Wednesday, May 08, 2013

JAMES BROWN - THE BEST OF LIVE AT THE APOLLO: 50TH ANNIVERSARY

Two music icons, James Brown and the Apollo Theater, both steeped in rich history and community, bringing out the best in each other: That’s what you’ll hear on the brand-new collection, JAMES BROWN – Best Of Live At The Apollo: 50th Anniversary, to be released June 25, 2013 by Universal Music Enterprises (UMe) – a unique album celebrating 50 years since the release of Brown’s 1963 classic album Live At The Apollo, and showcasing his many great performances recorded there. Brown, who would have turned 80 years old tomorrow, May 3rd, first arrived at the Apollo in April 1959 as an opening act for Little Willie John, one of his idols, though he wouldn’t be an opener for long. The Hardest Working Man In Show Business would play the Apollo Theater every year through 1974, and would return when the theater reopened its doors, with Brown ultimately playing there more than 600 times.

JAMES BROWN – Best Of Live At The Apollo: 50th Anniversary showcases 12 tracks from Brown’s three landmark albums recorded at the historic building: Live At The Apollo (recorded 1962, released 1963), Live At The Apollo Vol. II (recorded 1967, released 1968), and Revolution Of The Mind: Recorded Live At The Apollo Vol. III (recorded and released 1971), and includes two unreleased tracks taken from the live album Get Down At The Apollo with The J.B.’s: Live At The Apollo Vol. IV. The latter was recorded September 1972, but was ultimately never released.

Personally funded by James Brown, the original, critically acclaimed Live At The Apollo, featuring the Famous Flames and the James Brown Orchestra, was first released in 1963 and became a cultural phenomenon, reaching No. 2 on The Billboard 200 album chart. In 2003 it was listed at No. 24 on Rolling Stone’s 500 Greatest Albums Of All Time and in 2004, Live At The Apollo was added to the Library Of Congress’ National Recording Registry. Three tracks from this landmark recording, “I’ll Go Crazy,” “Try Me” and “Night Train,” plus the famous show introduction, are featured on Best Of Live At The Apollo.

Recorded in June 1967, Live At The Apollo Vol. II was released in 1968 and ushered in Brown’s new funky style with a larger, more sophisticated iteration of the James Brown Orchestra, featuring Maceo Parker and led by Alfred “Pee Wee” Ellis. This was Brown’s first live, double-LP set and charted at No. 2 on the R&B Album chart and Top 40 on The Billboard 200. Three tracks featured on Best Of Live At The Apollo from this recording are the live hit single “There Was A Time,” “Cold Sweat” and “Please, Please, Please,” showing the constant evolution of Soul Brother No. 1.

Revolution Of The Mind: Recorded Live At The Apollo Vol. III, a double-LP from 1971, is Brown’s third official live album recorded at the Apollo Theater and features the backing band Fred Wesley & The J.B.’s. Revolution Of The Mind went to No. 7 on the R&B Albums chart and No. 39 on The Billboard 200. Three tracks from the album, the super-hot “Sex Machine,” “Get Up, Get Into It, Get Involved” and “Soul Power” are featured on Best Of Live At The Apollo.

Get Down At The Apollo with The J.B.’s was recorded for a potential double-album and was to feature the J.B.’s as well as James Brown Revue singer Lyn Collins. It was mixed for LP but its release canceled. Best Of Live At The Apollo includes two songs from the album, the instrumental “Hot Pants Road” and “There It Is,” in new mixes exclusive to this collection. (An alternate take of “There It Is” was included on a previous JB collection.)

Best Of Live At The Apollo includes James Brown’s legendary hits, all recorded where the Godfather made history: Live at the Apollo!

JAMES BROWN – Best Of Live At The Apollo: 50th Anniversary
1. Introduction to James Brown
2.I’ll Go Crazy
3.Try Me
4.Night Train
5.There Was A Time
6.Cold Sweat
7.Please, Please, Please
8.Sex Machine
9.Get Up, Get Into It, Get Involved
10.Soul Power
11.Hot Pants Road *
12.There It Is *

Produced by James Brown  / * Previously Unreleased

BURT BACHARACH - THE ART OF THE SONGWRITER: ANYONE WHO HAD A HEART

Burt Bacharach, one of the world’s most acclaimed, award-winning composer/songwriters, is celebrating his 85th birthday (May 12) with today’s publication of his new autobiography from HarperCollins and Universal Music Enterprises’ May 28 release of a career-spanning 2-CD collection of his best songwriting collaborations. The Art Of The Songwriter: Anyone Who Had A Heart – The Best Of Burt Bacharach collects 40 of Bacharach’s timeless songs, performed by music’s most influential artists of the twentieth century, including “I Say A Little Prayer” (Aretha Franklin), “Alfie” (Barbra Streisand), “Wishin’ And Hopin’” (Brenda Lee), “Arthur’s Theme (Best That You Can Do)” (Christopher Cross), “Let The Music Play” (Diana Ross & The Supremes), “Any Day Now” (Elvis Presley), “Overnight Success” (Gladys Knight & The Pips), “Walk On By” (Gloria Gaynor), “I’ll Never Fall In Love Again” (Isaac Hayes), “That’s What Friends Are For” (Kevin Eubanks), “Heartlight” (Neil Diamond), “On My Own” (Patti LaBelle and Michael McDonald), “What’s New Pussycat” (Tom Jones), and many more.

For the past six decades, Burt Bacharach's songwriting has touched millions of devoted listeners all over the world. He has written more than seventy Top 40 hits and he has earned GRAMMY®, OSCAR®, and EMMY® Awards for his work. From his first pop hit on the charts, 1957’s “The Story of My Life” recorded by Marty Robbins, to his hit-making collaborations with longtime writing partner and lyricist Hal David, including “Alfie,” “A House Is Not A Home,” “Wishin’ And Hopin’,” “Raindrops Keep Fallin’ On My Head,” “I Say a Little Prayer,” and “This Guy’s in Love with You,” to more recent songs co-written with Carole Bayer Sager, Elvis Costello and others, The Art Of The Songwriter: Anyone Who Had A Heart – The Best Of Burt Bacharach is a career-spanning overview of Bacharach’s creative best.

The Art Of The Songwriter: Anyone Who Had A Heart – The Best Of Burt Bacharach invites the listener to delve into many of Bacharach’s most legendary, career-defining songs, while his new autobiography (written with Robert Greenfield), Anyone Who Had A Heart: My Life and Music, offers a frank and riveting account of his life and the stories behind the hits.

The Art Of The Songwriter: Anyone Who Had A Heart – The Best Of Burt Bacharach

DISC 1
01. ARETHA FRANKLIN I Say A Little Prayer
02. B. J. THOMAS Raindrops Keep Fallin’ On My Head
03. DUSTY SPRINGFIELD I Just Don’t Know What To Do With Myself
04. ETTA JAMES Waiting For Charlie To Come Home
05. MARTY ROBBINS The Story Of My Life
06. SERGIO MENDES & BRASIL ‘66 The Look Of Love
07. BROOK BENTON A House Is Not A Home
08. CHRISTOPHER CROSS Arthur’s Theme (Best That You Can Do)
09. SMITH Baby It’s You
10. GENE MCDANIELS Tower Of Strength
11. PERRY COMO Magic Moments
12. RICK NELSON Take A Broken Heart
13. BRENDA LEE Wishin’ And Hopin’
14. SYBIL Don’t Make Me Over
15. ELVIS PRESLEY Any Day Now
16. GENE PITNEY Twenty Four Hours From Tulsa
17. ISAAC HAYES I’ll Never Fall In Love Again
18. RONALD ISLEY Love’s (Still) The Answer
19. DIONNE WARWICK Anyone Who Had A Heart
20. JACKIE DESHANNON What The World Needs Now

DISC 2
01. TOM JONES What’s New Pussycat?
02. BARBRA STREISAND Alfie
03. THE WALKER BROTHERS Make It Easy On Yourself
04. HERB ALPERT This Guy’s In Love With You
05. THE MARVELETTES Message To Michael
06. THE FIFTH DIMENSION One Less Bell To Answer
07. GLORIA GAYNOR Walk On By
08. ASTRUD GILBERTO Trains And Boats And Planes
09. DIANA ROSS & THE SUPREMES Let The Music Play
10. THE STYLISTICS You’ll Never Get To Heaven (If You Break My Heart)
11. JACK JONES Wives And Lovers
12. CHRIS DE BURGH Love Is My Decision
13. PATTI PAGE Keep Me In Mind
14. PATTI LABELLE and MICHAEL MCDONALD On My Own
15. BURT BACHARACH Nikki
16. MANFRED MANN My Little Red Book
17. GLADYS KNIGHT & THE PIPS Overnight Success
18. ELVIS COSTELLO and BURT BACHARACH Toledo
19. KEVIN EUBANKS That’s What Friends Are For
20. NEIL DIAMOND Heartlight 

LA TV STATION KLCS TO AIR THE FRANK SINATRA SHOW

Sinatra lovers of all ages will get a special treat in May as KLCS presents the “Frank Sinatra Show” featuring some of America’s premier music icons like Elvis Presley, Sammy Davis Jr., Nancy Sinatra, Peter Lawford, and Joey Bishop. The shows, hosted by Sinatra aficionado Jerry Sharell, will air on Mother’s Day, Sunday, May 12, at 9 a.m. and Tuesday’s in May at 8 p.m. on KLCS, Channel 58 (L.A.’s own PBS station), DirecTV, Dish network and most cable systems.

ABC and CBS aired The Frank Sinatra Show from 1958 to 1960. Relive the Rat Pack’s day along with their very special friends…Watch, Elvis Presley’s first network appearance after returning from his service in the Army. The Frank Sinatra Show takes place at the famous Miami Beach Fontainebleau Hotel with guests including Sammy Davis Dr., Peter Lawford, Bing Crosby, Ella Fitzgerald, Eleanor Roosevelt, Lena Horne and more.

“The Frank Sinatra Show on KLCS creates an opportunity for our Station to reach viewers who believe in the arts, culture, education and excellence. We know that our City has a huge Sinatra fan base, and we want to bring these viewers a special treat for their enjoyment,” said Sabrina Thomas, KLCS General Manager. “KLCS is also honored to have Mr. Sharell join us to share his great Sinatra stories, his insights and to support KLCS,” added Thomas.

The Sinatra series provides a rare opportunity to take a glimpse back in time, and savor the essence of Sinatra, while observing the nuances of a bygone era and the subtleties of this great man and entertainer, who changed the world with his conscience, character and talents. 

MOPPA ELLIOT'S MOSTLY OTHER PEOPLE DO THE KILLING TO RELEASE SIXTH STUDIO ALBUM - RED HOT

On its newest album Red Hot, to be released on Hot Cup Records on September 24, 2013, Mostly Other People Do the Killing (MOPDtK) - a fearless ensemble that is one of the most acclaimed jazz groups working today - draws on the melodies and forms of late 1920s and early 1930s jazz and blues artists in music composed by bassist/bandleader Moppa Elliott.

For this project, MOPDtK has expanded its lineup to a 7-piece version which adds veteran New York journeyman Dave Taylor on bass trombone, Brandon Seabrook on banjo, and Ron Stabinsky on piano, each of whom has a lengthy history with MOPDtK.Their inclusion amplifies and clarifies the already well-known and acclaimed approach of the band. They fit seamlessly with the band's eclectic aesthetic, as each soloist demonstrates a deep understanding of music history, the ability to seamlessly incorporate extended techniques, and a propensity to juxtapose disparate musical styles.

Despite sounding wildly different, Red Hot follows the same conceptual approach as MOPDtK's previous Hot Cup release, Slippery Rock. For both projects, Elliott immersed himself in the music of a specific time period and searched for musical elements that were unique to each genre. In the case of Slippery Rock, the source material in question was classic smooth jazz of the mid 1970s to 1980s. For Red Hot, Elliott investigated the formal structures of jazz and blues recordings of the late 1920s and early 1930s. He highlighted the frequent use of modulations, stop-time sections, alternating solos and tutti passages, uneven phrase lengths and shifts in meter as essential elements to that time period's music that are underutilized by early 21st century jazz composers.

Yet rather than attempting to simply recreate the music of 80 years ago, Elliott incorporated these idiomatic structural elements into his own unmistakable compositional style. Anachronistic juxtapositions occur frequently but are somehow unified, as music spanning all of the last 80 years is shaped into a decidedly contemporary composite sound. Of particular note is Elliott's use of unaccompanied solos in the form of introductions, cadenzas and stop-time passages to allow the compositions to be partially defined by the whims of his band members. Elliott's Ellingtonian arrangements make full use of the orchestral palate the expanded ensemble offers him while highlighting the specific talents of each musician.

The opening track, "The Shickshinny Shimmy," utilizes an idiomatic double-time feel while the saxophone intones the melody before settling into the slower tempo. Relaxed swing alternating with hard rock power chords serves as the accompaniment for a trombone melody before transitioning to a shout chorus. The soloists first improvise over a modal vamp before moving on to the coda, a constantly rising vamp based on the idea of the Shepard tone.

"Zelienople" is introduced by drummer Kevin Shea after a lengthy drum solo in which he explores the large, 1930s vintage Slingerland drum set he plays throughout the album. The jaunty opening melody stated by Peter Evans on trumpet is surrounded by collective improvisation and wild shifts in tempo and style by Shea's drums. The second theme, a unison banjo and bass trombone melody, is played at a half-time tempo before the trombone returns to the opening phrase punctuated by stop-time figures in the ensemble. Dave Taylor's bass trombone solo continues over a stride piano accompaniment before the rhythm section re-enters and this solo form is repeated for Evans' trumpet.

The title cut opens with a banjo and electronics solo in which Brandon Seabrook manipulates sine waves while interjecting acoustic banjo phrases. The composition itself is a mash-up of at least five different songs by The Red Hot Chili Peppers, a band that profoundly influenced composer Elliott during his formative years in the early 1990s. Other compositional elements such as the double-time piano solos and some formal elements were derived from the Jelly Roll Morton compositions for his band, The Red Hot Peppers. Most of the expropriated melodic material has been adapted to blues harmonies and each member of the ensemble is given ample solo space.

After a masterful opening solo by Ron Stabinsky that contains more quotations and references than this space allows, "King of Prussia" begins with a series of piano cadenzas before being joined by the C melody saxophone to intone the slow swing theme. The second statement of the theme by Seabrook's bowed banjo segues into an improvised trio with piano and drums that veers into radically different musical territory. Seabrook brings the ensemble back in for a stop-time trumpet solo in which each solo break is of a different duration. Trumpeter Peter Evans explores a wide variety of sounds before the coda brings the tune to a close with erie electronic effects by Seabrook.

Bandleader Elliott opens "Turkey Foot Corner" with an unaccompanied bass solo interweaving gilssondi, double-stops, triads and large intervalic leaps. Once a steady pulse is stated, the rest of the band enters, improvising around the steady quarter note tempo. The harmonized melody seems to get stuck like a skipping CD for a different number of beats on each chord before it is clearly stated. The opening quarter note motif briefly recurs as a lead-in to an unaccompanied bass trombone solo by Dave Taylor in which he makes use of his collection of personally modified mutes. After the original tempo returns, a trumpet solo leads the ensemble to the coda.

"Seabrook, Power, Plank" is a three-Pennsylvania-town named adaptation of the name of Brandon Seabrook's power trio, "Seabrook Power Plant." This composition seems to set up a stop-time solo which abruptly cuts out, leaving the soloists, in this case Jon Irabagon on C melody saxophone and Brandon Seabrook on banjo, to their own devices. These cadenzas are interrupted by a deliberately awkward Latin jazz motif that bridges the divide between the two stop-time sections.

With a title that adapts a Pennsylvania town name to reference a Charles Mingus title, "Orange is the Name of the Town" is a waltz modeled after Paul Whiteman and other "sweet" dance orchestras of the late 1920s. After the Whiteman-esque opening melody, a bridge culled from the wreckage of Disney soundtracks leads to a 3/4 vamp reminiscent of the Africa Brass sessions by John Coltrane. Pianist Ron Stabinsky is then charged with transitioning from a McCoy Tyner-esque foray into the world of pentatonics and fourths to a Vienese waltz, a feat managed with great aplomb. Seabrook's banjo, in the role of descant soloist, swirls around the tutti ensemble shout chorus and continues after all the other members have packed up and gone home.

The 12/8 blues, "Gum Stump," opens with a duet between Evans' trumpet and Irabagon's soprano saxophone. The tempo is introduced by one of many adaptations of guitarist Robert Johnson's idiomatic interjections. Johnson's country blues style is often characterized by the addition of beats to certain measures to conform to his fills and interjections. This idea serves as the basis for Elliott's composition which regularly adds beats to certain measures in which sax and trumpet imitate Johnson's guitar behind a melody stated emphatically by bass trombonist Dave Taylor. Taylor continues as soloist over several choruses to invoke the history of the blues from Johnson to André 3000 before restating the melody.

If any Pennsylvania town name begged to be adapted into a jazz composition title, it is the village of "Bird-in-Hand." This up-tempo composition features two main themes, one major and one minor, and explores the pre-bebop jazz vocabulary as well as elements of Gershwin's "An American in Paris" and "Rhapsody in Blue." Irabagon's soprano saxophone is the lone soloist on this closing number which brings the proceedings to an abrupt and emphatic end.

In 2010, trumpeter Peter Evans was named as one of the 5 "Musicians of the Year" for the second year in a row by All About Jazz New York. Evans performs with two collaborative trios (Mary Halvorson and Weasel Walter, and Tim Dahl and Mike Pride), his own quartet and quintet, and a variety of other ensembles in addition to releasing music on his own label, More is More Records.

Ubiquitous saxophonist Jon Irabagon, winner of the 2008 Thelonious Monk International Jazz Competition, recently launched Irabagast Records, his own label. Irabagon continues to perform with legendary drummer Barry Altschul in duo and trio settings and recently became part of trumpeter and composer Dave Douglass' new quintet.

Dave Taylor is one of the most prolific and sought-after bass trombonists in history. Over the course of his forty year career he has performed or recorded with everyone from Duke Ellington to Pierre Boulez to the Rolling Stones to Jay-Z. Recently he has performed Daniel Schnyder's bass trombone concerto and toured with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra and Brad Mehldau.

Brandon Seabrook was chosen by the Village Voice Best of NYC issue as the city's top guitarist, but he is best known for his banjo playing. As the leader of his own ensemble "Seabrook Power Plant," he has recorded two albums for Loyal Label, the most recent of which was called "a manic clusterfuck of merciless banjo torture" by the Village Voice.

Ron Stabinsky is a mercenary pianist based in northeastern Pennsylvania. When not crisscrossing the northeast from gig to gig in his Prius, Ron presents concerts at St. Stephen's Church in downtown WIlkes-Barre and performs with a variety of improvising ensembles including the Peter Evans Quartet.

Bandleader, bassist, and composer Moppa Elliott spends most of his time educating and coaching his students at St. Mary's High School. His Hot Cup Records label has released Jonathan Moritz Secret Tempo and MOPDtK's Slippery Rock this year. He has appeared in the Downbeat Critics' poll several times as a "Rising Star Composer".

Drummer Kevin Shea has been a mainstay on the experimental music scene since the mid 1990s. His duo Talibam! with Matt Mottel has released two recent albums: Atlantass, a theatrical piece featuring Sam Kulik, and Puff Up the Volume, a foray into the world of rap and hip-hop. Shea was recently named "Best Drummer" in the Village Voice's Best of NYC issue for 2012, a title he has deserved for over a decade.

http://www.moppaelliott.com/

NEW RELEASES - PRESERVATION HALL JAZZ BAND, JOHNNY COPELAND, CHARLES WALKER & THE DYNAMITES

PRESERVATION HALL JAZZ BAND - THAT'S IT!
Preservation Hall Jazz Band have announced the release of their new album That's It! on July 9th, the band's first album of original music in its entire 50-year history! That's It! was produced by My Morning Jacket's Jim James and Ben Jaffe and recorded at The Preservation Hall. That's It! is an eclectic album that draws on the collective experience of players nurtured in the New Orleans tradition but determined to build something fresh and exciting on that foundation. The Preservation Hall Jazz Band derives its name from Preservation Hall, the venerable music venue located in the heart of New Orleans’ French Quarter, founded in 1961 by Allan and Sandra Jaffe. The band has traveled worldwide spreading their mission to nurture and perpetuate the art form of New Orleans Jazz.
JOHNNY COPELAND - IT'S ME: CLASSIC TEXAS SOUL 1955-72

An incredible collection of work from the great Johnny Copeland – way way way more stuff from the early years than we ever knew he recorded! Johnny's one of the few Texas singers of his generation who kept the flame burning brightly over the decades – but it's this stuff that's still his best work – amazing southern soul tracks handled in a mode that's unlike anything else – no Memphis or Muscle Shoals cliches here, and instead a really deep, personal approach to the music that makes tremendous use of Copeland's vocals! There's some slight undercurrents of blues at points, but the music is definitely soul – sometimes inflected with jazz on the mellower cuts, ala a Duke/Peacock recording – although the tracks here were for the Jet Stream, Wet Soul, and Wand labels – mixed here with a number of previously unreleased tracks. The 2CD package really hones in on Johnny's greatness – and serves up a whopping 43 tracks recorded between 1965 and 1971 – titles that include "The Invitation", "Why Don't You Make Up Your Mind", "Somebody's Been Scratchin", "Every Dog's Got His Day", "Wizard Of Art", "I Waited Too Long", "The Hip Hop", "Four Dried Beans", "Mother Nature", "You're Gonna Reap Just What You Sow", "Dedicated To The Greatest", "I Wish I Was Single", "Danger Zone", and "Slow Walk You Down".  ~ Dusty Groove

CHARLES WALKER & THE DYNAMITES - LOVE IS ONLY EVERYTHING

Maybe the most smoking collaboration so far between The Dynamites and vocalist Charles Walker – a singer who only seems to sound younger and younger with each new record – driven on by the sharp funky sounds of the group! Walker's got a way of stretching out a note that's rooted in 60s deep soul styles – yet also has a compactness that fits in well with The Dynamites' hip blend of Hammond, trumpet, guitar, and saxes – all stepping out with a beautifully soulful vibe on the album's host of original tracks! Titles include "Wakie Wakie", "I Just Want To Know", "Love Is Only Everything", "Please Open Up The Door", "So Much More To Do", and "Yours & Mine", which features a guest appearance from Bettye Lavette! ~ Dusty Groove

EUGENIE JONES - BLACK LACE BLUE TEARS

With the release of her debut album Black Lace Blue Tears, Seattle-based Eugenie Jones emerges as a rising jazz vocal star with a deep-rooted sense of where she's headed as an artist. Jones's repertoire is based primarily on her own striking originals, and she also had a hand in all of the arrangements. The disc is due from Jones's Open Mic Records on May 28.

Throughout Black Lace Blue Tears Jones receives first-rate support from three of Seattle's most gifted and sought-after jazz instrumentalists: pianist Bill Anschell, bassist Clipper Anderson, and drummer Mark Ivester. Guitarist Michael Powers joins them on three numbers.

Jones reveals herself to be a remarkably mature, refreshingly different artist, both as a song stylist and as a songwriter. Nine of the album's 11 selections are original compositions that offer new insights into a variety of emotions and situations, from the joyous opener "A Good Day" to the heartbreaking ballad "All the King's Men," the gently swinging "Perfect," and "I Want One," a song about looking for Mister Right that has been a favorite of women in her audiences. Jones also puts her stamp on "My Funny Valentine" and the Paul Desmond classic "Take Five" (with lyrics by Dave and Iola Brubeck).

Surprisingly, Jones never planned for a career in singing. Growing up in Morgantown, West Virginia, Eugenie (pronounced "u-gee-nee") had sung with the Baptist church choir directed by her father, but at home she left the singing to her mother, the late Tommie Parker. "She had an incredibly beautiful voice," Jones says. "Even when she wasn't in church and she was cooking and doing things around the house, she was always singing."

Eugenie went on to earn degrees in business and marketing, working as a business owner, consultant, and marketing specialist. When her mother took ill, she invited her to move west to spend her final years living with Jones and her two sons in Bremerton, Washington. It wasn't until her mother's death five years ago that Eugenie decided to take up singing herself. "I missed hearing her voice around the house," says Jones. "I think that was what drove me to pursue it."

Jones made her professional debut as a jazz singer only two years ago and has since drawn a devoted following to her unique musical artistry at venues throughout the Seattle area and as far south as Portland. One critic has likened her to Nina Simone, as has Greta Matassa, the noted Seattle jazz vocalist with whom Jones studied.

Although Jones has been writing poetry since she was in high school, and for 19 years wrote a weekly wellness column for a Washington paper that was often picked up by the national Scripps-Howard newspaper chain, she didn't try her hand at writing songs until just a year before Black Lace Blue Tears was recorded.

"I kind of felt my way through a paradigm that seemed to work for me," she says of her songwriting process. "I'm really just trying to capture an emotion when I'm writing."

Upcoming performances by the singer include Seattle's Lakeside Bistro 5/25, the Collective Visions Gallery in Bremerton 6/22, the Sorrento Hotel in Seattle 6/29, and the Music in the Park Concert Series in Everett 6/30. "I absolutely love jazz," states Jones. "Some people speak of dreaming in color. I'd say I dream in jazz and wake the next morning with lyrics and arrangements in my head. This -- in front of the microphone, sharing my dreams with others -- is where I belong and where I feel so at home."

LUCIO DALLA - DALLA IN JAZZ

OKeh Records has released Dalla in Jazz, a tribute to the late Italian vocalist/multi-instrumentalist Lucio Dalla (available now as a digital-only release). On March 1, 2012, Dalla, who had a lifelong affiliation with the Sony Music Entertainment family, tragically died from a heart attack in Montreux, Switzerland. Surrounding the first anniversary of his death, OKeh has decided to pay homage to Dalla with a special tribute - Dalla in Jazz, assigning his wonderful songs to the most representative jazz musicians on the Italian scene and letting them choose, arrange and interpret Dalla according to their taste and inspiration.

The album brings together some of the greatest Italian artists in the national and international scene in celebration of Dalla: Paolo Fresu, Stefano di Battista, Gegè Telesforo, Aldo Romano, Maria Pia De Vito, Giovanni Mirabassi, Flavio Boltro, Javier Girotto in duet with Peppe Servillo, Enrico Pieranunzi with Simona Severini, Nick The Nightfly, Fabrizo Bosso and Roberto Gatto together with an inspired Max Gazzè.

Vinicio Capossela adhered enthusiastically as well, with a reinterpretation of "Itaca" to the sonorities of the Greek band he cooperated with in the making of his last two records, making of it a sincere, raging, manly recall to the unknown sea. Dalla in Jazz contains the greatest hits ("Futura," "Com'è profondo il mare," "Caruso," "Attenti al lupo," "Balla balla ballerino") along with some of Dalla's more obscure songs ("Il cielo," "Vita," "Felicità"), but enthusiasm and emotion break out in every track from the very first listen.

In addition to the 13 pieces specifically recorded for the occasion during 2012, the opening track is an exceptional and rare version of Charles Trenet's "La Mer", recorded in 2010, where Lucio sings in counterpoint to Luca Aquino's evocative trumpet and refined electronics.

His career spanning over fifty-years made him a primary artist in Italian pop music. His lyrics and notes have radically renewed and influenced the prolific Italian singer-songwriters tradition, but Dalla is deeply rooted in jazz; it was his first love and remained a burning passion until the end. A vocalist, keyboardist, saxophonist and clarinetist, he was also very fond of bebop (when talking about Charlie Parker, he would become almost transfigured).

Dalla adored jazz of the 1950s and '60s, and this may be one of the reasons why many of his songs, including those that moved and continue moving millions of people, lend themselves well to improvisation and to harmonic and melodic variation on their wonderful themes. His last day in Montreux is somehow the emblem of such boundless love.

Tuesday, May 07, 2013

VOCALIST CHRIS MCNULTY WINS AUSTRALIAN JAZZ BELL AWARD

The acclaimed Australian-born, New York-based vocalist Chris McNulty has won a prestigious Australian Jazz Bell Award for her stunning 2013 album The Song That Sings You Here. Named for Graeme Bell, a legend of Australian jazz, the Bell Awards recognize and encourage excellence in the performance, creativity, recording and presentation of jazz in Australia. They were presented May 2 at the Regent Theatre in Melbourne.

On The Song That Sings You Here, McNulty, who has "a voice of serene beauty and striking veracity" (Peter Quinn, JazzWise), delivers a vibrant performance showcasing her tremendous range and abilities as a vocal stylist.

Released January 15, 2013 on Challenge Records, the CD features McNulty with bassist Ugonna Okegwo: drummer Marcus Gilmore, guitarist Paul Bollenback, pianists Andrei Kondokov and Graham Wood, saxophonist Igor Butman, and guest vocalist Anita Wardell. It's receiving high praise including 4-stars from DownBeat and 5-stars from Jazz Journal.

"Since the onset of her jazz career, McNulty has maintained and intriguing unpredictability, a terrific ability to trace serpentine routes while traversing pop and jazz standards, often taking them to previously undiscovered places yet never straying dangerously off courseÅ . And McNulty remains an underappreciated songwriter. Her eight-minute "Long Road Home - The Song That Sings You Here," to name one sterling example, is a circuitous exploration of love's vagaries and its ultimate immutability." - Christopher Loudon, JazzTimes

"Four Stars. A classy singer in the classic style, emoting from the heart and giving the lyrics their full meaning, but more than capable of mixing it with the band and improvising with the best of them. And she has assembled an equally classy, hard-swinging groupÅ  A timeless slice of pure jazz." - Cormac Larkin, Irish Times

"A dynamic singer with a great sense of rhythm in her voice." - Jerome Wilson, Cadence Magazine

McNulty had already finished recording The Song That Sings You Here in 2010, even selecting her composition "Long Road Home - The Song that Sings You Here" to title the album, when tragedy struck, delaying the album's release. Says McNulty, "This recording, the tune selections, my two compositions and the treatment concept, all took place before my beautiful beloved and cherished son, Sam departed this world (July 16th, 2011). Nothing has been changed or altered in any way. My composition "Long Road Home - The Song that Sings You Here" was completed in 2008. The title for this recording was chosen in 2010. As I listen back now, it strikes me that much of this album sounds like it was conceived after Sam left us. I have no explanation for this except to say that every song I sing, I sing for him. I sing him here, always."

The music, especially on the evocative title track that closes the album, has taken on an added poignancy in the wake Sam's death, but the circumstances of its release should by no means detract from the level of artistry. McNulty is a vocalist firmly in command of her instrument, with a rich expressive voice soaked in swing and blues, and an ability to improvise that's straight from the heart. She has truly come into her own on this, her Challenge Records debut and seventh album as a leader.

Chris McNulty first visited New York City in 1985 and settled there in 1988 after being awarded an International Study Grant from the Australia Council. Since then, McNulty has garnered further accolades from critics, jazz musicians and fans alike, as well as collaborating and performing with some of the finest musicians on the jazz scene today including: Gary Bartz, Paul Bollenback, Billy Hart, Frank Wess, Mulgrew Miller, John Hicks, Gary Thomas, Ingrid Jensen, Montez Coleman, Mat Wilson, Ed Howard, Jeff Ballard, Dave Pietro, Joe Locke, Harvey S and many more. Acclaimed as well for her stunning live performances, McNulty has performed across Europe, in Australia, and throughout the USA.

www.chrismcnulty.com

NEW RELEASES - PATRICIA MARX, DARCY JAMES ARGUE'S SECRET SOCIETY, PETROWSKY / BAUER / GUMPERT / SOMMER

PATRICIA MARX - TRINTA


Warm, wonderful, and completely beautiful work from Patricia Marx – a singer we've followed from the start, and who's reemerged here after a bit of silence – sounding even more spellbinding than ever! Patricia's one of the most soulful Brazilian singers of the past decade or two – and here, she really hits a new level of maturity – working with backings from Bruno E that are far more complex and sophisticated than his previous drum and basslines – as powerful and layered as the best sounds you'd hear with an American soul singer – but also with a crispness that's really personal, too – the kind of warmth and energy that have always made us love Swing Out Sister's recent recordings. Patricia gets help from two artists who are always tops in our book – Ed Motta and Seu Jorge – each of whom sing on a track – and titles include "Cedo Ou Tarde", "Espelhos D'Agua", "Menino", "Tudo O Que Eu Quero", "Quando Chove", "Ficar Com Voce", and "Sem Pensar". ~ Dusty Groove

DARCY JAMES ARGUE'S SECRET SOCIETY - BROOKLYN BABYLON

A beautiful love letter to contemporary Brooklyn – originally commissioned by BAM, as part of a longer piece that included narration, animation, and paintings – but a work that stands more than strongly here on its own! The music has a wonderful mix of themes – sometimes straight, sometimes a bit more abstract, to the point of illustration – played by a shifting lineup of younger musicians who really deliver on the promise of Darcy James Argue's compositions – a group that includes John Ellis on tenor sax, Rob Wilkerson on alto, Ryan Keberle on trombone, Matt Holman on trumpet, Nadje Noordhuis on flugelhorn, and Sebatian Noelle on guitar. Titles include "The Neighborhood", "Builders", "Grand Opening", "Coney Island", "Construction/Destruction", "The Tallest Tower In The World", and "Missing Parts". ~ Dusty Groove

PETROWSKY /  BAUER / GUMPERT / SOMMER - SYNOPSIS

Bold sounds from this German quartet – a group who certainly deliver one of the most striking avant jazz sessions on the legendary Amiga label! The set's got a free frenzy that's right up there with the 70s best from FMP – played by musicians who often made key appearances on that label too – including Ernst Ludwig Petrowsky on saxes and flute, Conrad Bauer on trombone, Ulrich Gumpert on piano, and Gunter Sommer on drums and percussion! The album takes off with a machine gun-like energy at the start – a real blast of sound that shows all the revolutionary power of this generation of German jazz – but then as things progress, the players explore some wonderful tones and textures that reflect a more contemplative mode as well – still very groundbreaking, but in a more subtle way. Titles include "Traumtanzer", "Quartett Diskurs", "Holzland", "Kommit Ihr G'Spielen", and "Post Aus Vogelsang".  Dusty Groove

NEW RELEASES - EARLY GIORGIO MORODER & MUNICH MACHINE WITH BONUS TRACKS ADDED!

GIORGIO MORODER - SON OF MY FATHER

Excellent early work from Giorgio Moroder – recorded in the pre-disco years, with a trippy rock style that mixes electronics and some surprisingly soulful guitar work! The overall style is almost a prog take on the beat group sound with some poppy touches – a cool blend that was shared briefly by other European groups of the time, before they stretched out and got a bit more trippy. The album's got some nice moogy touches, tight drums by Keith Forsey, and even a bit of keyboards from Max Gregor Jr. Most tracks have vocals, but also kick off with a strong foot instrumentally – making for some great rock break moments that are worth the album alone, even though the full songs are pretty nice too! Titles include the epic "Tears", "Lord Release Me", "Watch Your Step", "Pauline", "Son Of My Father", "Automation", "London Traffic", "Spanish Disaster", and "Underdog". CD features lots of bonus tracks too – including "Today's A Tomorrow", "Everybody Join Hands", "I'm Free Now", "Non Ci Sto", "Take It Shake It Break My Heart", and "Underdog (mono)". ~ Dusty Groove

MUNICH MACHINE - BODY SHINE

A German disco classic from Munich Machine – and maybe the tightest album ever from the always-sharp studio group! Giorgio Moroder's at the head of the record on production, but the sound here is often a bit warmer than some of his own recordings – thanks to an ear for some of the more soulful instrumental sides of the dancefloor spectrum, particularly on the keyboard solos, which never have the coldness of Moroder's music – and thanks also to some well-placed vocals from soul singers Judith Jones and Yolande Howard, both of whom add a bit of personality to the record too! Yet that great Moroder ear for a dancefloor groove is still perfectly intact – as you'll hear on cuts that include "Let Your Body Shine", "Space Warrior", "Bolectro", "Easy", "Reputation", and "Fallen Angel". CD features two bonus tracks – "Space Warriors (blue eyed DJ rmx)", and "Giorgio Moroder Medley (blue eyed DJ rmx)". ~ Dusty Groove

GIORGIO MORODER - SCHLAGERMORODER VOLUME 1 1966 - 1975

Not disco Moroder, but schlager Moroder – great early recordings from German maestro Giorgio, done before his famous dancefloor hits of the later 70s – and with a very groovy sound throughout! The music here is more pop than soul, but often has these sweet and freaky little touches – a bit like the way that French pop artists of the late 60s would cop an American mode, then turn it around with some cool local touches of their own – or trip things out with a few inflections borrowed from psych or other new rock modes! Some tunes are playful and catchy, others are more ballsy and brash – especially as the set moves on, and the music hits those immediate pre-disco years that make for some of Moroder's most compelling. Massive 2CD package features 51 rare cuts from these early years – titles that include "Cinnamon", "Tempo D'Amore", "Underdog", "Watch Your Step", "Bla Bla Diddly", "Love's Morning Land", "Mah Na Mah Na", "Crippled Words", "Lie Lie Lie", "Collico", "Heaven Helps The Man", "Bricks & Mortar", "It's A Shame", and "Today's A Tomorrow". ~ Dusty Groove

NEW RELEASES - GAL COSTA, EDU LOBO, WILSON DAS NEVES

GAL COSTA - RECANTO GAL AO VIVO

Amazing sounds from Gal Costa – a brilliant live album that follows strongly in the mode of her Recanto studio album! Like that set, this one features Gal in the most experimental style she's used in years – bits of electronics and contemporary underground modes layered in with her sublime vocals – all in ways that reopen that leftfield side of Costa's talents that have been buried for so many years! Some tracks are quite intimate and personal, others are very powerful – and the performance was put together by both Caetano and Moreno Veloso, with backing by a trio that also features percussion from Domenico too. Titles include "Tudo Gil", "Da Maior Importancia", "Mansidao", "Forca Estranha", "Meu Bem Mel Mal", "O Amor", "Baby", "Deus E O Amor", "Segunda", "Barato Total", and "Autotune Autoerotico". ~ Dusty Groove

EDU LOBO - EDU LOBO & METROPOLE ORKEST

Some of the boldest, most expressive work we've heard from Edu Lobo in years – a beautiful recording with the Metropole Orchestra, who help Lobo regain all the lofty power of his early 70s years! The arrangements here are full, and full of feeling too – lead vocals by Lobo soaring over the top of his sublime compositions, pushed onward strongly with the full orchestrations of the ensemble –and given some great jazzy undercurrents by the flute and sax work of Mauro Senise! We always like Edu, but the album's a real return to the qualities that first made us fall in love with his music so many years ago – and is continuing proof that the Metropole Orchestra really know how to bring new energy to an artist. Titles include "Vento Bravo", "Canto Triste", "Casa Forte", "Zanzibar", "Ave Rara", "Choro Bandido", "A Bela E A Fera", "Frevo Diabo", and "Danca Do Corrupiao". ~ Dusty Groove

WILSON DAS NEVES - SE ME CHAMAR O SORTE

Beautiful work from Wilson Das Neves – as mature and poised as his image on the cover, but still filled with the depth and soul we remember from years back! The vocals have this raspy charm that definitely underscores Wilson's years on this planet – and the backings have this warmth and jazzy undercurrent that really works well with the sound of the tunes – a slight hint of sentiment, but never in a cloying way – just the perfect sort of balance to honor the talents and accomplishments of someone like Das Neves! Titles include "Trato", "Cara De Queixa", "Peao De Obra", "Limites", "Feito Siameses", "Mascara De Cera", "Se Me Chamar O Sorte", and "O Dono Da Razao". ~ Dusty Groove

Monday, May 06, 2013

NEW RELEASES - BRIAN SIMPSON, WALLACE RONEY, JOSHUA REDMAN

BRIAN SIMPSON - JUST WHAT YOU NEED

There are no surprises on Brian Simpson's fifth solo release, Just What You Need. The ten cuts are comprised of catchy, laid-back smooth jazz arrangements with elements of lite R&B, executed with ease and a very clean production. The two standout tracks, for very different reasons, are both cover versions. "The Girl from Ipanema" (with Dave Koz on saxophone) has none of the romantic breezy haze of the original, and comes across too formal and somewhat sterile. On the other hand, "You Gotta Be," the 1994 hit song by Des'ree, has an infectious, relaxed groove, featuring vocalist Jeff Robinson, that is hard to get out of your head. Also making guest appearances on Just What You Need are celebrated smooth jazz musicians Gerald Albright, Marc Antoine, Elan Trotman, and Jonathan Butler. ~ CD Universe

WALLACE RONEY - UNDERSTANDING

Wallace Roney's sixth studio album for High Note, 2013's Understanding, is an expansive, often swinging work that finds the trumpeter digging even deeper into the straight-ahead if no less adventurous sound of his recent releases. These are bluesy, harmonically layered modal songs that bring to mind such touchstones as '70s Woody Shaw and late-'60s Miles Davis. Joining Roney here are saxophonists Arnold Lee and Ben Solomon, pianist Victor Gould, bassist Daryl Johns, and drummer Kush Abadey.  ~ CD Universe

JOSHUA REDMAN - WALKING SHADOWS

Saxophonist Joshua Redman’s new album, Walking Shadows, is due out May 7 on Nonesuch Records. The album is Redman’s first recording to include an orchestral ensemble and was produced by his friend and frequent collaborator Brad Mehldau. The record's core ensemble is a quartet featuring Mehldau, Larry Grenadier, and Brian Blade. Walking Shadows includes original tunes from both Redman and Mehldau along with works by a wide range of composers, like John Mayer and Pino Palladino, Kern and Hammerstein, and Lennon and McCartney. "Stop This Train," the tune by Mayer and Palladino, was featured on the latest episode of Jamie Cullum's show, which aired recently on BBC Radio 2. "It’s fascinating here how this band get into this very sweet melody and state it in a very simple, beautiful way," says Cullum, "and then start improvising on the melody and go more and more inside and outside the song in the soloing. A brilliant bit of improvisation from Joshua Redman.” Joshua Redman performed with his Quartet, featuring Aaron Goldberg, Joe Sanders, and Kendrick Scott, at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival this past Friday. As part of his European spring tour, Redman performs with bassist Christian McBride at London's Wigmore Hall on May 11, the final concert in the Wigmore jazz series under Redman's curatorship this season. ~ nonesuch records

IRIS ROMEN - VINTAGE GAL HOUR

Looking at the cover photo, you could be excused for thinking “Vintage Gal Hour” is an album from the Golden Fifties. A classically-cut dress, a bow around the waist and a headband in the hair, eyes gazing longingly into the distance – that is how IriS Romen presents herself on the cover of her debut solo album. The pose in retro-look is a stylistic reference to the sound that awaits us behind the CD’s cellophane – with its invocation of music genres from decades gone by, it also has an anachronistic feel to it at first. Does IriS Romen have a place in the present at all, with her revisiting of the vintage sound of past epochs? But of course! And how! Because let’s be honest – don’t we all have a little of this lovable little Dutch girl in us just longing to get out? Doesn’t she appeal to all our yearnings for yesteryear and the undeniable advantages it had? In a word: yes! In an age of emotionally detached, fully digitised technology, she strikes straight at the heart with her genuine, hand-made songs. Her heart-warming music with the old-vinyl feel satisfies that hunger for true emotions so pervasive today, and that makes it modern and up-to-the-minute. What IriS Romen has recorded here in Berlin together with producer Johnny Bluth (Johnny Trouble Trio) and her musician friends over a period of almost two years and using old analogue equipment reveals a profound knowledge of the 50s and 60s. We hear Old-Time Country in a style reminiscent of Kitty Wells (“You Stole My Heart”) and Loretta Lynn (“Growing Pains”), are highly entertained by the nostalgically jazzy (“I Found You In Fall”), delight in string sounds Ă  la Hank Marvin of The Shadows (“Tabou”) and encounter twang guitars like the ones from those old Spaghetti Westerns (“Dance With Me”). But the best thing about the songs is that IriS Romen doesn’t simply rinse and repeat the influences of her idols, she recreates them again from scratch in her own imagination. Despite numerous quotes and cross-references, “Vintage Gal Hour” is completely and utterly IriS Romen. She wrote all the tracks on this solo album herself and is blessed with a wonderful, natural, unmistakable voice that renders pointless any comparisons with stars from the past.

IriS Romen discovered at a very early age that the music from the early 20th century struck a chord in her. She would sing along ardently when her father put on LPs at home, and she loved doing famous musicals in school performances. It was experiences like those that led, in her teenage years, to her resolve to make singing her career one day. After graduating school she studied jazz vocalisation with Janice Lakers at the Maastricht music academy and classical singing with Marie-JosĂ© Van De Beuken, while also financing private lessons with vocal coach Anne Bruning by working in a supermarket (where she once even served AndrĂ© Rieu). During this phase, her love of old jazz emerged. She also came to know and love the Brecht interpretations of Kurt Weill, Paul Dessau and Hanns Eisler during this time, and was introduced to the world of Jump ‘n’ Jive, Rock ‘n’ Roll and Rhythm ‘n’ Blues as a guest singer in Ray Collins’ Hot Club. In 2004, IriS Romen, who had by then also learned how to play the double bass, moved to the German capital where she still lives today. Saturdays she takes the packed Clärchens Ballhaus, the historical dance hall that Quentin Tarantino used as a set in “Inglourious Basterds”, through rousing dance evenings as the lead vocalist of the Ballhaus Band. She also broadens her spectrum as a member of the girl group The Runaway Brides (often to be seen supporting BossHoss) and Ben Becker’s background band. Now the time is ripe for an international solo career. “I believe in the timelessness of everything that is done and viewed with the heart.” That is what IriS Romen says of her solo debut. On it she strikes exactly the tone of her favourite ages, while remaining on the cutting edge of the present with every note. Very few manage that balancing act, but on “Vintage Gal Hour” IriS Romen succeeds immaculately. www.irisromen.com

~ grooveattack.com

ARTIST OF THE MONTH FOR MAY 2013 - MILES DAVIS

Columbia Records and Legacy Recordings, the catalog division of Sony Music Entertainment, celebrate the genius of Miles Davis , honoring the 20th century jazz avatar as Legacy's Artist of the Month for May 2013.

On May 16, at 3pm, the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission will honor Miles Davis at a Medallion Ceremony at 312 West 77th Street, the brownstone townhouse, purchased by Davis in 1958, that served as both home and working environment for the artist for 25 years.

Born Miles Dewey Davis III on May 26, 1926 in Alton, Illinois, Miles grew up in East St. Louis, first learning trumpet at age 13. Graduating high school, he moved to New York in 1944 to study at the Juilliard School of Music, developing chops in technique and music theory before leaving the school to become a full-time player on the New York jazz circuit, cutting his first records in 1945.

One of the most revolutionary and influential musicians and recording artists of the 20th century, Miles Davis was in the vanguard of virtually every phase of the evolution of post-WWII American jazz, from be-bop to cool jazz to hard-bop to modal jazz to the rock-jazz-funk-fusion that got him inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2006. Miles Davis died on September 28, 1991, leaving an extensive catalog of unprecedented music that remains both timeless and groundbreaking.

Trumpeter, bandleader and composer, Miles Davis fronted some of the most formidable and adroit ensembles in jazz history. Miles was that rarest of artists: an uncompromising avant-garde visionary who achieved both critical and commercial success. In 2008, Davis's 1959 masterpiece, Kind of Blue, was certified 4x platinum, solidifying its stature as the top-selling jazz album of all-time. In December 2009, the United States House of Representatives passed a resolution on Kind of Blue's 50th anniversary "honoring the masterpiece and reaffirming jazz as a national treasure."

On the Legacy Recordings site, fans and collectors will find access to a variety of comprehensive Miles Davis titles including: Setlist: The Very Best of Miles Davis and Setlist: The Very Best of Miles Davis (Live) as well as Volumes 1 and 2 of the acclaimed Miles Davis Bootleg Series, a selection of rare and previously unreleased recordings to be drawn from all phases of Davis's career, housed in deluxe CD + DVD boxes (with a "Best of" compilation available for The Bootleg Series, Vol. 1).

The first two titles in the series -- Live In Europe 1967: The Bootleg Series Vol.1 (2011) and Live In Europe 1969: The Bootleg Series Vol. 2 (2013) -- showcased Miles as bandleader, working with a different quintet, creating very different music on each release. Each collection peaked at #3 on the Billboard Jazz charts.

Live In Europe 1967 was 2011's most acclaimed historic jazz box set, receiving a "5-star" review from Down Beat magazine and voted Historical Album of the Year in the Down Beat Readers and Critics Poll; it ranked as the #1 reissue in both the Critics and Readers polls of JazzTimes magazine, and the Jazz Journalists Association voted it Best Historical or Boxed Set. The package received an "A" from Entertainment Weekly, and Pitchfork.com said "At its heart, jazz thrives on bold, sensitive interaction in the moment, and Live In Europe 1967 represents the pinnacle of that practice." Rave reviews appeared in a wide array of publications including the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Nation, Slate, and many others.

In his Sunday "Arts & Leisure" rave review of Live In Europe 1967, New York Times critic Nate Chinen concluded: "It's humbling to think that a release like Live in Europe 1967 might help illuminate jazz's present as well as its past, but that's what great archival work can do. So congratulations, Columbia/Legacy. Now, what's next?"

Live In Europe 1969: The Bootleg Series Vol.2 showcased a short-lived legendary Miles Davis ensemble, a "third great quintet" recorded live featuring Wayne Shorter on soprano and tenor saxophones, Chick Corea on electric (and occasionally acoustic) piano, Dave Holland on bass and Jack DeJohnette on drums.

"The scope of these concerts is remarkable," wrote Pitchfork in its (9 out of 10 rated) review of Live In Europe 1969: The Bootleg Series Vol.2, "(The Miles Davis Quintet) makes for a deadly team, equally at home with low-down groove, in-the-pocket swing and feverish abstraction."

"It's wild, fitful, ripping good stuff," raved NPR's All Things Considered while the New York Daily News noted that "This set snaps Miles with a quintet that danced brilliantly between the relative formality of the mid '60s and the great madness to come."

"(Miles) plays with power, range and passion, goading the rhythm section into epic battles," observed BBC Music while The Guardian gave it 4 stars marveling that "...this is newly emerging and influential music still in the furnace and Davis' timing can make even a season fan whoop."

Seasoned and future fans of Miles Davis are invited to check out the man and his music as Legacy Recording's May Artist of the Month.

~ Legacy Recordings

NEW RELEASES - JAZZ INVADERS FEATURING DR. LONNIE SMITH, STIRRUP, THE SWEET VANDALS

THE JAZZINVADERS FEATURING DR. LONNIE SMITH - THAT'S WHAT YOU SAY!

The Jazz Invaders here are tighter than ever – and not just because they've got some heavy Hammond help from the legendary Lonnie Smith! Smith's definitely a key part of what makes this album so great – and his organ lines have a sharpness and depth that really stands out from the rest of the group – kind of an extra level of sound that really makes the whole thing sparkle! Yet the group themselves are pretty wonderful too – much more righteous than ever before, going past just a combo who can copy the best jazz modes, into the realm of one that's more than capable of making some mighty fresh sounds of their own. Linda Bloemhard sings on a few cuts, with this raspy edge that's pretty cool – but the instrumental push is what really makes the record shine. Titles include "Square Blues", "Little Sunflower", "Buzzin", "Song For Lonnie", "Tastich", "Nelson", "Mellow Mood", and "Tie Am". ~ Dusty Groove

STIRRUP - SEWN

A really cool trio recording – one that has Fred Lonberg-Holm playing some mighty sweet tenor guitar in addition to his usual cello – an instrument that comes across with this great sort of fuzzy sound! The tones spin out in these fluid waves – often a bit more forward-moving than some of Fred's other music, thanks partly to the rhythmic progressions of Nick Macri on bass and Charles Rumback on drums – both players who have a way of staying free, yet still finding a pulse together. Titles include "Floating Melody", "Song For Salim", "Super Seeded", "Convulsive", "In Zenith I", and "The Profit Of Field Stripping". ~  Dusty Groove


THE SWEET VANDALS - AFTER ALL

Sweet grooves from this hip Spanish combo – one of the hardest-working deep funk combos on the European scene in recent years – and a mighty soulful one as well! Mayka Edjole sings lead vocals in English, but with this cool accent that really makes the music sound different – still as classic and vintage as you might hope for, but also not as much in the copycat mode you might find with other girl funk singers these days – definitely a voice of her own that really makes The Sweet Vandals stand out! Instrumentation is heavy on Hammond and guitar, with bits of added horns here and there, but not nearly as much as from other groups – and there's some light use of strings at a few points, which makes for a nice surprise. Titles include "Whether You Like It Or Not", "After All", "Ain't No Use", "Old Souls", "Out Of My Head", and "Waves & Wings". (Includes bonus download code.) ~ Dusty Groove

Friday, May 03, 2013

MICHAEL BUBLE ANNOUNCES 40 CITY US TOUR

Michael Bublé's "To Be Loved" CD debuts at the No. 1 spot on Billboard Magazine's Top 200 Pop Charts. Next for the Canadian superstar is a 40 city US concert tour beginning in Chicago on Sept. 7. Bublé officially announced the tour for the first time during his appearance on today's Ellen show. The dates were confirmed by Don Fox of Beaver Productions, the national tour promoter. A complete list of shows follows this release.

"I'm very excited to get back on the road and perform for my fans. It's been a while but we're rested up and ready to have a big party on stage every night," commented Bublé.

Bublé has already sold out 10 nights at the 17,000 capacity O2 Arena in London beginning June 30th and 5 nights at the 10,000 capacity O2 in Dublin beginning July 15th. His previous Crazy Love Tour sold out in 80 US cities and was seen by over two million fans worldwide. "To Be Loved" is Bublé's 4th consecutive No. 1 album. In conjunction with the release, he co-hosted The Today Show and appeared on Kelly & Michael, The Ellen Show, Nightline, Dancing With The Stars, The Chelsea Lately show and a surprise appearance in a NY subway station which immediately went viral. The multi-Grammy winning artist has had global sales of 45 million albums in the course of his extraordinary decade long career. Bublé's last CD, the multi-platinum "Christmas," was the second biggest selling album of 2011 following Adele.

MICHAEL BUBLÉ TOUR DATES:
9/7/13 Chicago, IL United Center
9/8/13 Kansas City, MO. Sprint Center
9/11/13 St. Paul, MN XCEL Energy Center
9/13/13 Lincoln, NE Pinnacle Bank Arena
9/14/13 St. Louis, MO Scottrade Center
9/15/13 Indianapolis, IN Bankers Life Fieldhouse
9/17/13 Detroit, MI Palace of Auburn Hills
9/18/13 Cleveland, OH Quicken Loans Arena
9/20/13 Pittsburgh, PA Consol Energy Center
9/21/13 Philadelphia, PA Wells Fargo Center
9/22/13 Washington, DC Verizon Center
9/24/13 Buffalo, NY First Niagara Center
9/25/13 Hartford, CT XL Center
9/27/13 Boston, MA TD Garden
9/28/13 Newark, NJ Prudential Center
9/29/13 Brooklyn, NY Barclays Center
10/16/13 Tulsa, OK BOK Center
10/18/13 Dallas, TX American Airlines Center
10/19/13 San Antonio, TX ATT Center
10/20/13 Houston, TX Toyota Center
10/22/13 New Orleans, LA New Orleans Arena
10/23/13 Nashville, TN Bridgestone Arena
10/25/13 Raleigh, NC PNC Arena
10/26/13 Charlotte, NC Time Warner Cable Arena
10/27/13 Atlanta, GA Gwinnett Arena
10/29/13 Jacksonville, FL Veterans Memorial Arena
10/30/13 Orlando, FL Amway Arena
11/1/13 Tampa, FL Tampa Bay Times Forum
11/2/13 Ft. Lauderdale, FL BB&T Center
11/3/13 TBA
11/15/13 Seattle, WA Key Arena
11/16/13 Portland, OR Rose Garden
11/19/13 Salt Lake City, UT Energy Solutions Arena
11/20/13 Denver, CO Pepsi Center
11/22/13 Phoenix, AZ US Airways Center
11/23/13 Las Vegas, NV MGM Arena
11/24/13 Anaheim, CA Honda Center
11/26/13 San Diego, CA Valley View Casino Center
11/29/13 Los Angeles, CA Staples Center
11/30/13 Oakland, CA Oracle Arena

MATTHEW SHELL & ARUN SHENOY - GENESIS

Narked Records, in collaboration with MTS Music, have announced the release of “GENESIS” an exciting instrumental single forged out of the first ever collaboration between record producers Matthew Shell & Arun Shenoy. The music on this track features guest musicians from around the world, including Ian Cameron of Canada on lead violin. “GENESIS” is the lead single for Shell's new album VICTORIOUS, releasing in Summer 2013; it can be heard at Soundcloud, and purchased at iTunes, Amazon and CDBaby.

The producers describe the piece as “a glorious celebration of the beauty of unity” adding that “it brought our musical family from across the globe together again.” Music writer El Guero Unico, at Generation Bass, echoed their sentiment writing “Victorious is more than just a incredibly beautiful album, it is proof of how musicians and artists from around the world can now connect to record amazing music together without the limitations of location.”

Shenoy is based in Singapore, and his production style weaves through the genres of rock n roll, world and jazz. His self-released world fusion debut titled "Rumbadoodle" (ASMP, 2012) featured some of the musicians heard on “GENESIS” and garnered a GRAMMY® nomination in Pop Instrumental at this year’s 55th Annual GRAMMY® Awards.

Shell, a Washington DC based music producer & engineer, was recently featured on GRAMMY.com. He has produced and/or engineered records for a wide range of acclaimed artists over the years. His upcoming album release – Victorious -- will feature collaborators from around the world, including Kenny McNeil, G.P. Jackson, Taurus Soul, Rufus Fly, Markus Huber, Vahagn Stepanyan, and Shenoy, among others.

Director Jason Baustin, of Traveste Films, combined footage from the various recording sessions in Armenia, India, Germany, and the U.S. to create a music video that drives home the global nature of the collaboration and the powerful part played by technology. The single's cover art direction was provided by Robert Capria (Actuality Films) and Roshni Mohapatra, both of whom also art directed Rumbadoodle.

Jerome Promotions, Inc. is currently servicing “GENESIS” to Smooth Jazz radio, and The B Company handles publicity and media requests. For more information, images, music, videos, and reviews, please visit the producer's websites at arunshenoy.com and mtsmusic.net.

SWING OUT SISTER CELEBRATES 25TH ANNIVERSARY

Corinne Drewery, Swing Out Sister's lead singer, joins Kim Greenhouse of It’s Rainmaking Time!® to celebrate the new release of “Private View” featuring intimate, jazzy arrangements of Swing Out Sisters greatest hits.

Grammy-nominated band Swing Out Sister celebrates more than top ten hits, worldwide appeal, and a devoted global fan base. While they are best known for such smash hits as "Breakout", "Am I The Same Girl" and "You Are On My Mind", Corinne Drewery and Andy Connell are partners who have been creating music and living life together for 25 years, bridging their calling and their relationship.

While most relationships and bands split up after a much shorter time, Andy and Corinne continue to make music and magic together. Sharing a love and a creative space is an art form that few people in the world get a chance to experience.

It’s Rainmaking Time!® explores the mystery of their success and longevity in an intimate setting in London. Corinne shares her real-world experiences about family, performing, travel, life and death and opening for legends like Burt Bacharach, Stevie Wonder, and Tom Jones, and living life as a true artist in every sense of the word.

Swing Out Sister is coming to the USA beginning July 3rd at Chene Park Ampatheater in Detroit Michigan, then on July 7th at Birchmere in Alexandria Virginia and in New York, New York at The B.B. King Blues Club and Grill on July 9th. Don't miss one of the music industry's greatest treasures.

NEW RELEASES - JIRO INAGAKI & SOUL MEDIA, KING CURTIS, MAJOR HARRIS

JIRO INAGAKI & SOUL MEDIA - JAZZ ROCK LEGEND

A killer collection of work from one of the funkiest Japanese groups of the early 70s – billed as jazz rock in the title, but with a much deeper sound overall! Reedman Jiro Inagaki definitely comes from jazz roots, but has also picked up plenty of trippy touches from the late 60s too – fuzzy guitar, sweet keyboards, and an especially strong ear for the kind of heavy drums that folks like Lou Donaldson were using to push their instrumental work into a whole new dimension! The group here is often largeish, but still has the punch of a smaller funky combo – and the set brings together some of the most soulful albums from Jiro's rare Japanese-only albums – titles that include "The Ground For Peace", "Snap Shot", "Papa's Got A Brand New Bag", "Twenty One", "Breeze", "Painted Paradise", "Sniper's Snooze", and "Express". (Part of the Deep Jazz Reality series!) ~ Dusty Groove

KING CURTIS - HAVE TENOR SAX, WILLL BLOW

Smoking tenor from one of the greatest reedmen of all time – and one of the few who could easily bridge the worlds of jazz, soul, and R&B! The set's one of King's earliest albums – recorded back in 1959, and really given a tight Atlantic Records focus that takes the music way past some of Curtis' recordings for other labels – a sharp, tight punch in the rhythms that really works perfectly with his horn! Most of the players have a jazz pedigree, but fall nicely in line behind the tenor lead – on a rich range of original titles that include "Midnight Ramble", "The Shake", "Lil Brother", "Jaywalk", "Snake Eyes", "The Groove", and "Chili" – plus a sweet take on "Peter Gunn" too! ~ Dusty Groove

MAJOR HARRIS - JEALOUSY

One of the best 70s mellow soul talents at Atlantic Records – sounding completely sublime here in a full set of Philly arrangements! The set was recorded at Sigma Sound – and is a great reminder that even during the disco years, the studio was still a great place to cut a heartbreaking ballad – the sort of number that younger Philly groups would have done for indie labels at the start of the 70s – polished up and given some real maturity here by The Major! There's also a few great groovers on the record too – but with that Philly poise that also still holds onto all the personality of the singer – and the arrangements are great throughout – handled by Norman Harris, Ron Kersey, and Bobby Eli – a perfect Philly team. Titles include "Walkin In The Footsteps", "Jealousy", "I Got Over Love", "Tynisa", "It's Got To Be Magic", and "What's The Use In The Truth". ~ Dusty Groove

JAS ANNOUNCES FULL JUNE FESTIVAL LINE-UP: BEN HARPER & CHARLIE MUSSELWHITE, TEDESCHI TRUCKS BAND, NICOLE HENRY, RAUL MIDON & OTHERS

Ben Harper & Charlie Musselwhite (Photo: Danny Clinch)
GRAMMY® Award-winning blues-rock singer Ben Harper & bluesman Charlie Musselwhite have been added to the JAS Aspen Snowmass June Festival line-up, performing on Saturday, June 22nd at the Benedict Music Tent. Harper recently teamed up with the harmonica legend and Blues Hall of Fame inductee Charile Musselwhite to release a collaborative blues album titled Get Up!. On Sunday, June 23rd the 11-piece Tedeschi Trucks Band, led by the husband-wife team of Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi will perform with special guests the vocal play group Naturally 7. These artists will join previously announced Friday, June 21st performer Jackson Browne and July 5th performers Pink Martini, presented in association with the Aspen Music Festival and School.

JAS has also announced an expanding FREE Festival Lawn Party taking place on the Benedict Music Tent grounds starting at 6pm June 21-23. Two bands will perform nightly including Cuban born Pablo Menendez "Mezcla" and rising world-fusion star TIZER. Multiple food and drink vendors will be on-site creating a festival feel for the entire community to come enjoy.

The JAS Cafe at the Nell Summer Series, which kicks off as part of the JAS June 21 - July 6 Festival has also been announced to include the guitar & vocal wizardry of Raul Midon double-billed with the singer/pianist Karrin Allyson on June 26; the funky & soulful New Orleans' keyboard & vocals of Jon Cleary on June 28-29; The Jeff Hamilton Trio on July 3; The 12 Pc. Cuban Big Band Wil Campa Y su Gran Union on July 5; The suave & high energy Pianist/Vocalist Tony DeSare on July 18-19; The Malian guitarist/vocalist Vieux Farka Toure on Aug 7; The Jazz & Soul vocalist Nicole Henry on Aug 9-10 and the Italian jazz vocalist Roberta Gambarini on August 17-18 with additional dates and artists to be announced at a later date.

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