Wednesday, April 30, 2025

Christian Escoudé - in L.A.

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1993
Time: 57:32
File: MP3 @ VBR ~297K/s
Size: 111,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:55) 1. Just One Of Those Things
(8:29) 2. With A Song In My Heart
(6:36) 3. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
(7:04) 4. Laura
(5:17) 5. I Won't Dance
(5:09) 6. A Foggy Day
(4:23) 7. Passarim
(5:05) 8. Moment's Notice
(7:21) 9. Twilight With You
(3:08) 10. When You Wish Upon A Star

Christian Escoudé is born in 1947. His father, gypsy and guitarist, plays in the popular dances of the region. His father has boundless passion for Django Reinhardt that he passes on to his son and introduces him to the guitar at the age 10. Five year later Christian begins a musician's career.

Christian Escoudé is part of a small jazz guitarist's familly coming out from the Manouche circle: Thus, he built up his own guitar style, a mix of be-bop approach widely tinged with Tzigane influence. He demonstrate a great melodic feeling, using "gypsy" inflexions , such as vibrato and portamento, hot runs and a large, profound sound. He distinguishes itself by the quite personal way it uses arpeggios on the systems semitone / tone.

At the Jazz In, where he plays «after Hours» in 1972, he met with the trio of Eddy Louiss, Bernard Lubat and Aldo Romano. Later on he join Didier Levallet's"Swing String System", and Michel Portal'sMichel Portal Unit. In 1976, l'Académie du jazz award him the Prix Django Reinhardt, meanwhile a new quartet take form with Michel Graillier, Aldo Romano, and Alby Cullaz the later soon replaced by Jean-François Jenny-Clark. He can also be heard (as free-lance) alongside Michel Portal or with Slide Hampton, Martial Solal and Jean-Claude Fohrenbach.

In 1978, the Festival de Nice offers him the opportunity to records with the quartet of John Lewis as well as to play with Stan Getz, Bill Evans, Philly Joe Jones, Freddie Hubbard, Lee Konitz, Shelly Manne, Elvin Jones... Starting in 1978, He participates almost every year to the Festival de Samois, organized in homage to Django Reinhardt.

In 1979, he perform at the Festival de Dakar, as guest of the René Urtreger's trio with Pierre Michelot and Daniel Humair. Summer 1980 : John McLaughlin invite him to tour in a duo setup, this take them to the United-States, Brazil and Japon.

In 1981, He become member of the Martial Solal's big band. The following year, he perform in quartet alongside Shelly Manne. Back in France, he create a quartet with Olivier Hutman (claviers), Nicolas Fitzman (b, bg) et Jean My Truong (perc) - the last two will be later replaced by Jean-Marc Jafet et Tony Rabeson.

In 1983, he start a duo with Didier Lockwood which turn into a trio in 1984 with the addition of Philip Catherine. In 1985, he perform with Capon and Carter then he creates the "Trio Gitan" with Boulou Ferré and Babik Reinhardt.

In 1987, he play's in duo with Michel Graillier, with John Thomas, continues playing with the "Trio Gitan", and again with Capon-Carter. A the start of 1988 a new quartet is born with Jean-Michel Pilc, François Moutin et Louis Moutin. The following year, he setup an octet composed of four guitars (Paul Challain Ferret, Jimmy Gourley, Frédéric Sylvestre), accordion (Marcel Azzola), cello (Vincent Courtois), bass (Alby Cullaz) and drum (Billy Hart).

In New York, 1990 : He play's at the Village Vanguard with Pierre Michelot, Hank Jones and the drummer Kenny Washington. In 1991, surrounded by a string orchestra, he records eleven compositions from Django Reinhardt. In 1992, his "Gipsy Trio" (Challain Ferret, Sylvestre) growth with Babik Reinhardt or Bireli Lagrene, the following year, in Los Angeles, he records with Lou Levy, Bob Magnusson et Billy Higgins.

In 1998, He creates and records A Suite for Gypsies, a Jazz rock, fusion composition dedicated to the memory of gypsy's childrens dead in the nazi's camps. In 2003, year of the fiftieth birthday of DJANGO REINHARDT's death, he creates a big band (17 musicians) with whom he il explore the musical inheritance of Django while adding his own style and own harmonical and rythmical ideas.

In 2004 he setup « The New Gypsie Trio », a group of 3 guitarists with the necessary open mind to express a timely musical concept, without disavowing their own musical roots (with David Reinhardt and Martin Taylor orJean-Baptiste Laya).

In mars 2005 his last album, distributed byNocturne, "Ma ya. Ya" with his new sextet (Progressive Sextet) with : Marcel Azzola, Jean-Baptiste Laya, Sylvain Guillaume, Jean-Marc Jafet, Yoann Serra.

Under the label EmArcy, Verve's parisians office contract him for 7 albums from 1989 to 1994, : Gipsy Waltz / 1989 / Marcel Azzola / Live at the Village Vanguard / Plays Django Reinhardt / In L.A.-Standards Vol.1 / Cookin’in Hell’s Kitchen In 96 the album "Live at Duc des Lombards". In 98 : "A suite for Gypsies". As of now, Christian Escoudé has composed or participated to revording of over 50 albums. https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/christian-escoude/

in L.A.

Isabella Lundgren - Hit The Road To Dreamland

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:31
Size: 102,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:07)  1. Sentimental Journey
(5:37)  2. Far Away Places
(3:56)  3. A Lot Of Livin’ To Do
(3:43)  4. Slow Boat To China
(3:56)  5. Where Or When
(5:35)  6. Anyplace I Hang My Hat Is Home
(5:31)  7. I Wonder As I Wander
(3:25)  8. Trav'lin' Light
(4:40)  9. Come Fly With Me
(3:57) 10. Hit The Road To Dreamland

Isabella Gunhild Helén Lundgren , born 21 December 1987 in Karlstad , is a Swedish jazz singer . She grew up in Karlstad, studied and emerged in 2006-2010 in New York and began studying as a priest in Stockholm in 2010. Lundgren made his debut in 2012 and has since published several albums. Lundgren grew up in Karlstad, where she went on a musical line at high school. She moved to New York at the age of eighteen, studying at New York University in 2006–10 and performing with, among others, Gavin DeGraw , Moby and Woody Allen's band leader Eddy Davis. She returned to Sweden in 2010 and started studies at the Theological University in Stockholm. Lundgren's interest in philosophy and existential issues has also characterized her music creation. Isabella Lundgren made her debut in 2012 with the album It Had to Be You with music from the Great American Songbook . A second album, Somehow Life Got in the Way , was released in 2014. She sings in the band Isabella Lundgren & Carl Bagge Trio  and has been mentioned several times as one of Sweden's strongest jazz vocalists. https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isabella_Lundgren

Hit The Road To Dreamland

Michael Dease - Grace

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:42
Size: 157.3 MB
Styles: Trombone jazz
Year: 2010
Art: Front

[1:42] 1. Discussao
[6:31] 2. Blues On The Corner
[5:40] 3. In A Mist
[8:26] 4. I Talk To The Trees
[7:10] 5. Four
[4:09] 6. Tippin'
[5:30] 7. Setembro
[5:28] 8. 26-2
[5:56] 9. Toys
[5:56] 10. Love Dance
[6:16] 11. Grace
[5:53] 12. Salt Song

Michael Dease: trombone, valve trombone; Roger Squitero, Circle Rhythm: vocals, percussion; Mark Whitfield: guitar, acoustic guitar; Yotam: acoustic guitar, electric guitar; Sharel Cassity: alto flute, alto saxophone; Eric Alexander: tenor saxophone; Roy Hargrove: trumpet, flugelhorn; Claudio Roditi: flugelhorn; Steve Davis: trombone; Cyrus Chestnut: piano; Gene Jackson: drums.

Michael Dease is to the trombone what Harry Allen is to the tenor saxophone. Lyrical, traditional, well-studied and broad based, both artists can equally get their freak on when necessary. Dease's trombone style contains many influences, but like many conservatory-trained musicians, Dease has had the time and practice to develop is own potent voice. Emerging among a class of young musicians that include Sharel Cassity and Carol Morgan, Dease presents as a neo-traditionalist with pristine chops and a universal exposure (both bandstand and didactic) to music providing him a virtual library from which to draw. Technically, that is all well and good as a description; but what does Dease sound like? Dease's previous recordings, Dease Bones (Astrix Media, 2007) and Clarity (Blues Back Records, 2008) found Dease honing his already very capable craft. His voice and tone have become perfectly rounded with a rich and creamy timbre superbly captured on the Jobim opener, "Discussao."

Bix Beiderbecke's "In A Mist" is post-modern updated by Dease, making it both more densely impressionistic and swinging at the same time, proving that the two not need mutually exclusive. Dease allows himself ample room for exploration with a reigned-in rhythm section providing the propulsion without getting in the way. Dease approaches Miles Davis' "Four" where he doubles on trombone and tenor saxophone. More ballad than bebop, Dease's treatment is languid and moody like an opiate nod. Cyrus Chestnut holds the piece together with a concise solo before Dease does his best Scott Hamilton.

Dease does get his bebop on for Oscar Peterson's "Tippin'" playing J.J. Johnson fast, taking corners like Curtis Fuller. His fluid chops are on display on this song with a taut and effusive solo where he is able to exercise his considerable solo prowess. It is as a balladeer that Dease excels and where his true strength lies, as demonstrated on the two Ivan Lins compositions "Setembro" and "Love Dance." Dease's lone composition, the title piece, is a mid-tempo swinger that sums up well what Dease's finely crafted jazz is all about. C. Michael Bailey

Grace

Monday, April 28, 2025

Don Sebesky - Giant Box

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1973
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:35
Size: 140,1 MB
Art: Front

(13:56)  1. Firebird/Bird Of Fire
( 5:50)  2. Song To A Seagull
( 8:15)  3. Free As A Bird
( 8:11)  4. Psalm 150
( 5:40)  5. Vocalise
( 9:48)  6. Fly/Circles
( 7:52)  7. Semi-tough

It's a bit bizarre to find an album called Giant Box in a small cardboard case, or as a download lacking physical form, but times change. When Don Sebesky's grand musical statement on CTI hit the marketplace in 1973, it came in a classical-type record box, befitting the stature of the music. Opinions vary as to whether Sebesky can be said to have been a savior of jazz in the '70s, or a jazz Judas who helped to commercialize the music. Truth be told, he's neither. Sebesky is simply a great arranger and talent who happened to thrive in this music during a period when the ideology of jazz was fractured in so many ways. Sebesky bore the brunt of critical attacks against this new offshoot, but he wasn't trying to reinvent the wheel. While his arrangements were occasionally excessive, many of his works are also masterful musical creations that create an entire universe of sound, in service of a particular artist's vision. While there may be reservations about the "Sebesky Sound," hindsight shows his arranging brilliance, as demonstrated on Giant Box.

The early '70s success of CTI afforded Creed Taylor the opportunity to give Sebesky some musical freedom on this project, and what he came up with is astonishing. Sebesky fuses Igor Stravinsky's "Firebird" and John McLaughlin's "Birds Of Fire" into a single work, featuring cinematic orchestral episodes and exciting solos from the likes of Hubert Laws and Freddie Hubbard. Joni Mitchell's "Song To A Seagull" becomes a feature for Paul Desmond's distant and lonely sounding alto saxophone, but Ron Carter's bass makes friends with him and the pair proves to be simpatico in its conversational work. The first of three Sebesky originals ("Free As A Bird") is also the first number that deals in hard swinging big band writing, and it also features some wonderful solo work from pianist Bob James, Freddie Hubbard now on flugelhorn and Grover Washington Jr. on soprano saxophone. Sebesky's take on Jimmy Webb's "Psalm 150" is the one number that doesn't stand up too well, as it comes off like a combination between solemn chanting, Donald Byrd's A New Perspective (Blue Note, 1963), standard-issue funk, and "Aquarius" from Hair (1967). Things get back on track with Desmond's sad-eyed saxophone work on "Vocalise," which also features vibraphonist Milt Jackson and Sebesky's superb string writing. The final pair of pieces on the album are representative of Sebesky's experimental side ("Fly/Circle") and understanding of popular, groove-based music ("Semi-Tough"). "Fly/Circle" is an episodic number that features Laws' effects-laden flute runs, Sebesky's pleasant vocals, an eerie Bernard Hermann-esque woodwind statement, solos over a small group setting, and more. "Semi-Tough" goes in a completely different direction, as Sebesky taps into raunchy, straight-up street funk that's part-Isaac Hayes and part Sanford And Son. While Giant Box is indicative of the bigger-is-better approach of the times, it also serves as a benchmark for creativity in arranging and composition, and helps to place Sebesky's talents in the proper light. ~ Dan Bilawsky https://www.allaboutjazz.com/giant-box-don-sebesky-cti-masterworks-review-by-dan-bilawsky.php

Personnel: Don Sebesky: piano (7), electric piano (1, 2, 3), organ (7), accordion (3, 6), clavinet (7), vocals (4, 6); Bob James: piano (3, 5, 6), organ (4, 7); Ron Carter: bass, electric bass, piccolo bass; Billy Cobham: drums (1, 4, 7); Jack DeJohnette: drums (2, 3, 5, 6); George Benson: guitar (7); Harry Leahey: guitar (1); Airto: percussion (1, 6, 7); Rubens Bassini: conga drums (4); Dave Friedman: percussion (4); Phil Kraus: percussion (4); Ralph MacDonald: percussion (4); Paul Desmond: alto saxophone (2, 5); Joe Farrell: soprano saxophone (6); Grover Washington, Jr.: alto saxophone (7), soprano saxophone (3); Milt Jackson: vibraphone (5); Freddie Hubbard: trumpet (1, 5), flugelhorn (3); Hubert Laws: flute (1, 6); Jackie Cain: vocals (4); Roy Kral: vocals (4); Randy Brecker: trumpet; Alan Rubin: trumpet; Joe Shepley: trumpet; Wayne Andre: trombone, baritone; Warren Covington: trombone, baritone; Garnett Brown: trombone; Paul Faulise: bass trombone, baritone; Alan Raph: bass trombone, baritone; Jim Biffington: french horn; Earl Chapin: french horn; Phil Bodner: flute, piccolo, clarinet, soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone, oboe, English horn; Jerry Dodgion: flute, piccolo, clarinet, soprano saxophone; Walt Levinsky: clarinet, tenor saxophone; George Marge: flute, clarinet, soprano saxophone, baritone saxophone, oboe, English horn; Romeo Penque: flute, piccolo, clarinet, soprano saxophone, oboe, English horn; Tony Price: tuba; Al Brown: violin; Harry Cykman: violin; Max Ellen: violin; Paul Gershman: violin; Harry Glickman: violin; Emanuuel Green: violin; Harold Kohon: violin; Charles Libove: violin; Harry Lookofsky: violin; Joe Malin: violin; David Nadien: violin; Gene Orloff: violin; Elliot Rosoff: violin; Irving Spice: violin; Seymour Barab: cello; Charles McCracken: cello; George Ricci: cello; Alan Shulman: cello; Margaret Ross: harp; Homer Mensch: concert string bass; Lani Groves: background vocals (7); Carl Caldwell: background vocals (7); Tasha Thomas: background vocals (7).

Giant Box

Sunday, April 27, 2025

Michela Lombardi - Live to Tell

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2017
Time: 81:13
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 187,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:38) 1. Burning Up
(5:32) 2. Lucky Star
(4:32) 3. Material Girl
(7:35) 4. Rain
(4:49) 5. Music
(5:18) 6. Frozen
(4:32) 7. True Blue
(5:51) 8. Live to Tell
(5:08) 9. Like a Virgin
(4:06) 10. Holiday
(5:48) 11. Papa Don't Preach
(5:24) 12. You'll See
(4:20) 13. Into the Groove (Tahwos)
(4:29) 14. Take a Bow
(3:32) 15. La Isla Bonita
(6:38) 16. Dear Jessie

The new album from Italian vocalist Michela Lombardi “Live To Tell” was recorded together with the Riccardo Fassi Trio and features a full set of re-imagined music first recorded by pop icon Madonna. Featuring special guests Steven Bernstein (trumpet) and Don Byron (clarinet), this album, firmly rooted in the jazz idiom, brings a new and unique vision to this repertoire that is rarely heard in an acoustic setting.https://www.dottimerecords.com/product/live-to-tell/

Personnel: Michela Lombardi – vocals; Steven Bernstein – trumpet; Don Byron – clarinet

Live to Tell

Jaimee Paul - The Gershwin Songbook

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2025
Time: 42:27
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 97,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:03) 1. They Can't Take That Away From Me
(3:08) 2. I Got Rhythm
(5:15) 3. I've Got A Crush On You
(2:54) 4. A Foggy Day
(2:58) 5. Love Is Here To Stay
(5:12) 6. It Ain't Necessarily So
(3:51) 7. ‘S Wonderful
(4:49) 8. The Man I Love
(3:15) 9. Let's Call The Whole Thing Off
(4:38) 10. Embraceable You
(3:19) 11. But Not For Me

Celebrated international jazz vocalist Jaimee Paul returns with fresh takes on George Gershwin's timeless classics. The Gershwin Songbook album includes hits "The Man I Love," "Let's Call The Whole Thing Off," "But Not For Me," and "They Can't Take That Away From Me." Produced by Jack Jezzro, the album is releasing on Green Hill Music in partnership with Burton Avenue.

The Gershwin Songbook

Andy Sheppard Quartet - Romaria

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:07
Size: 110,7 MB
Art: Front

(8:06)  1. And A Day ...
(4:48)  2. Thirteen
(5:11)  3. Romaria
(4:21)  4. Pop
(5:56)  5. They Came From The North
(5:53)  6. With Every Flower That Falls
(7:07)  7. All Becomes Again
(6:42)  8. Forever ...

Where so much music treats silence as an exception, Andy Sheppard's recordings find it serving more as the rule. He's never been one for weaving flashy speed runs or feeling pressure to fill space. Even when his sax lines speed up from time to time through Romaria, they serve the mood with tasteful restraint, smoothly evoking the soothing coolness of its cover. Sheppard uses the term "dream band" to describe this quartet, which is appropriate in more ways than one. Dreaminess is the overarching quality of the session and the group's longstanding familiarity lets them trust each other wherever they drift. Sheppard had already explored the chordless trio format with Michel Benita on bass and Sebastian Rochford at the drumkit; the guitar and electronic tones of sometime collaborator Eivind Aarset made an excellent expansion on Surrounded by Sea (ECM, 2015). Their followup here is just a touch more active in comparison, keeping their identity while turning one more facet toward the light. The opening "And a Day..." could serve as the start of a proper ambient album if it wished, full of wide breathing space and gentle sweeps of guitar swaying like waves at low tide. It's not long before Sheppard steps into livelier territory with the mid-tempo lines through "Thirteen," though the album's pace never feels anywhere near rushed. Again Aarset provides an atmospheric backing framework while the other players keep the pulse at the most languid of lulls. The rhythm section is often here to provide shading more than actual rhythm throughout; when the pieces ebb, they judiciously choose their spots with tasteful strums and splashes rather than any recognizable beat. The leader's pieces generally alternate between these two modes to refreshingly tranquil effect. 

The groove builds to a light-floating cruise during "Pop" and "All Becomes Again," then an actual clatter in between with "They Came from the North." Open air takes prominence for the meditative ballad "Every Flower That Falls" and the finale of "Forever..." (bookended with that opener because they were two complementary takes of the same piece). In either mode it's an atmosphere to soak in at leisure. This quartet's easy chemistry creates a pretty soundscape both inviting and intriguing, and Romaria never loses the airy feel of a cozy reverie even at its busiest. ~ Geno Tackara https://www.allaboutjazz.com/romaria-andy-sheppard-ecm-records-review-by-geno-thackara.php

Personnel: Andy Sheppard: tenor and soprano saxophones; Eivind Aarset: guitar; Michel Benita: double bass; Sebastian Rochford: drums.

Romaria

Friday, April 25, 2025

Alex Sipiagin - Generations: Dedicated To Woody Shaw

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:14
Size: 154,3 MB
Art: Front

(8:41)  1. Greenwood I
(5:48)  2. Obsequious
(5:49)  3. Cassandranite
(7:33)  4. Beyond All Limits
(8:35)  5. Windy Bahn
(7:11)  6. Katrina Ballerina
(7:12)  7. Chance
(8:13)  8. Blues For Wood
(8:07)  9. Greenwood II

Alex Sipiagin pays it forward with his eighth Criss Cross release, Generations, dedicated to the late Woody Shaw, a lesser celebrated but brilliant trumpeter who performed with artists including Anthony Braxton, Chick Corea, Eric Dolphy, Andrew Hill. A fiery stylist with perfect pitch and lyricism, Shaw was admired by peers and emulated by up-and-comers as Sipiagin confirms, "Even now, many years later, every time I listen to Woody, I always find something new and inspiring." Sipiagin is also a stylist himself; an exceptional player and leader whose clarion horn has been called upon by bassist Dave Holland and saxophonist Michael Brecker. The trumpeter's band members are also leaders who have appeared on many of his releases, and were all members of various Brecker groups over the years, including the rhythmic underpinning of bassist Boris Kozlov and drummer Antonio Sanchez. 

Adam Rogers, another leader in his own right, is the perfect complement to Sipiagin's warm tonality; a guitarist who continues to unveil his superlative skills on the similarly themed Due Reverence (Posi-Tone, 2010), saxophonist Ralph Bowen's tribute to other lesser-known but influential musicians. The trumpeter's group is convincing, with a persuasive mix of fresh Sipiagin originals and Shaw reworks that are pristine reflections and contrasts of both musicians. Rogers cooks up a funky riff throughout Sipiagin's "Greenwood I" and "Greenwood II" (an alternate take and a nod to older recordings), as the trumpeter throws down melodic notes with cool precision, shifting between multiple changes of swing. "Windy Bahn" is another original, initially sketched on the trumpeter's computer, a composition that features jagged tempo changes. The spirit of the great B3 organist Larry Young, with whom Shaw frequently performed, looms on three tracks Young's "Obsequious," as well as Shaw's "Cassandranite" and "Beyond All Limits." 

They're perfect examples of the elders' progressive ideas in structure and harmony, along with the keen arrangements with which Sipiagin highlights each musician the trumpeter's lucidity, Sanchez's detailed traps, Kozlov's meaty yet lithesome fingerings, and Rogers' liquid maneuvers. Referencing Shaw's biography and Sipiagin's liner notes, some historical points concerning these jazz musicians is noteworthy: First, Shaw felt an immediate connection to another forerunner, trumpeter Clifford Brown, who died in June 1956, the same month and year he started playing. Second, the first time Sipiagin heard Shaw was around 1985, while studying in Russia; four years before Shaw's untimely passing in 1989. From one impactful connection to the next; the music continues its vitality.By Mark F.Turner  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/generations-alex-sipiagin-criss-cross-review-by-mark-f-turner.php
 
Personnel: Alex Sipiagin: trumpet, flugelhorn; Adam Rogers: guitar; Boris Kozlov: bass; Antonio Sanchez: drums.

Cyrille Aimée - à Fleur de Peau

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2024
Time: 35:15
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 85,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:47) 1. Beautiful Way
(3:28) 2. Again Again
(3:50) 3. For the Love f You
(4:18) 4. Inside and Out
(0:47) 5. Yo soy Diosa
(4:34) 6. Back to You
(2:44) 7. Feel What I Feel
(4:02) 8. Here
(3:36) 9. Ma Préférence
(4:03) 10. Historia de Amor

During the Covid-19 pandemic, she returned to the Costa Rican jungle and bought a plot of land in an eco-community inhabited mainly by expatriates. She spent time there during the lockdown, camping out at first, eventually designing and building her own off-the-grid homestead. After the fact, she describes the songs she wrote in Costa Rica as a kind of "journal" of the process. She declares in her lyric to "Inside and Out," the seed for the album, that "I will build a house so steady for you to come back to." At the time she wrote it, she had no real plans to build. In retrospect, she sees the house in the lyric as the real jungle dwelling she was to construct and the "you" as the music she was to create in it. The official video of the piece was shot on her Costa Rican property and in her home, a fantastic idiosyncratic colorful abode with charmingly primitive plumbing. It shows her singing and dancing on her porch and frolicking in the village swimming hole (YouTube, bottom of this page).

When she had written enough material for an album, she reconnected with Sherman, saying, "Hey, I have some fun, trendy songs. Let's finish what we started." The two of them realized the project together. The tunes on À Fleur de Peau are as described: they have a breezy pop flavor, gentle grooves, lovely melodies and lyrics that are sweet and personal. Aimée, accompanying herself simply on guitar or ukulele, is at the core of the production, with the other lines and instruments superimposed.

After more than a dozen well-received recordings of standards as a leader, including a Grammy nomination for her arrangement of Stephen Sondheim's "Marry Me a Little" (Move On: A Sondheim Adventure, Mack Avenue, 2019), this is Aimée's first album to feature original material. She intended for it to be "accessible" and it is. Situated among her pop confections are versions of "Ma Préférence" by French singer-songwriter Julien Clerc (Pathé, 1978) and The Isley Brothers' "For the Love of You" (The Heat is On, Epic, 1975), which is described in the album notes as "an unabashed, gloriously uplifting slice of sophisticated Yacht-Pop." By Katchie Cartwright https://www.allaboutjazz.com/a-fleur-de-peau-cyrille-aimee-whirlwind-recordings

Personnel: Cyrille Aimee – vocals, acoustic guitar, baritone ukelele | Jake Sherman – various instruments | Abe Rounds – drums & percussion | Jorge Roeder – bass (2) | Duncan Wickel – violin, cello (2, 6, 7) | Naseem Alatrash – cello (2, 7) | Jay Rattman – clarinet (2, 7) | Wayne Tucker – trumpet (1, 3) | Maria Cardona – vocals (5) | Jamison Ross – drums (6) | Chloe Rowlands – trumpet, flugelhorn (6, 8) | Andy Clausen – trombone (6, 8) | The Williamsburg School of Music Chorus – vocals (8) | Armando Young – additional drum production

à Fleur de Peau

Isabella Lundgren - Songs To Watch The Moon

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2017
Time: 50:07
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 115,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:40) 1. I Wished On The Moon
(4:30) 2. Moon River
(4:27) 3. Isn't It Romantic
(5:30) 4. For Heavens Sake
(4:08) 5. Dream A Little Dream Of Me
(5:14) 6. I'm Old Fashioned
(4:48) 7. Moonlight In Vermont
(4:40) 8. When Lights Are Low
(4:02) 9. I'll Be Tired Of You
(5:12) 10. Pennies From Heaven
(1:51) 11. Blueberry Hill

I am sitting at a wooden table in the basement of the Scala theater in Stockholm. I am watching Isabella Lundgren from afar. Everywhere around us the party is swirling and swaying back and forth. Her party. An after party if you will, after her concert at the Stockholm Concert hall, which she sold out entirely on her own. Last time I was at the concert hall was when Patti Smith held a concert there after receiving the Polar Music Prize, it was not sold out. An hour ago Isabella held a somewhat sacred and rather magical concert with her own material, backed by a full classical orchestra. The seated audience applauded enthusiastically but politely. They were dressed up the way middle age people dress up for the theater. In Scala’s basement the mood in inverted. A wild band is blowing Dixie as underage girls spill Jack and Coke over their music-school-attending boyfriends and the in Sweden mandatory thick winter coats are trampled on the floor. In front of the stage the sweat is dripping down from the ceiling.

It is crowded and rowdy and hot. Isabella has a smile on her face and her adopted Romanian street dog in her arms. She is standing a little to the side, watching the party with mild amusement. She is drinking a non alcoholic cider. Out of the sea of people Rigmor Gustafsson emerges to thank Isabella. The Swedish jazz queen Rigmor has stars in her eyes. She gives Isabella, what seems to be, at least from where I am sitting, an overwhelming review. As they are holding each others arms I think of a moment I have only read about. When Johnny Cash made his way over to Bob Dylan after a concert in the late sixties, to give to him his finest acoustic guitar. I think of that and I think of this. An equivalent of that moment. A passing of the torch if you will. There it is, torch passed. They even hail from the same town.

I first heard Isabella Lundgren sing in a music high school practice room in that town. Karlstad in rural Sweden. As I recall her voice then it sounded just like it does now. And I think she was only fifteen years old at the time. She already had that voice. An old voice. With a tear in it. A voice that had seen the bottom of the glass and the top of the world.

A voice that had laughed its way through the night in a taxi with it’s fingers in a strangers hair. A voice that had thrown it all away and had to face its gaze in the mirror the morning after. A voice that had felt love. And seen hate. Though it was, at that time, a voice like a bird in a cage. That mostly had been secluded to a teenage girls bedroom, with her mothers jazz records, in an apartment building opposite a gas station and a McDonalds restaurant. A voice that had been singing for thousands of hours accompanied by her Cd-Walkman underneath black and white posters of the Manhattan skyline. A voice that maybe hadn’t lived but had longed to live. I started talking to that voice on the phone for hours on end. For we longed for the same things. We talked and talked, like only teenagers can, about our restless longing. About Bob Dylan and about old movies. About everything that had to happened and about everything that mustn’t. We longed to live and we longed to leave. She left before me. On a full scholarship to the New School University for Jazz and Contemporary Music in New York City.

She ended up in New Jersey at first, at some remote relatives house, but she told a lie about having found another place to stay, in the city with a classmate, and again she did leave. A white lie from someone who had been longing. Longing to throw herself out from safety and into life with no safety net. And from what I heard, it was a hard fall. As hard as falls can become for someone who’s been longing. Longing for the night and the stage and the love. Longing for friendship and avenues and smoky clubs and bars. Longing for laughter and random encounters and booze and sex and dope. When she finally came back to Europe she was another. Wise somehow, beyond her years. She was still only twenty five but she had, it seemed, lived five lifetimes. She had found her faith and lost it. Dealt with her longing and her limitlessness. And it took time but she did start to sing again. To use the voice. Harness it. She had so many things to tell. And she now knew that music had to mean more. More than entertainment. It had to mean something real. She started writing her own material. Political, raw, and absolutely beautiful. With that same voice. Sometimes the girl have to catch up to the voice. Sometimes the woman first must live what the voice long have told.https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/isabella-lundgren/

Personnel: Vocals – Isabella Lundgren; Bass – Niklas Fernqvist; Drums – Daniel Fredriksson; Piano – Carl Bagge

Songs To Watch The Moon

Gene Ammons - The Boss Is Back!

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:16
Size: 168,3 MB
Art: Front

(7:27)  1. Tastin' the Jug
(7:59)  2. I Wonder
(8:48)  3. Ger-ru
(6:06)  4. Here's That Rainy Day
(6:47)  5. Madame Queen
(5:34)  6. The Jungle Boss
(5:10)  7. Jungle Strut
(6:03)  8. Didn't We
(5:04)  9. He's a Real Gone Guy
(5:41) 10. Feeling Good
(4:06) 11. Blue Velvet
(4:26) 12. Son of a Preacher Man


The executives at Prestige must have been felt ecstatic when they heard Gene Ammons first play after his release from a very severe seven-year jail sentence. The great tenor proved to still be in his prime, his huge sound was unchanged and he was hungry to make new music. This CD, which completely reissues the first two LPs Ammons cut after his return (The Boss Is Back! and Brother Jug!) rewards repeated listenings. The first date (in an acoustic quintet with pianist Junior Mance) hints at his earlier bop-based music while the numbers from the following day (with organist Sonny Phillips) find Ammons playing over a couple of boogaloo vamps very much of the period. Actually it is his ballad statements (particularly "Here's That Rainy Day," "Feeling Good" and even "Didn't We") that really make this CD memorable, although on "He's a Real Gone Guy" Ammons shows that he had not forgotten how to jam the blues either. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-boss-is-back!-mw0000111625

Personnel: Gene Ammons (tenor saxophone); Billy Butler (guitar); Houston Person, Prince James (tenor saxophone); Junior Mance (piano); Sonny Phillips (organ); Bob Bushnell (electric bass); Frank Jones , Frankie Jones, Bernard "Pretty" Purdie (drums); Candido , Candido Camero (congas).

The Boss Is Back!

Friday, April 18, 2025

Richard 'Groove' Holmes - After Hours

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1962
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:55
Size: 149,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:36)  1. Sweatin'
(2:56)  2. Jeannine
(4:13)  3. Minor Surgery
(4:08)  4. This Here
(5:16)  5. It Might as Well Be Spring
(5:21)  6. Moose the Mooche
(6:46)  7. Groove's Bag
(2:33)  8. Hallelujah, I Love her So
(5:25)  9. After Hours
(4:34) 10. Later
(5:01) 11. Do It My Way
(6:44) 12. Secret Love
(3:16) 13. Denise

Richard "Groove" Holmes was one of the first jazz organists to emerge after the rise of Jimmy Smith (who would remain a lifelong influence). Holmes had a lighter tone on the more up-tempo pieces, but on the ballads (such as "Denise" on this set) his organ could give the impression of weighing a ton. This CD reissue combines together most of the music from Holmes' two early albums: After Hours and Tell It like It 'Tis. 

These trio renditions (with either Joe Pass or Gene Edwards on guitar and Larance Marable or Leroy Henderson on drums) give one a strong sampling of the organist's talents on a variety of blues, bop standards, and obscure originals. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/after-hours-mw0000184447

Personnel: Richard Groove Holmes (organ); Joe Pass, Gene Edwards (guitar); Larance Marable, Leroy Henderson (drums).

After Hours

Rebecca Kilgore - A Little Taste a Tribute to Dave Frishberg

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2024
Time: 38:40
File: MP3 @ 128K/s
Size: 39,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:51) 1. A Little Taste (The Single)
(3:42) 2. Our Love Rolls On
(5:08) 3. "Peel Me a Grape"
(2:33) 4. Little Did I Dream
(4:27) 5. Heart's Desire
(3:16) 6. Snowbound
(3:01) 7. "Brenda Starr"
(2:36) 8. Telephone Song
(3:25) 9. Ah so Pure
(2:56) 10. You Are There
(4:40) 11. Eastwood Lane

Singer Rebecca Kilgore’s A Little Taste showcases her wonderful delivery, accompanied by a stellar lineup of musicians. The album features Dan Barrett on trombone, Dick Titterington on trumpet and flugelhorn, Randy Porter on piano, Tom Wakeling on bass and Todd Strait on drums, among others, creating a rich backdrop for Kilgore’s performances.

Singer Rebecca Kilgore’s A Little Taste showcases her wonderful delivery, accompanied by a stellar lineup of musicians. The album features Dan Barrett on trombone, Dick Titterington on trumpet and flugelhorn, Randy Porter on piano, Tom Wakeling on bass and Todd Strait on drums, among others, creating a rich backdrop for Kilgore’s performances. A string sections adds in that regard as well. The recording leans heavily into jazz standards, offering a nostalgic journey through well-loved tunes. Kilgore’s is effortlessly elegant style and the interplay between her vocals and the instrumental arrangements is wonderful delivers warmth and intimacy that make this a beautifully enjoyable listening experience.https://thejazzpage.com/album/rebecca-kilgore-a-little-taste/

A Little Taste a Tribute to Dave Frishberg

Fredrik Kronkvist - Out of the Blue

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2025
Time: 77:12
File: MP3 @ 128K/s
Size: 74,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:38) 1. Blues on the Corner
(7:07) 2. Jinrikisha
(6:05) 3. Driftin'
(5:38) 4. Mahjong
(6:55) 5. Nica's Dream
(7:40) 6. Una Mas
(8:07) 7. Short Story
(6:46) 8. Oriental Folksong
(6:10) 9. The Kicker
(8:21) 10. Blue Bossa
(8:40) 11. Moanin'

The powerful and soulful altoman Fredrik Kronkvist is considered one of Europe’s finest alto saxophonists and takes charge whenever he is in the spotlight. Fredrik is an award-winning saxophonist and he has several albums out as a leader. Both his writing and improvisational skills are on display when he gives the audience his experience in drawing the heat from a tune with his big sound.

He is leading his own band where he presents a quartet, consisting of musicians from the vanguard of today. https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/fredrik-kronkvist/

Out of the Blue

Johnny Frigo - Debut of A Legend

Styles: Jazz, Swing
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:58
Size: 132,3 MB
Art: Front + Back

(4:34)  1. Get Happy
(4:03)  2. I'm Old Fashioned
(3:04)  3. Osaka Saki
(5:09)  4. Too Late Now/Street of Dreams
(3:30)  5. Bow Jest
(4:25)  6. Nuages
(6:14)  7. Jitterbug Waltz
(5:25)  8. Heather On The Hill/How Are Things In Glocca Morra
(5:01)  9. I Love Paris
(6:18) 10. Here's That rainy Day
(3:09) 11. Lush Life
(5:03) 12. Jeannine

Violinist Johnny Frigo's third album as a leader (he had previously made a forgotten date for Mercury in 1957 and a Chesky CD in 1988) is his definitive set, even though he was 77 at the time. With a good supporting cast (guitarist Gene Bertoncini, Bob Kindred on tenor and clarinet, pianist Joe Vito, bassist Michael Moore, and drummer Bill Goodwin), Frigo mostly explores standards, plus two of his originals. The music, falling between swing and bop, is superior straight-ahead jazz; among the highlights are "Get Happy," "Bow Jest," "Jitterbug Waltz," and "Jeannine." Frigo's sudden prominence in his '70s (considering he spent most of his career as a bassist) was as unlikely and welcome an event as trumpeter Doc Cheatham's late-period triumphs.By Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/debut-of-a-legend-mw0000119053

Personnel: Johnny Frigo (violin); Gene Bertoncini (guitar); Bob Kindred (clarinet, tenor saxophone); Joe Vito (piano); Bill Goodwin (drums).

Wednesday, April 16, 2025

Harry Allen's All Star Brazilian Band - Flying Over Rio

Styles: Brazilian Jazz
Year: 2014
Time: 76:27
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 179,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:32) 1. Double Rainbow
(4:01) 2. A Ship Without A Sail
(7:09) 3. The Night Has A Thousand Eyes
(4:50) 4. Bonita
(5:44) 5. Girl From Ipanema
(4:44) 6. Bate Papo
(5:57) 7. Copacabana
(4:31) 8. Tristeza De Nos Dois
(4:17) 9. Eu E A Briza
(4:52) 10. Mojave
(4:52) 11. Flying Over Rio
(4:08) 12. Serra De Estrella
(4:45) 13. Lamento No Morro
(5:08) 14. Piano No Mangueirra
(6:48) 15. Love Dance

Harry Allen is one of those tenor saxophonists that, in many ways, defies categorization. Strongly swing-oriented, his style is influenced not only by the masters such as Coleman Hawkins and Lester Young, but also by his contemporaries such as Scott Hamilton and Stan Getz. In his current release Flying Over Rio, he explores Brazilian music and how it has been both adapted and adopted into North American musical forms.

There is probably no better way of starting this adventure than with the Jobim/Lees collaboration “Double Rainbow”. Bringing together a bossa nova theme with a waltz tempo, which is all held together by vocalist Maucha Adnet, is a perfect synthesis of what Allen is trying to accomplish with this album. “The Night Has A Thousand Eyes” is one of those popular tunes whose origins are often forgotten, but nevertheless has attributes that seem to fit any musical style. Here, led by a sixteen-bar introduction from drummer Duduka Da Fonseca, Allen picks up the melody with some lovely phrasing before rolling out several choruses of improvisation with the addition of some nifty piano from Klaus Mueller.

It would almost be heresy to exclude “Girl From Ipanema” from a Brazilian album, so Allen and the band avoid this apostasy with a lilting arrangement, with guitarist Guilherme Monteiro taking the opening solo lead. Then Allen chimes in with his lyrical take on the composition, evoking the ghost of Stan Getz. The group dives into the purely Brazilian songs with gusto and offers vocalist Maucha Adnet lots of room to explore the genre on “Bonita” and “Eu e a Briza”. On the evocative “Mojave” Allen and bassist Nilson Matta offer a tenor-bass duo which is an intricate interplay between the two with a complex time signature. As for the title tune “Flying Over Rio” it is a samba in a reflexive mode with Allen, pianist Mueller, and bassist Matta all at the top of their game. The session closes with “Love Dance” taken at a barely perceptible bossa rhythm with Allen, guitarist Monteiro, and pianist Mueller sharing the solo space with emotion and resonance.

Lead by Harry Allen’s sturdy tenor saxophone, this inventive and versatile band brings a unique voice to the Brazilian musical experience.By John Sunier https://www.audaud.com/harry-allen-all-star-brazilian-band-flying-over-rio-arbors/

Personnel: Harry Allen – tenor saxophone; Klaus Mueller – piano; Guilherme Monteiro – guitar; Nilson Matta – bass; Duduka Da Fonseca – drums; Maucha Adnet – vocals

Flying Over Rio

Variable Density Sound Orchestra - Evolving Strategies

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2014
Time: 51:34
File: MP3 @ 128K/s
Size: 52,6 MB
Art: Front

( 9:02) 1. Mystical Realities
( 3:41) 2. Evolving Strategies
( 8:23) 3. Return and Breathe
( 5:08) 4. Thoughts for Dixon
( 7:17) 5. Voyage from Ra
( 2:34) 6. Revolving Strategies
( 3:22) 7. Heart Is Only a Part
(12:07) 8. Mystical Realities: Aftermath

The constituent parts of guitarist Garrison Fewell's Variable Density Sound Orchestra shifted gradually between its eponymous inception (Creative Nation, 2008) and sophomore effort on Sound Particle 47 (Creative Nation, 2010). Inevitably there will be further changes in the future if the unit continues, as both trumpeter Roy Campbell and reedman John Tchicai have passed on since the session which yielded Evolving Strategies in January 2012. Such losses will make a big difference as the group has developed a distinctive ethos built upon elegant writing which encourage garrulous interplay and improvisation with a personal stamp. That's all the more surprising as the charts stem from the pens of not only the leader but also Tchicai and trombonist Steve Swell.

Two takes of Swell's Mystical Realities bookend the proceedings. In the liners, Fewell explains that the quality of the solos demanded that both cuts be included, and it's easy to hear the truth in that statement, notably in the longer second version where both the author and Tchicai sound particularly inspired and expressive. Between times, a variety of compositional gambits generate consistently worthwhile results. Both Fewell's title cut and its near relative "Revolving Strategies" were created by giving each player a set of themes, from which they could select five. It was up to each player whether to repeat and how to transition between themes. Avoiding any hint of artifice, both versions revel in a conversational pointillism which nonetheless produces a unified whole, lyrically calm on the former, more emphatic and chatty on the latter.

By contrast Tchicai's "Return and Breathe" features recognizable soloists, each given a different settings. It moves between sparse unhurried dialogue, an intricate hocketed march and a loping riff, over which the reedman spins insistent soulful variations. He also looms large on "Voyage from Ra," blowing an impassioned incantation against choppy backing, before switching to flute for a poised conclusion. Throughout the generous and adventurous program, the leader's cool intelligence and full jazzy tone add graceful counterpoint which not only complements whoever stands center stage but also provides the cohesion which glues everything together.By John Sharpe https://www.allaboutjazz.com/evolving-strategies-variable-density-sound-orchestra-nottwo-records-review-by-john-sharpe

Personnel: Garrison Fewell: guitar, violin bow; bottleneck slide; John Tchicai: tenor saxophone, flute; Roy Campbell Jr: trumpet; pocket trumpet, flugelhorn, flute; Steve Swell: trombone; Dmitry Ishenko: bass; Reggie Nicholson: drums.

Evolving Strategies

Alice Groves - Whisper Down The Wind

Styles: Vocal, Adult Contemporary
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:44
Size: 91,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:37)  1. MacArthur Park (Abridged)
(4:50)  2. Windmills of Your Mind
(4:20)  3. Across the Universe of Time
(4:01)  4. Wild Is the Wind
(3:51)  5. Forever and Ever
(4:32)  6. Dance Me to the End of Love
(5:13)  7. The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face
(8:17)  8. Jazz Tango to Love

Smooth Jazz edges weaving in and out of the evocative fusion of world sounds on this Adult Contemporary album - Yes, the music is stunningly beautiful, but it is the ethereal but gutsy soprano voice that grips your soul and won't let go. https://www.cdbaby.com/cd/alicegroves

Cristiana Polegri,Roberto Spadoni - It Had Better Be Henry Mancini

Styles: Vocal, Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:18
Size: 156,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:04) 1. Days Of Wine And Roses
(6:41) 2. Slow Hot Wind (Lujon) (Feat. Giovanni Falzone)
(7:15) 3. A Cool Shade Of Blue (Feat. Giovanni Falzone & Maurizio Giammarco)
(5:58) 4. The Sweatheart Tree
(5:42) 5. It Had Better Be Tonight (Meglio Stasera) (Feat. Elio, Giovanni Falzone & Maurizio Giammarco)
(6:49) 6. Peter Gunn (Feat. Giovanni Falzone & Maurizio Giammarco)
(6:40) 7. Two For The Road (Feat. Stefano Fresi & Maurizio Giammarco)
(4:39) 8. The Pink Panther Theme
(5:48) 9. Moon River
(6:50) 10. Loss Of Love
(6:48) 11. Baby Elephant Walk (Feat. Giovanni Falzone & Maurizio Giammarco)

"It Had Better Be Henri Mancini" is Cristiana Polegri and Roberto Spadoni's tribute to the great American composer and conductor famous for having composed some of the most beautiful and well-known soundtracks in the history of cinema, in a long career studded with accolades. Among these we can mention famous songs such as "Moon River", "Baby Elephant Walk", "Peter Gunn" and the theme of the Pink Panther.

The singer and saxophonist Cristiana Polegri and Roberto Spadoni, arranger of all the songs and musical director, reinterpret some of his best-known compositions in the album, arranged for a colorful ten-piece jazz ensemble. To embellish the album the participation of the singer Elio and the actor Stefano Fresi as well as the trumpeter Giovanni Falzone and the saxophonist Maurizio Giammarco.
https://www.dischivolanti.ch/it/article/music/M39554/

It Had Better Be Henry Mancini

Sunday, April 13, 2025

Sue Raney - Quietly There - Music of Johnny Mandel

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 1987
Time: 60:32
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 139,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:36) 1. Lovers After All
(4:02) 2. El Cajon
(5:12) 3. Quietly There
(3:10) 4. Sure As You're Born
(4:50) 5. The Shining Sea
(3:41) 6. The Shadow Of Your Smile
(3:46) 7. Chose Enough For Love
(3:54) 8. Cinnamon And Clove
(3:36) 9. Unless It's You
(3:44) 10. Suicide Is Painless
(4:37) 11. You Are There
(3:48) 12. A Time For Love
(4:19) 13. Emily
(2:22) 14. Don't Look Back
(4:50) 15. Take Me Home

Sue Raney has one of the most beautiful voices in music. She is always in-tune, displays complete control over her vibrato, and has the rare gift of being able to interpret lyrics with such deep understanding that she makes them sound fresh, even if the words are familiar. Raney would be much better known today if she did not spend most of her time as a well-respected voice teacher, living in the Los Angeles area, and if she had recorded more extensively throughout her career. But she is one of the greats.

Sue was born Raelene Claire Claussen on June 18,1940, in McPherson, Kansas, and her career started very early. "I came From a musical background for my mother was a singer and my great great aunt had been in German opera When I was about four my mother realized that I could sing. My first public appearance was at a party in Wichita, Kansas when I was five."

Unable to find a voice teacher for her daughter at that time (due to her extreme youth), Raney's mother (who later in life became a vocal teacher) took voice lessons herself and then passed what she learned down to Sue.

"Early on I sang the hits, tunes that the girl singers in the big hands were performing. While growing up in the 1950's. I first listened to Doris Day, Patti Page, Rosemary Clooney and Kay Starr. I discovered jazz when I was 16 or 17 and of course soon loved Ella Fitzgerald and Sarah Vaughan."

After working steadily in New Mexico and taking several trips out to Los Angeles during a couple of summer vacations, Sue Raney joined the Jack Carson radio show in 1954. "That is why the family moved out to Los Angeles. I had auditioned for Frankie Laine and made a couple of demos for his office. It was through him that I ended up on the Jack Carson show. It was one of the last major radio programs on CBS and at 15 I was the teenager on the show for nine or ten months. After Jack Carson I started appearing on Ray Anthony's television program and then became the vocalist with his hand when he played the Palladium. When I was 19, I put an act together and started working on the road."

She was already an established singer when most young girls were making a rather awkward transition from Elvis Presley to Clearasil. It took time to polish her vocal talent. There were ups and downs, good breaks and bad ones. There was the time in Australia when the critics banged nothing but praise out of their typewriters and the crowds came early and stayed and stayed and stayed. Then, for a time, things couldn't be better, She completed her third album for Capitol Records and was swamped with hotel and night club bookings as well as offers for various television appearances. Then came a down. An auto accident crumbled the classic stairway to stardom. Bedridden for months, Sue faded out of the musical picture. But no one seemed to forget. With the help of crutches, she made an appearance on Johnny Carson's "Tonight Show," and became an instant hit.

In the 1960's Sue Raney worked with the Four Freshmen at Las Vegas, toured with her own group, and appeared frequently on television variety shows including those of Red Skelton, Dean Martin and Danny Kaye. During the following decade she became active in the studios where her impressive voice helped sell products. But when asked to name her favorite gig, Sue Raney says "Possibly the highpoint of my life musically was when I toured with Michel Legrand in the 1980's. We worked with symphony orchestras in addition to having a self-contained rhythm section. I had a chance to sing Michel's lovely songs and it was wonderful." Of her own personal recordings she says "I think the trio of records that I made for Albert Marx, on Discovery in the 1980's are the ones that I am most proud of. I also like the Henry Mancini tribute Dreamsville that I did with Alan Broadbent." Sue is also an accomplished songwriter, contributing lyrics to several songs including Statue Of Snow.

These days Sue Raney is quite active as a voice teacher. "I've been teaching since the early 1980's, originally at the Dick Grove school and now privately nearly every afternoon. It is very rewarding. Teaching has allowed me to relearn what I thought I knew and explore new areas. I find that I'm now in better shape vocally than I've ever been. I sing with the L.A. Voices and Supersax, occasionally appear at the Moonlight Tango Cafe in Sherman Oaks near Los Angeles with Bill Watrous' big band and still go on the road when it feels right and it is artistically rewarding." When asked about her future goals, Sue Raney replied "I'd like to record a duet album with Alan Broadbent. But basically I just want to keep on doing what I'm doing, singing the music I love."https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/sue-raney/

Quietly There-Music of Johnny Mandel