Thursday, December 12, 2013

NEWPORT JAZZ FESTIVAL®: NOW 60 TOUR FEATURES KARRIN ALLISON, ANAT COHEN, RANDY BRECKER AND OTHERS...

Karrin Allison, Clarenece Penn, Larry Grenadier, Anat Cohen, Mark Whitfield, Randy Brecker, and Peter Martin (Photo Credit: Jimmy Katz)
In celebration of the 60th anniversary of the world-renowned Newport Jazz Festival® (August 1-3, 2014), clarinetist/saxophonist Anat Cohen, vocalist/pianist Karrin Allyson, bassists Larry Grenadier and Ben Allison, pianist Peter Martin, guitarist Mark Whitfield, trumpeter Randy Brecker, and drummer Clarence Penn embark on the 17-city "Newport Jazz Festival®: Now 60" Tour, February 8 - March 30, 2014, with more dates during June, July and August in North America and Europe.

This multi-gender, multi-national and multi-generational group of musicians was especially selected by festival founder/producer George Wein, in conjunction with his long-time associates and the tour's producers, Danny Melnick of Absolutely Live Entertainment, LLC and Darlene Chan of FestivalWest, Inc., to represent the incredible diversity of talent that the Newport Jazz Festival® has presented over the last six decades. (Melnick is also the associate producer of the Newport Jazz Festival®.)  

"I've put together some excellent all-star ensembles in the past, but this group is really special to me," says Wein. "These musicians come from different parts of the country, different parts of the world and from different eras of jazz and they offer an excellent census of where the music has been, where it is and where it's going. Together, they represent the festival's 60-year goal: to bring the best and brightest jazz musicians to present musical experiences that fans will remember for a lifetime."

The tour venues include Schwartz Center for Performing Arts, Emerson Concert Hall, Emory University, Atlanta, GA; Berklee Performance Center, Boston, MA; the Merriam Theater, Philadelphia, PA; Walt Disney Concert Hall, Los Angeles, CA; Old Town School Of Folk Music, Chicago, Il; and the Jazz Standard, New York, NY (See full schedule below)

THE ARTISTS

Born in Tel Aviv, Israel, clarinet/tenor saxophonist Anat Cohen, comes from a musical family that includes her brothers, saxophonist Yuval and trumpeter Avishai. She studied clarinet at the age of 12, and attended the Tel Aviv School for the Arts, the "Thelma Yellin" High School for the Arts and the Jaffa Music Conservatory. She played tenor saxophone in the Israeli Air Force Band, from 1993 to 1995, enrolled at the Berklee School of Music, and moved to New York City in 1999, where she worked with a number of bands including the Diva Jazz Orchestra, drummer Dudu Da Fonseca's Samba Jazz Quintet and the Choro Ensemble. In 2005, she created her own label, Anzic Records, and released Noir and Poetica (2007), Notes from the Village (2008), and Clarinetwork: Live at the Village Vanguard(2010). Hailed by Nat Hentoff as a musician who "...tells stories from her own experiences that are so deeply felt that they are very likely to connect listeners to their own dreams, desires and longings," Cohen's latest CDs, Claroscuro(2012), brilliantly blends jazz with New Orleans, African and Brazilian genres, and Tightrope (2013), her fourth release with her two brothers, together called the 3 Cohens.

The Philadelphia-born Randy Brecker - who constituted one-half of the famed Brecker Brothers Band with his saxophonist brother, Michael - has  been one of the most diverse and in-demand trumpeters of the last four decades. He grew up playing in R&B, soul and rock bands in Philadelphia, and was influenced by Lee Morgan, Clifford Brown, Sonny Rollins and Miles Davis. He attended Indiana University from 1963 to 1965, where he played with Booker T. and The MG's and IU Big Band. He moved to New York City the next year, and worked with Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Jazz Orchestra, the Duke Pearson Big Band, recorded two albums with Blood, Sweat and Tears, and worked in Horace Silver's quintet. Brecker was also a member of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers and co-founded the seminal jazz fusion group, Dreams.  With over 20 recordings as a leader to his credit, Brecker's latest CDs include Randy Brecker Plays Wlodek Pawlik's Night in Calisia (2013) and Brecker Brothers Band Reunion (2013).

Known as "The Marksman" when he burst on the scene during the  "Young Lions" decade of the nineties, guitarist Mark Whitfield takes the approaches of George Benson, Grant Green and Kenny Burrell to a whole new level. A graduate of the Berklee College of Music, Whitfield has worked with a wide variety of musicians, from Dizzy Gillespie, Herbie Hancock and Carmen McRae, to Wynton Marsalis, Ray Charles and Betty Carter. He's also worked with many pop stars including Sting, Jill Scott, and Mary J. Blige.  He released his debut CD, The Marksman in 1990, and has recorded over 11 releases as a leader, including his latest, Songs of Wonder(2009), a tribute to Stevie Wonder. He toured with the band Jazz Futures, which was created in 1991 by George Wein to celebrate the next generation of jazz.

Born in Great Bend, Kansas, raised in Omaha, Nebraska and Northern California, Karrin Allyson, "... brings a timbre that is part ice and part grain - incisive, original, and emotionally convincing" according to critic Gary Giddins. After graduating from the University of Nebraska in 1987 with a degree in classical piano and a minor in French, Allyson, gigged at a Kansas City nightclub, and signed with Concord Records in 1992, which released her debut recording, I Didn't Know About You. She has since recorded over 10 CDs as a leader including Footprints (2006), Imagina: Songs of Brazil (2008), Round Midnight (2011) and a holiday pleaser, Yuletide Hideaway (2013).

Hailing from St. Louis, Missouri, pianist Peter Martin is one of the most rooted and revelatory musicians on the scene. The son of parents who were classical musicians, Martin studied the violin and the piano at the age of three. After he graduated from high school, he received the Presidential Scholar in the Arts award from President Reagan, attended The Juilliard School in New York on scholarship, where he studied with Martin Canin, and moved  to New Orleans in 1990, where he has worked with Nicholas Payton, Germaine Bazzle, Chris Thomas, Alvin Batiste, Brian Blade and Victor Goines.  Martin toured and recorded with artists such as Betty Carter, Wynton Marsalis, Dianne Reeves, Chris Botti, Joshua Redman, Christian McBride, Roy Hargrove, and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra.  He also performed with the Berlin Philharmonic with Simon Rattle, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the New York Philharmonic, and the Sydney Symphony. With over five CDs as a leader, his latest record, Set of Five (2009), is a solo piano tour de force.

Born in San Francisco, bassist Larry Grenadier took up the trumpet at the age of 10 before switching to the bass at 12.  Four years later, he was playing at various gigs around his hometown, and sat in with Joe Henderson, Eddie Henderson, Bobby Hutcherson, and George Cables. Grenadier earned a Bachelor's Degree from Stanford University in 1989, and worked with Stan Getz, who was Artist-in-Residence at the University. Grenadier moved to Boston and worked with Gary Burton, and later moved to New York City in 1991, where his work as a sideman included gigs with his wife, Rebecca Martin, Joshua Redman, John Scofield, Charles Lloyd, Mark Turner and Pat Metheny. He's been a member of pianist Brad Mehldau's trio since 2004. His CDs as a co-leader include Year of the Snake (w/Mark Turner and Jeff Ballard, 2012) and Costumes are Mandatory (w/Ethan Iverson, Lee Konitz and Jorge Rossy, 2013).

A native of Detroit, Michigan, and a graduate of Interlochen Academy, Clarence Penn attended the University of Miami and Virginia Commonwealth University, where Ellis Marsalis was a faculty member. He moved to New York City in 1991 and was hired by Betty Carter. Penn has worked with Stanley Clarke. Christian McBride, Michael Brecker, Dizzy Gillespie, Luciana Souza, Gary Burton, Joshua Redman, Richard Galliano, Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Charlie Haden, Makoto Ozone and Maria Schneider. His CDs as a leader include Penn's Landing (1997), Play-Penn(2001), Saomaye(2002), A Master's Diary (2012) and Dali in Cobble Hill (2012).

Hailed by the Boston Globe as one of "... today's best young jazz musicians," bassist Ben Allison is one of the most ubiquitous bassists on the scene. The New Haven, Connecticut native has worked with an impressive and diverse array of artists, from Lee Konitz and Joe Lovano, to performance artist Joey Arias and US Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky. Allison's 10 CDs as a leader include Seven Arrows (1996), Medicine Wheel (1998), Third Eye (1999), Riding the Nuclear Tiger (2001), Peace Pipe (2002),Buzz (2004), Cowboy Justice (2006), Little Things Run the World (2008), Think Free(2009), and Action-Refraction (2011).  Allison's The Stars Look Very Different Today,is scheduled for release in December.

Featuring a diverse  group of improvisers brought together to celebrate the anniversary of a legendary festival, these dates will no doubt present jazz with one foot in its proud past, and another pointing toward its bright future.

NEWPORT JAZZ FESTIVAL®: NOW 60 2014 TOUR*

February 8 / Emory University, Atlanta, GA
February 13 / Berklee Performance Center, Boston, MA
February 15 / Manchester Craftsmen's Guild, Pittsburgh, PA
February 16 /Music Center at Strathmore, N. Bethesda, MD
March 4 / Jazz Standard, NYC, NY
March 5 / Jazz Standard. NYC, NY
March 6 / Jazz Standard, NYC, NY
March 7 / Jazz Standard, NYC, NY
March 8 / Jazz Standard, NYC, NY
March 9 / Merriam Theater, Philadelphia, PA
March 14 / Lobero Theatre, Santa Barbara, CA  
March 15 / Walt Disney Concert Hall, Los Angeles, CA  
March 20 / Missouri Theatre, Columbia, MO 
March 21 / SW Missouri State, Springfield, MO
March 22 / Gem Theater, Kansas City 
March 23 / Old Town School of Folk Music, Chicago, IL
March 26 / Lake Michigan College, Benton Harbor, MI 
March 27 / Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI
March 28 / Capitol Center, Madison, WI 
March 29 / Harris Theatre, Brookfield, WI 
March 30 / Sheldon Concert Hall, 

TOUR MUSICIANS
Anat Cohen - musical director, clarinet, tenor saxophone
Karrin Allyson - vocals, piano
Randy Brecker - trumpet
Mark Whitfield - guitar   
Peter Martin - piano (all dates except February 15)
Clarence Penn - drums
Larry Grenadier - bass (all dates except March 4-15)
Bruce Barth - piano (February 15 only)
Ben Allison - bass (March 4-15 only)

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

ELLA FITZGERALD - THE VOICE OF JAZZ 10-CD BOX SET

Ella Fitzgerald’s vocal style was as incredible and diverse as the material that she sang. She started out a swing singer, moved to bebop, sang perfect scat, was an extraordinary jazz vocalist and had no fear of modern material as the 60s and 70s came along. From the blues to bossa nova, and calypsos to carols, Fitzgerald imbued all with her unique voice, sounding forever young.

On December 10, 2013, Verve Records/Universal Music Enterprises (UMe) will release the 10-disc box set Ella Fitzgerald: The Voice of Jazz, the first career-spanning retrospective of the most popular jazz singer and arguably one of the greatest singers of all time, Ella Fitzgerald. Featuring over 200 newly remastered studio and live tracks, including a previously unreleased concert from the 1960s, The Voice of Jazz is elegantly packaged in a linen-covered box and includes a 96-page, hardbound book that charts Fitzgerald’s career through her recordings plus photos and a complete discographical notation along with color and black and white illustrations.

From her days as Chick Webb’s girl singer, including her first ever release with Chick Webb’s Orchestra in 1935, through her rise as Decca Records’ singing star in the 1940s and early 1950s, to her decade-long career with Verve Records where she defined the long-playing record with her albums dedicated to the writers of the Great American Songbook. Ella Fitzgerald: The Voice of Jazz encapsulates the recording legacy of one of the most loved, admired and revered vocalists of the 20th century.

TRACK LISTING:
 CD-1 
   1.   I'll Chase The Blues Away (Chick Webb & His Orchestra vocal Ella Fitzgerald) 
   2.   Love & Kisses (Chick Webb & His Orchestra vocal Ella Fitzgerald) 
   3.   My Melancholy Baby (Teddy Wilson & His Orchestra vocal Ella Fitzgerald) 
   4.   All My Life (Teddy Wilson & His Orchestra vocal Ella Fitzgerald) 
   5.   When I get low, I get high (Chick Webb & His Orchestra vocal Ella Fitzgerald) 
   6.   Sing me a swing song (and let me dance) (Chick Webb & His Orchestra vocal Ella Fitzgerald)

   7.   Mr. Paganini (You'll have to swing it) (Chick Webb & His Orchestra vocal Ella Fitzgerald)

   8.   Goodnight My Love (Benny Goodman & his Orchestra vocal Ella Fitzgerald) 
   9.   Eight My Last affair (Ella Fitzgerald & her Savoy) 
   10.   Big Boy Blue (Ella Fitzgerald & The Mills Brothers) 
   11.   Dedicated to You (Ella Fitzgerald & The Mills Brothers) 
   12.   All over Nothing at all (Ella Fitzgerald & her Savoy Eight) 
   13.   Everyone's Wrong but me (Ella Fitzgerald & her Savoy Eight) 
   14.   I got a guy (Chick Webb & His Orchestra vocal Ella Fitzgerald) 
   15.   Rock it for me (Chick Webb & His Orchestra vocal Ella Fitzgerald) 
   16.   It's my turn now (Ella Fitzgerald & her Savoy Eight) 
   17.   A-Tisket A-Tasket (Chick Webb & His Orchestra vocal Ella Fitzgerald) 
   18.   This time it's real (Ella Fitzgerald & her Savoy Eight) 
   19.   You can't be mine (Ella Fitzgerald & her Savoy Eight) 
   20.   Wacky Dust (Chick Webb & His Orchestra vocal Ella Fitzgerald) 
   21.   Undecided (Chick Webb & His Orchestra vocal Ella Fitzgerald) 
   22.   Taint What You Do (Chick Webb & His Orchestra vocal Ella Fitzgerald) 
   23.   My heart belongs to daddy (Chick Webb & His Orchestra vocal Ella Fitzgerald) 
   24.   Don't worry 'bout me (Ella Fitzgerald & her Savoy Eight) 
   25.   That was my heart (Chick Webb & His Orchestra vocal Ella Fitzgerald) 
       
CD-2 
   1.   I Want the Waiter (With the water) (Ella Fitzgerald & her Famous Orchestra) 
   2.   The Starlit Hour (Ella Fitzgerald & her Famous Orchestra) 
   3.   Imagination (Ella Fitzgerald & her Famous Orchestra) 
   4.   Shake Down The Stars (Ella Fitzgerald & her Famous Orchestra) 
   5.   Five O'Clock Whistle (Ella Fitzgerald & her Famous Orchestra) 
   6.   Hello Ma I done It Again (Ella Fitzgerald & her Famous Orchestra) 
   7.   The Muffin Man (Ella Fitzgerald & her Famous Orchestra) 
   8.   Cow Cow Boogie (Ella Fitzgerald & The Inkspots) 
   9.   I'm Making Believe (Ella Fitzgerald & The Inkspots) 
   10.   Into each life some rain must fall (Ella Fitzgerald & The Inkspots) 
   11.   And her tears flowed like wine (Ella Fitzgerald acc. By Johnny Lang & his Orchestra) 
   12.   It's only a paper moon (Ella Fitzgerald & The Delta River Boys)

   13.   Stone Cold dead in the market (Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Jordan) 
   14.   Flying Home (Ella Fitzgerald with Vic Schoen & his Orchestra) 
   15.   You won't be satisfied (Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong) 
   16.   For Sentimental Reasons (Ella Fitzgerald & The Delta River Boys) 
   17.   Guilty (Ella Fitzgerald with Eddie Heywood & his Orchestra) 
   18.   Oh Lady Be Good (Ella Fitzgerald with Bob Haggart & his Orchestra) 
   19.   How high the Moon (Ella Fitzgerald & The Daydreamers) 
   20.   My Happiness (Ella Fitzgerald with The Song Spinners)

   21.   I can’t go on (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   22.   I couldn't stay away (Ella Fitzgerald with Sy Oliver & his Orchestra) 
   23.   Lovers Gold (Ella Fitzgerald with Gordon Jenkins & his Orchestra) 
   24.   Dream a little longer (Ella Fitzgerald with Gordon Jenkins & his Orchestra) 
   25.   Baby it's cold outside (Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Jordan) 
       
CD-3 
   1.   Baby Won't you say you love me (Ella Fitzgerald with Sy Oliver & his Orchestra) 
   2.   I've got the world on a string (Ella Fitzgerald with Sy Oliver & his Orchestra) 
   3.   Ain't nobody's business but my own (Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Jordan & his Tympany Five) 
   4.   Dream a little dream of me (Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong) 
   5.   Looking for a boy (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   6.   Maybe (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   7.   Because of rain (Ella Fitzgerald with Sy Oliver & his Orchestra) 
   8.   Even as you and I (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   9.   Smooth sailing (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   10.   Air Mail Special (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   11.   Nowhere guy (Ella Fitzgerald with Sy Oliver & his Orchestra) 
   12.   Angel Eyes (Ella Fitzgerald with Sy Oliver & his Orchestra) 
   13.   Trying (Ella Fitzgerald with Leroy Kirkland's Orchestra) 
   14.   Walkin' by the river (Ella Fitzgerald with Leroy Kirkland's Orchestra) 
   15.   Crying in the Chapel (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   16.   Melancholy me (Ella Fitzgerald with Sy Oliver & his Orchestra) 
   17.   I need (Ella Fitzgerald with Gordon Jenkins and his orchestra) 
   18.   People will say we're in love [Ella Fitzgerald with Ellis Larkins (piano)] 
   19.   Stardust [Ella Fitzgerald with Ellis Larkins (piano)] 
   20.   Lullaby of Birdland (Ella Fitzgerald with Sy Oliver & his Orchestra) 
   21.   It might as well be spring (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Andre Previn) 
   22.   I can't get started (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Andre Previn) 
   23.   Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Benny Carter) 
   24.   Pete Kelly's Blues (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   25.   My one and only love (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Toots Camarata) 
       
CD-4 
   1.   Stay there (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Buddy Bregman) 
   2.   Ridin' High (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Buddy Bregman) 
   3.   Just one of those things (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Buddy Bregman) 
   4.   Begin the Beguine (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Buddy Bregman) 
   5.   So in love (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Buddy Bregman) 
   6.   What is this thing called love (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Buddy Bregman) 
   7.   I concentrate on you (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   8.   Let's do it (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   9.   Cheek to Cheek (Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong) 
   10.   Moonlight in Vermont (Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong) 
   11.   The nearness of you (Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong) 
   12.   Lover (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Buddy Bregman) 
   13.   I wish I were in love again (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Buddy Bregman) 
   14.   Mountain greenery (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Buddy Bregman) 
   15.   Manhattan (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Buddy Bregman) 
   16.   Wait till you see her (Ella Fitzgerald with Barney Kessel)

   17.   It never entered my mind (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Buddy Bregman) 
   18.   I could write a book (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Buddy Bregman) 
   19.   Where or when (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Buddy Bregman) 
   20.   Isn't it romantic (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Buddy Bregman) 
   21.   Everything I've got belongs to you (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   22.   In a sentimental mood (Ella Fitzgerald with Barney Kessel)

       
CD-5 
   1.   Satin Doll (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   2.   Don't get around much anymore (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   3.   Hear my heart (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Russ Garcia) 
   4.   Take the A Train (Ella Fitzgerald with Duke Ellington & his Orchestra) 
   5.   Drop me off in Harlem (Ella Fitzgerald with Duke Ellington & his Orchestra) 
   6.   I'm beginning to see the light (Ella Fitzgerald with Duke Ellington & his Orchestra) 
   7.   All too soon (Ella Fitzgerald with Duke Ellington & his Orchestra) 
   8.   Our love is here to stay (Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong) 
   9.   Autumn in New York (Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong) 
   10.   These foolish things (remind me of you) (Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong) 
   11.   You turned the tables on me (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Frank DeVol) 
   12.   Summertime (Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong) 
   13.   Bess, you is my woman now (Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong) 
   14.   I wants to stay here (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   15.   We'll be together again (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Frank DeVol) 
   16.   I thought about you (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Frank DeVol) 
   17.   Mood indigo (Ella Fitzgerald) 
       
CD-6 
   1.   In a mellow tone (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   2.   Night wind (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Frank DeVol) 
   3.   What's new (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Frank DeVol) 
   4.   Isn't this a lovely day (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Paul Weston) 
   5.   I used to be color blind (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Paul Weston) 
   6.   How deep is the ocean (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Paul Weston) 
   7.   Blue skies (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Paul Weston) 
   8.   Teach me how to cry (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Paul Weston) 
   9.   What's your story morning glory (Ella Fitzgerald with the Marty Paich Dek-Tette) 
   10.   If I were a bell (Ella Fitzgerald with the Marty Paich Dek-Tette) 
   11.   Oh what a night for love (45 rpm version) (Ella Fitzgerald with the Marty Paich Dek-Tette) 
   12.   Let's fall in love (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Frank DeVol) 
   13.   Love is here to stay (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) 
   14.   The Man I love (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) 
   15.   A foggy day (in London town) (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) 
   16.   Somebody loves me (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) 
   17.   I've got a crush on you (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) 
   18.   You go to my head (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Frank DeVol) 
   19.   Spring will be a little late this year (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Frank DeVol) 
   20.   But not for me (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) 
   21.   They all laughed (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) 
   22.   Gone with the wind (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Frank DeVol) 
       
CD-7 
   1.   Shall we dance (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) 
   2.   It's Wonderful (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) 
   3.   Beat me, Daddy eight to the bar (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Marty Paich) 
   4.   Black Coffee (Ella Fitzgerald with Paul Smith, piano) 
   5.   September Song (Ella Fitzgerald with Paul Smith, piano) 
   6.   One for my baby (Ella Fitzgerald with Paul Smith, piano) 
   7.   Winter wonderland (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Frank DeVol) 
   8.   It's only a paper moon (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Billy May) 
   9.   Stormy weather (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Billy May) 
   10.   Heart & Soul (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Billy May) 
   11.   Come rain or come shine (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Billy May) 
   12.   The one I love belongs to somebody else (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   13.   Stella By Starlight (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   14.   Ich Fuhle Mich Crazy (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   15.   Mean to me (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) 
   16.   I hear music (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) 
   17.   Broadway (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Bill Doggett) 
   18.   She's funny that way (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) 
   19.   Stardust Bossa Nova (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Marty Paich) 
   20.   Almost like being in love (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Marty Paich) 
   21.   I'm Old Fashioned (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) 
   22.   The way you look tonight (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) 
   23.   All the things you are (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) 
       
CD-8 
   1.   Deed I do (Ella Fitzgerald with Count Basie & his Orchestra) 
   2.   My last affair (Ella Fitzgerald with Count Basie & his Orchestra) 
   3.   Trouble in mind (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   4.   How high the moon (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Frank DeVol) 
   5.   I'm a poached egg (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) 
   6.   Skylark (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) 
   7.   Brown-Skin Gal (In The Calico Gown) (Ella Fitzgerald with Duke Ellington & his Orchestra) 
   8.   The shadow of your smile (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Gordon Jenkins) 
   9.   Whisper Not (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Marty Paich) 
   10.   Lover Man (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Marty Paich) 
   11.   Misty Blue (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Sid Fuller) 
   12.   Love for sale (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) 
   13.   Once I loved (Ella Fitzgerald & Joe Pass)

   14.   Round Midnight (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   15.   Midnight Sun (Ella Fitzgerald & Oscar Peterson) 
   16.   That old Feeling (Ella Fitzgerald & Joe Pass) 
   17.   I'm getting sentimental over you (Ella Fitzgerald with Count Basie & his Orchestra) 
   18.   Wave (Ella Fitzgerald with orchestra conducted by Eric Bulling) 
   19.   They can't take that away from me (Ella Fitzgerald with Andre Previn) 
   20.   Don't worry 'bout me (Ella Fitzgerald & Joe Pass) 
   21.   All that jazz (Ella Fitzgerald) 
       
CD-9 
   1.   Love For Sale (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   2.   You Won't Be Satisfied (Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Fitzgerald) 
   3.   I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Down Myself a Letter (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   4.   Moonlight in Vermont (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   5.   Stompin at the Savoy (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   6.   St Louis Blues (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   7.   I loves You Porgy (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   8.   Midnight sun (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   9.   Misty (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   10.   The Man I Love (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   11.   Mack the knife (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   12.   On A Slow Boat to China (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   13.   Rock It For Me (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   14.   Stairway to The Stars (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   15.   Happiness is just a thing called Joe (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   16.   Deep Purple (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   17.   Here's That rainy Day (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   18.   Don't rain on my parade (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   19.   Lullaby of Birdland (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   20.   The More I See you (Ella Fitzgerald) 
       
CD-10 
   1.   Norman Granz Introduction Of Ella Fitzgerald #1 
   2.   Robbins' Nest (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   3.   A New Shade Of Blues (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   4.   Old Mother Hubbard (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   5.   I'm Just A Lucky So-And-So (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   6.   Somebody Loves Me (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   7.   Basin Street Blues (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   8.   Oh, Lady, Be Good! (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   9.   Black Coffee (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   10.   A-Tisket, A-Tasket (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   11.   How High The Moon (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   12.   Perdido (Ella Fitzgerald, Charlie Parker) 
   13.   Bill (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   14.   Why Don't You Do Right? (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   15.   A Foggy Day (In London Town) (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   16.   Lullaby Of Birdland (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   17.   The Man That Got Away (Ella Fitzgerald) 
   18.   Hernando's Hideaway (Ella Fitzgerald) 

   19.   Later (Ella Fitzgerald)  


STING: THE LAST SHIP, AIRS ON PBS GREAT PERFORMANCES, FEB, 21, 2014

Sting: The Last Ship will air on THIRTEEN's Great Performances, Friday, February 21 at 9 p.m., ET on PBS (check local listings) and features the 16-time Grammy Award-winning musician performing songs from his new album, The Last Ship, and forthcoming play of the same name in an intimate evening of music and storytelling live at The Public Theater in New York City.

The program offers unique insight into the creative process behind Sting's latest album and his new musical, premiering June 2014 in Chicago before its debut on Broadway in the fall.  Drawing upon his childhood memories growing up in the shipbuilding community of Wallsend in the North East of England, Sting provides a glimpse into the narrative of the play through the songs on the new album, inspired by the story of "The Last Ship."

He is joined by a 14-piece band, many of whom also hail from the region (Kathryn Tickell on violin and Northumbrian pipes, Peter Tickell on violin and mandolin, Julian Sutton on the melodeon, and vocalists The Wilson Family), including actor and singer Jimmy Nail, who will appear in the upcoming stage production. Also featured is Musical Director Rob Mathes on acoustic guitar, piano and keyboards, and background vocals.

The evening was filmed on Sting's birthday (October 2) at a special fan club performance during a 10-night run of benefit concerts that immediately became one of New York's hottest tickets. The Public Theater's Artistic Director Oskar Eustis observed at the time, "The Last Ship' is shaping up to be a masterpiece, both an elegy for and a celebration of the working class life of the Newcastle shipyards."

Sting has crafted a richly diverse musical landscape for a close-knit community of original characters. With a backdrop of evocative visual projections, he shares his experience emerging from a songwriting hiatus to pen his first album of original material in nearly a decade and his very first musical theater score, incorporating a mix of genres and styles ranging from pub-like folk tunes to ballads to a wall of sound from the full band.

"The memories at the heart of The Last Ship have occupied my mind for most of my life," said Sting. "I was compelled to tell this story." Sting's collaborators on the Broadway-bound production include the Tony-winning team of book writers John Logan ("Red," "I'll Eat You Last") and Brian Yorkey ("Next to Normal") along with director Joe Mantello ("Wicked").

The musical program is as follows:

The Last Ship
Shipyard
Coming Home's Not Easy
And Yet
August Winds
What Have We Got?
Practical Arrangement
What Say You Meg?
Dead Man's Boots
Big Steamers
Sky Hooks and Tartan Paint
Jock the Singing Welder
So To Speak
Show Some Respect
Underground River
The Last Ship (Reprise)

Composer, singer, author, actor, activist, Sting was born in Newcastle, England before moving to London in 1977 to form The Police with Stewart Copeland and Andy Summers. The band released five albums, earned six Grammy awards, and was inducted into The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003.

Since 1985, Sting has released 11 studio albums as a solo musician and has earned an additional 10 Grammy awards, a Golden Globe, an Emmy, and three Oscar nominations. Of his latest album, Jim Farber of the New York Daily News opined, "The Last Ship has an intelligence, beauty and pitch-black wit that makes it both a worthy solo project and a solid blueprint for something to be fleshed out later on stage."

"The Last Ship" will open on Broadway in the fall of 2014, following a pre-Broadway World Premiere from Tuesday, June 10 – Sunday, July 13, 2014 at Chicago's Bank of America Theatre.

Directed by Paul Bozymowski, Sting: The Last Ship is produced by Jon Kamen and Justin Wilkes; Kathryn Schenker and Joe Killian are executive producers. 


TRUE TO THE BLUES: THE JOHNNY WINTER STORY, AVAILABLE FEB. 25, 2014

The extraordinary four decade-plus recording career of seminal Texas blues-rocking guitar legend Johnny Winter, who celebrates his 70th birthday on February 23, 2014, will be commemorated with the release of True To The Blues: The Johnny Winter Story.  This deluxe 4-CD box set, includes 56 tracks that span his major label career from 1968 until his most recent album of 2011, will be available everywhere February 25, 2014, through Columbia/Legacy.

The two-time Grammy Award®-nominated, perennially touring Johnny Winter will play a special birthday night performance at the B.B. King Blues Club & Grill at Times Square in New York City on Sunday, February 23, 2014.  Tickets are available for $30 in advance and $35 day of show. For tickets go to http://www.bbkingblues.com/bio.php?id=3309.

"If it was not for Johnny Winter," said Joe Perry of Aerosmith, "I would have never picked up the guitar!"  The testimonial is one of nearly 20 that accompany the box set, from such guitar luminaries as Eddie Van Halen, Angus Young, Pete Townshend, Carlos Santana, Steven Tyler, Billy Gibbons, Joe Satriani, Derek Trucks, Gregg Allman, Leslie West, Vince Gill, Glenn Tipton, Mark Knopfler, and many more.  "A lot of people play the blues," said Charlie Daniels, "but there's only a handful who can reach deep into the music and make it real.  Johnny Winter can take you on a ride.  Juke joints and cotton fields, rotgut whiskey and back alley crap games, lowdown, lonesome, trifling women and hard times.  That's the blues, y'all."

True To The Blues: The Johnny Winter Story lives up to its title with a chronological track sequence of studio and live material that underscores Johnny Winter's hard-won reputation as an American blues master.  The contents are sourced from no less than 27 separate albums on the Imperial, Columbia, Blue Sky/Epic, Alligator, Point Blank (Virgin), Friday Music, Megaforce, and Columbia/Legacy labels.  These range from his independently recorded and released The Progressive Blues Experiment of 1968 ("Bad Luck And Trouble," "Mean Town Blues") up through 2011's all-star duets project, Roots ("Maybelline" with Vince Gill, "Dust My Broom" with Derek Trucks).

Guests abound throughout True To The Blues, starting with the third track as fellow blues guitar giant Michael Bloomfield introduces Johnny Winter to the Fillmore East audience in December 1968, during a "Super Session" live concert date with Al Kooper.  It was Winter's first trip to New York City, on the heels of a Texas music scene survey on the newsstands that week in Rolling Stone magazine (not yet one year old!).  The issue, coupled with his incendiary playing on an 11-minute jam of John Lee Hooker's "It's My Own Fault," shot the unknown and unsigned-to-a-record-label Johnny Winter to stardom.  His six-figure signing with Columbia was reportedly the biggest advance in the CBS Records era to that point in history.  Winter would be signed with CBS through 1980.

Among other notable musicians on True To The Blues are Dr. John on "Illustrated Man," recorded in Chicago, 1991.  A year later, Winter was invited to the Bob Dylan 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration at Madison Square Garden, to reprise his blistering version of "Highway 61 Revisited," one of two indelible covers of Dylan, along with Jimi Hendrix's "All Along the Watchtower," that defined the closing of the '60s.  Joining Winter at MSG was that night's all-star 'house band' of G.E. Smith, Steve Cropper, Booker T. Jones, Donald "Duck" Dunn, Anton Fig, and Jim Keltner.

True To The Blues not only showcases Winter and the band lineups he has led over the years, many of them (up through 1976) including his brother Edgar on vocals and an array of instruments (keyboards, reeds, drums).  A blues lover's dream collection, the box set also pays homage to the great forebears who influenced Winter, and with whom he was able to record during his long career, among them:

•Willie Dixon and Walter "Shakey" Horton (together on "Mean Mistreater" from Winter's self-titled Columbia debut LP, 1969); and
•Muddy Waters and his band featuring James Cotton, "Pinetop" Perkins, and Willie "Big Eyes" Smith (in the studio on Muddy's "Walkin' Thru The Park," and live on Guitar Slim's "I Done Got Over It," both from 1977).
(It is noted that Johnny Winter produced and played guitar on the final four LPs recorded by his hero Muddy Waters after he left Chess Records.  The first three of those titles won consecutive Grammy Awards® as "Best Ethnic Or Traditional [i.e. Blues] Recording," namely Hard Again (1977), I'm Ready (1978), and Muddy "Mississippi" Waters – Live (1979).)

True To The Blues also draws tracks from Winter's two Grammy Award®-nominated albums:

•Guitar Slinger, nominated for Best Traditional Blues Recording at the 27th Grammy Awards (February, 1985); and
•Serious Business, nominated for Best Traditional Blues Recording at the 28th Grammy Awards (February, 1986).
At the core of True To The Blues are the six albums that Winter recorded for Columbia Records:  Johnny Winter (1969), Second Winter (1969), Johnny Winter And (1970), Johnny Winter And/Live (1971), Still Alive And Well (1973), and Saints & Sinners (1975).  There were also six albums that he recorded for manager Steve Paul's Blue Sky Records (distributed by Columbia's sister imprint, Epic/Portrait/Associated Labels, or E/P/A):  John Dawson Winter III (1974), Together (1976), Captured Live! (1976), Nothin' But The Blues (1977), White, Hot & Blue (1978), and Raisin' Cain (1980).

In addition, True To The Blues draws tracks from a number of historic Columbia/Legacy projects: Fillmore East: The Lost Concert Tapes 12/13/68 (2003), The Woodstock Experience (2009), Second Winter: Legacy Edition (2004), and Breakin' It Up, Breakin' It Down (2007).

In addition to Winter's formidable catalog of original albums on Columbia and Blue Sky, True To The Blues revisits a lost classic of rock history, the Columbia three-LP package of 1970 known as The First Great Rock Festivals Of The Seventies - Isle Of Wight/Atlanta Pop.  Previously unavailable on CD, it starred (in Atlanta) Johnny Winter And, Poco, the Chambers Brothers, the Allman Brothers, and Mountain; and (at Isle Of Wight, UK) Sly and the Family Stone, Cactus, David Bromberg, Ten Years After, Procol Harum, Leonard Cohen, Jimi Hendrix, Kris Kristofferson, and Miles Davis.

In the pole position, side one, track one of that remarkable vinyl collectors item was "Mean Mistreater" by Johnny Winter And (his group with Rick Derringer and bassist Randy Hobbs, with Edgar sitting in on drums), as recorded live at the [Second] Atlanta Inter­national Pop Festival, their only appearance on the triple-record.  True To The Blues now adds two more previously unreleased numbers, Sonny Boy Williamson II's "Eyesight To The Blind" (cf. the Who's Tommy) and Johnny's take on "Prodigal Son." 

True To The Blues: The Johnny Winter Story was produced by Jerry Rappaport, and executive produced by Paul Nelson, Johnny's guitarist and manager.  The compilation was mastered by multiple Grammy Award®-winner Mark Wilder at Battery Studios in New York.

"For well over five decades," writes Guitar World magazine editor-in-chief Brad Tolinski in his liner notes for True To The Blues, "John Dawson 'Johnny' Winter III has produced and played on some of the most exciting blues and rock recordings in the history of both genres."  The writer's newly researched 4,000-word essay includes fresh, revealing interview material from Johnny Winter.  Tolinski has annotated previous releases from AC/DC, Charlie Christian, and Jeff Healey, and penned the notes for the double-CD, The Essential Johnny Winter (released April 2013 on Columbia/Legacy).

The notes touch on every facet of Winter's life and career: Growing up in Beaumont, Texas, influenced by his musical parents as well as the likes of Robert Johnson, T-Bone Walker, Elmore James, Hubert Sumlin and Chuck Berry; his early trio with bassist Tommy Shannon and drummer "Uncle" John (Red) Turner (as heard on the first two Columbia LPs); a pivotal wee-hours association with Jimi Hendrix in New York centering around Steve Paul's The Scene ultra-hip nightclub on 46th Street; his popular triumph at Woodstock but his regrettable absence from the movie; the transition to working in the '70s with post-McCoys Rick Derringer ("Rock And Roll Hoochie Koo") and Muddy Waters; the origins of dozens of tracks, from "Johnny B. Goode" and "Jumpin' Jack Flash" to "Harlem Shuffle" and "Bony Moronie"; his return to the blues, with "a renewed sense of confidence and a big shot of inspiration" in the '80s; and the "artistic renaissance" that has kept Johnny Winter at the absolute pinnacle of guitar heroes around the world to this day.

"His absolute command of traditional music," the notes sum up, "has earned him the respect of serious musicologists, while his tremendous agility, wicked speed and full-tilt aggression on the electric guitar and acoustic bottleneck has won over several generations of younger rock players looking to cop some the fastest and hottest licks ever committed to tape."

True To The Blues: The Johnny Winter Story:

Disc One – Selections: 1. Bad Luck And Trouble (A) - 2. Mean Town Blues (A) - 3. Mike Bloomfield's Introduction Of Johnny Winter (live, B) - 4. It's My Own Fault (live, B) - 5. I'm Yours And I'm Hers (C) - 6. Mean Mistreater (C, with Willie Dixon and Walter "Shakey" Horton) - 7. Dallas (C) - 8. Be Careful With A Fool (C) - 9. Leland Mississippi Blues (live, D) - 10. Memory Pain (E) - 11. Highway 61 Revisited (E) - 12. Miss Ann (E) - 13. Hustled Down In Texas (E) - 14. Black Cat Bone (live, F) - 15. Johnny B. Goode (live, F).

Disc Two – Selections: 1. Eyesight To The Blind (previously unreleased, live at Atlanta Pop Festival, 1970) - 2.Johnny Winter's Intro (live at Atlanta Pop Festival, 1970) - 3. Prodigal Son (previously unreleased, live at Atlanta Pop Festival, 1970) - 4. Mean Mistreater (live, G) - 5. Rock And Roll Hoochie Koo (H)  - 6. Guess I'll Go Away (H) - 7. On The Limb (H) - 8.  It's My Own Fault (live, I) - 9.  Jumpin' Jack Flash (live, I) - 10. Good Morning Little School Girl (live, J) - 11. Mean Town Blues (live, J).

Disc Three – Selections: 1. Still Alive And Well (K) - 2. Rock Me Baby (K) - 3. Rock & Roll (K) - 4. Rollin' 'Cross The Country (L) - 5. Hurtin' So Bad (L) - 6. Bad Luck Situation (L) - 7. Self Destructive Blues (M) - 8. Sweet Papa John (M) - 9. Rock & Roll People (M) - 10. Harlem Shuffle (live, with Edgar Winter, N) - 11. Bony Moronie (live, O) - 12. Roll With Me (live, O) - 13. Tired Of Tryin' (P) - 14. TV Mama (P) - 15. Walkin' Thru The Park (with Muddy Waters & James Cotton, P) - 16. I Done Got Over It (live, with Muddy Waters & James Cotton, Q).

Disc Four – Selections: 1. One Step At A Time (R) - 2. Honest I Do (R) - 3. Nickel Blues (R) - 4. Talk Is Cheap (S) - 5. Wolf In Sheep's Clothing (S) - 6. Bon Ton Roulet (S) - 7. Don't Take Advantage Of Me (T) - 8. Master Mechanic (U) - 9. Mojo Boogie (V) - 10. Stranger Blues (live, W) - 11. Illustrated Man (with Dr. John, X) - 12. Hard Way (Y) - 13. Highway 61 Revisited (live, Z) - 14. Maybelline (featuring Vince Gill, AA) - 15. Dust My Broom (featuring Derek Trucks, AA).

Album index:
A – from The Progressive Blues Experiment (Liberty LP-12431, recorded 1968, released 1969)
B – from Fillmore East: The Lost Concert Tapes 12/13/68 (Columbia/Legacy 85278, recorded 1968, released 2003)
C – from Johnny Winter (Columbia 9826, recorded and released 1969)
D – from The Woodstock Experience (Columbia/Legacy 88697 48244 2, rec. 1969, rel. 2009)
E – from Second Winter (Columbia 9947, recorded and released 1969)
F – from Second Winter: Legacy Edition (Columbia/Legacy 85735, recorded 1970 at The Royal Albert Hall, London, released 2004)
G – from The First Great Rock Festivals Of The Seventies – Isle Of Wight/Atlanta Pop (Columbia 30805, recorded July 5, 1970, at Middle Georgia Raceway, Byron, GA, released 1971, previously unavailable on CD)
H – from Johnny Winter And (Columbia 30221, recorded and released 1970)
I – from Johnny Winter And/Live (Columbia 30475, recorded 1970 at Pirate's World, Dania, FL, released 1971)
J – from Live At The Fillmore East 10/3/70 (Collectors Choice 60002, rec. 1970, rel. 2010)
K – from Still Alive And Well (Columbia 32188, recorded and released 1973)
L – from Saints & Sinners (Columbia 32715, recorded 1974, released 1975)
M – from John Dawson Winter III (Blue Sky 33292, recorded and released 1974)
N – from Together (Blue Sky 34033, recorded 1975 at Swing Auditorium, San Bernardino, CA, released 1976)
O – from Captured Live! (Blue Sky 33944, recorded 1976 at San Diego Sports Arena and Oakland Coliseum, released 1976)
P – from Nothin' But The Blues (Blue Sky 34813, recorded and released 1977)
Q – from Breakin' It Up, Breakin' It Down (Columbia/Legacy 88697 07283 2, recorded 1977 at Masonic Temple Theatre, Detroit, released 2007)
R – from White, Hot & Blue (Blue Sky 35475, recorded and released 1978)
S – from Raisin' Cain (Blue Sky 36343, recorded 1979, released 1980)
T – from Guitar Slinger (Alligator 4735, recorded and released 1984, Grammy®-nominated)
U – from Serious Business (Alligator 4742, recorded and released 1985, Grammy®-nominated)
V – from 3rd Degree (Alligator 4748, recorded and released 1986)
W – from Live Bootleg Series Vol. 3 (Friday Music 1085, recorded late 1980s, released 2008)
X – from Let Me In (Pointblank 91744-2, recorded and released 1991)
Y – from Hey, Where's Your Brother? (Pointblank 0777 7 86512 2 2, rec. and rel. 1992)
Z – from Bob Dylan – The 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration (Columbia 53230, recorded 1992 at Madison Square Garden, released 1993)
AA – from Roots (Megaforce 1603, recorded and released 2011)


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