5/56) * 6. Dear Old Stockholm (6/5/56).

Disc Two:
Miles Ahead by Miles Davis + 19 (originally issued October 14, 1957, as Columbia CL 1041)  Selections:  1. Springsville (recorded 5/23/57) * 2. The Maids of Cadiz (5/6/57) * 3. The Duke (5/6/57) * 4. My Ship (5/10/57, from the Broadway musical, Lady in the Dark) * 5. Miles Ahead (5/10/57) * 6. Blues for Pablo (5/23/57) * 7. New Rhumba (5/23/57) * 8. The Meaning of the Blues (5/27/57) * 9. Lament (5/27/57) * 10. I Don't Wanna Be Kissed (By Anyone But You) (5/27/57).

Disc Three:
Milestones by Miles Davis (originally issued December 1, 1958, as Columbia CL 1193)  Selections:  1. Dr. Jekyll (recorded 3/4/58) * 2. Sid's Ahead (3/4/58) * 3. Two Bass Hit (2/4/58) * 4. Miles (2/4/58) * 5. Billy Boy (2/4/58) * 6. Straight, No Chaser (2/4/58).

Disc Four:
Jazz Track by Miles Davis (originally issued October 19, 1959, as Columbia CL 1268)  Selections:  1. Generique * 2. L'assassinat de Carala * 3. Sur l'autoroute * 4. Julien dans l'ascenseur * 5. Florence sur les Champs-Elysees * 6. Diner au motel * 7. Evasion de Julien * 8. Visite du vigile * 9. Au bar du Petit-Bac * 10. Chez le photographe du motel * 11. On Green Dolphin Street (recorded 5/26/58) * 12. Fran-Dance (5/26/58) * 13. Stella By Starlight (5/26/58).  (Tracks 1-10, music from the Louis Malle film, Ascenseur pour l'echafaud, recorded in Paris, 12/4 & 5/57.)

Disc Five:
Porgy And Bess by Miles Davis (originally issued March 9, 1959, as Columbia CL 1274)  Selections:  1. The Buzzard Song (recorded 8/4/58) * 2. Bess You Is My Woman Now (7/29/58) * 3. Gone (7/22/58) * 4. Gone, Gone, Gone (7/22/58) * 5. Summertime (8/18/58) * 6. Bess, Oh Where's My Bess (8/4/58) * 7. Prayer (Oh, Doctor Jesus) (8/4/58) * 8. Fishermen, Strawberry and Devil Crab (7/29/58) * 9. My Man's Gone Now (7/22/58) * 10. It Ain't Necessarily So (7/29/58) * 11. Here Come de Honey Man (7/29/58) * 12. I Loves You, Porgy (8/18/58) * 13. There's a Boat That's Leaving Soon for New York (8/18/58).

Disc Six:
Kind Of Blue by Miles Davis (originally issued August 17, 1959, as Columbia CL 1355)  Selections:  1. So What (recorded 3/2/59) * 2. Freddie Freeloader (3/2/59) * 3. Blue In Green (3/2/59) * 4. All Blues (3/2/59) * 5. Flamenco Sketches (4/22/59).

Disc Seven:
Sketches Of Spain by Miles Davis (originally issued July 18, 1960, as Columbia CL 1480)  Selections:  1. Concierto de Aranjuez (recorded 11/20/59) * 2. Will o' the Wisp (3/11/60, from "El amor brujo") * 3. The Pan Piper (3/10/60) * 4. Saeta (3/11/60) * 5. Solea (3/11/60).

Disc Eight:
Someday My Prince Will Come by Miles Davis (originally issued December 11, 1961, as Columbia CL 1656)  Selections:  1. Someday My Prince Will Come (recorded 3/20/61, from the Walt Disney film, Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs) * 2. Old Folks (3/20/61) * 3. Pfranc­ing (3/7/61) * 4. Drad-Dog (3/7/61) * 5. Teo (3/21/61) * 6. I Thought About You (3/21/61).

Disc Nine:
Miles And Monk At Newport (originally issued May 11, 1964, as Columbia CL 2178)  Selections:  1. Ah-Leu-Cha * 2. Straight, No Chaser * 3. Fran-Dance * 4. Two Bass Hit (tracks 1-4 by the Miles Davis Sextet, recorded 7/4/58) * 5. Nutty * 6. Blue Monk (tracks 5-6 by the Thelonious Monk Quartet, recorded 7/4/63).



NEW RELEASES - STEVE GADD BAND, JANIS SIEGEL, PATRICK YANDALL

STEVE GADD BAND - FADDITUDE

2013 album from the legendary drummer. For Gadditude, his tenth outing as a leading and second for BFM Jazz, Steve Gadd got a little help from his distinguished friends - guitarist Michael Landau, keyboardist Larry Goldings, trumpeter Walt Fowler and bassist Jimmy Johnson. Together they had already established a high degree of bandstand chemistry as the touring band for superstar singer-songwriter James Taylor. That goes a long way in explaining the sense of comfort and ease from track to track on this relaxed session recorded in just one week at Landau's home studio. ~ amazon.com


JANIS SIEGEL - NIGHT SONGS

Over the years, Janis has sung lead on many of the Manhattan Transfer's biggest hits, including 'Operator,' 'Twilight Zone,' 'The Boy from New York City,' 'Mystery,' 'Spice of Life,' 'Shaker Song,' 'Birdland,' 'Ray's Rockhouse,' and the 5-million selling 'Chanson D'Amour.' Her first solo album, Experiment in White, was released in 1981. At Home, her second solo effort, garnered Janis a Grammy nomination for Best Female Jazz Vocal.  The second album with Fred Hersch, Slow Hot Wind, was released in 1995 on Varese/Sarabande Records. Janis and Fred have toured extensively in the U.S. and Japan, and have also done radio concerts, T.V. and private dates. Her fifth solo album entitled The Tender Trap was released by Monarch Records in 1999, was produced and arranged by Fred Hersch, and featured Russell Malone, Matt Wilson, Victor Lewis, Michael Brecker and Hank Crawford. I Wish You Love, released in 2002, marked her first CD for the Telarc label and a return to working with longtime collaborator and friend Joel Dorn.
Friday Night Special followed in 2003 featuring soul jazz and bluesy grooves with a first-rate organ and tenor ensemble consisting of Joey DeFrancesco and Houston Person. Her most recent Telarc release, 2004's Sketches of Broadway, was produced and arranged by longtime friend Gil Goldstein. Janis will be touring on Night Songs in 2013. ~ amazon.com

PATRICK YANDALL - SOUL GRIND

2013 release, the 15th album from the Smooth Jazz guitarist. Produced and engineered by Yandall (who also writes 11 of the 14 tracks), this is very much his own project and a resounding showcase for his art. Yandall's music is typified by an easy grooving San Diego vibe that is consistently to die for. Despite a mellow introduction, 'It's Time' quickly takes on something of a Steely Dan attitude and, talking of Steely Dan, Patrick takes time out for a sumptuous reimagining of the band's 'Josie.' One of only three covers it is in the good company of a handsome take on the timeless 'Human Nature' and an immaculate rendition of Larry Carlton's 'Room 335' from his 1977 self-titled debut. ~ amazon.com



GHOST TRAIN ORCHESTRA - BOOK OF RHAPSODIES

Book of Rhapsodies is Ghost Train Orchestra's second album, following their highly acclaimed debut Hothouse Stomp (2011). In this adventurous installment, Ghost Train Orchestra plus a six-member choir perform bandleader Brian Carpenter's modernistic reimaginings of four unusual ensembles from the late 1930s: The Alec Wilder Octet, The John Kirby Sextet, The Raymond Scott Quintette, and Reginald Foresythe and His New Music. Produced by Grammy award winner Danny Blume and featuring Carpenter's surreal arrangements for 12-member orchestra plus choir, Book of Rhapsodies delivers the rich experience of transporting the listener to the past and using that past to transform the future.

Decades before composer/conductor Gunther Schuller coined the term Third Stream to describe a genre straddling the line between jazz and classical music, New York became the epicenter of a new movement of composers whose work seemed to exist outside the margins. In the late 1930s, a small cadre of forward-thinking composers began creating small ensembles with unorthodox instrumentation to realize some of the strangest and most evocative music of the period. With Book of Rhapsodies, Ghost Train Orchestra travels ten years ahead from Hothouse Stomp to tackle Brian Carpenter's new rearrangements of late 1930s chamber jazz by four seminal bandleader/composers: Alec Wilder, John Kirby, Raymond Scott, and Reginald Foresythe.

The Ghost Train Orchestra's debut album Hothouse Stomp  listed on several 2011 top ten lists: NPR, New York Jazz Record, Boston Globe, JazzTimes, The Sound Room, and Stereophile Magazine. Brian Carpenter was featured on NPR's Fresh Air with Terry Gross and the album reached the top 10 of the Billboard Jazz charts. Downbeat Magazine raved "Carpenter and his little big band don't just recreate musical museum pieces; they breathe fire and life into this amazing musicŠthe only thing better than hearing this recording would be seeing the band live."

The Ghost Train Orchestra was formed in 2006 after Carpenter was selected as the musical director for an event marking the 90th anniversary of the historic Regent Theater in Arlington, MA. Since then the band has performed regularly in New York City, home of all its members except the leader, a Boston resident. Book of Rhapsodies was recorded at Brooklyn Recording Studio after a string of monthly shows at Brooklyn's colorful Jalopy Theater. Carpenter rearranged the music for orchestra, adding strings, low brass, guitar, and a six-member choir featuring members of the Philip Glass/Robert Wilson opera Einstein on the Beach. Acclaimed artist Noah Woods created the cover and booklet artwork inspired by the strange and descriptive song titles of the original composers.

In 2001, Carpenter moved to Boston to direct a film documentary on the life and legacy of Albert Ayler. He subsequently founded the sprawling Boston-based band Beat Circus and composed an acclaimed "Weird American Gothic" trilogy of dark Americana albums. He also leads Brian Carpenter & the Confessions, whose music is primarily song-oriented, with Carpenter as lead singer and lyricist. He was recently commissioned by the Berkeley Repertory Theater in California as composer and lyricist for "true crime" musical The Barbary Coast, based on the book by Herbert Asbury. In addition, he produces radio programs on WZBC-FM at Boston College, including recent documentaries on Sam Rivers, Raymond Scott, and film sound design. His Ghost Train Orchestra features an outstanding roster of talent: alto saxophonist Andy Laster (Satoko Fujii), clarinetist Dennis Lichtman (Mona's Hot Four, Nation Beat), tenor saxophonist Petr Cancura (Joe Morris), trombonist Curtis Hasselbring (Ballin' the Jack), tubist Ron Caswell (Slavic Soul Party), violinist Mazz Swift (Burnt Sugar), guitarist Avi Bortnick (John Scofield), bassist Michael Bates, and drummer Rob Garcia (Joseph Jarman, Vince Giordano).

Book of Rhapsodies will be released on October 8, 2013.




Tuesday, September 03, 2013

NEW RELEASES - STACEY KENT, RANDY BRECKER, KATHY SANBORN

STACEY KENT - THE CHANGING LIGHTS

A multi-award winner (2001 British Jazz Award, 2002 BBC Jazz Award Best Vocalist, etc) and Grammy nominee, Stacey has built a huge fanbase for her cool, classy interpretations of the Great American Songbook, all recorded with husband, arranger, producer and now songwriter Jim Tomlinson (himself a winner of the 2006 Album of the Year British Jazz Award). Her new album, The Changing Lights is a musical journey through jazz, bossa nova and chanson, including a mixture of Bossa Nova classics from Tom Jobim, Marcos Valle, and also Roberto Menescal, who appears as a featured guest on the album. There are also new songs written especially for Stacey by Jim Tomlinson. The title track, 'The Changing Lights', is written by Jim Tomlinson and novelist Kazuo Ishiguro, the songwriting team that have been writing for her since her first album for EMI, the Grammy-nominated Breakfast On The Morning Tram. Stacey tours constantly, and as well as the Ronnie Scott's dates in late September / early October, she will play a significant number of dates in the UK this year (see the left of this presenter). We will be focusing our promotion and marketing push then as a preview to the forthcoming residency at Ronnie Scotts from Sep 30th to October 4th. We will also target such obvious music shows as Later With Jools and the full range of daytime and arts TV shows - including Richard & Judy, Breakfast shows, Loose Women, The Culture Show, Newsnight, etc. Stacey is a staple for all jazz radio in the UK. We will be focussing on 'One Note Samba' and 'The Changing Lights'. She will be doing interviews and sessions on everything across the BBC and jazz radio stations. We will also be going for Album of the Week, as well as plays right across the spread of jazz radio and more adult-oriented stations and shows. ~ cduniverse

RANDY BRECKER - THE BRECKER BROTHERS BAND REUNION

Though saxophonist Michael Brecker passed away in 2007, his brother, trumpeter Randy Brecker, keeps the jazz-funk fusion of the Brecker Brothers alive with the Brecker Brothers Reunion Band. While not a strict reunion of the original ensemble, the band does feature many of the players who have performed with the Brecker Brothers over the years, such as guitarist Mike Stern, drummer Dave Weckl, and keyboardist George Whitty, as well as new members including Italian saxophonist Ada Rovatti (Brecker's wife), and keyboardist Oli Rockberger. The band played several shows beginning in 2011, and in 2013 released this album, which also featured such former Brecker Brothers' associates as guitarists Dean Brown, Adam Rogers, and Mitch Stein, drummer Rodney Holmes, bassist Chris Minh Doky, and saxophonist David Sanborn. ~ Matt Collar

KATHY SANBORN - SULTRY NIGHT

Sultry Night is the steamy new release by American jazz singer and composer Kathy Sanborn. Sanborn's sizzling album has a film noir inspiration, where passion and sensuality rule the day.Sultry Night opens with the smoky and seductive title track, evocative of the age of film noir detectives Sam Spade and Philip Marlowe. The album continues with songs honoring movie icon Cary Grant and jazz vocal legend Anita O'Day, both performers reaching their heyday in the age of film noir, the 1940s and '50s. The album features both ballads and upbeat songs, performed in Sanborn's inimitable smooth and sultry style. The singer composed all of the album's nine songs. In a reverential turn, Sanborn penned the song, "Angels Cry," in honor of the children who lost their lives in the Sandy Hook school tragedy. Based in northern California, the velvet-voiced jazz songstress and composer is of Nicaraguan descent. Bilingual and cosmopolitan, the exotic Sanborn combines sultry vocals with artistic originality. Besides composing, arranging, and producing the Sultry Night album, Sanborn provides the vocal and piano artistry. Trumpeter Wayne Ricci complements the album with full-bodied, film noir performances. 

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