Professor freddy's Jazz & Blues University

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Helmet of Gnats - High Street (2010)

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Helmet of Gnats - High Street
2010 - Ambient - CBR@320 KB/s

Prof Review: Been listening to this album for a coupla weeks now -- at least 5 times. It instantly struck The Prof that these cats must have listened to and learned from The Dixie Dregs and John McLaughlin -- a whole lot. The guitar work is very good -- perhaps not quite up to the standards of a Steve Morse -- but very good. Bass and drums are right there when they need to be. But The Prof was most struck by the keyboardist, Matthew Bocchino. This cat can jam with the finest in the business. But please don't misunderstand. The cats are not quite on the level of The Dixie Dregs, but that was a different generation. It's nice to hear the influence. Much to enjoy on this great album. Highly recommended.

Dan Thaler Review: Those who say jazz is dead must only look harder. I suppose it isn’t as popular to the greater whole of humanity as it used to be, but neither is prog rock, and I honestly feel that both benefited from such a change. A Helmet of Gnats is part of that subgenre of jazz known as fusion that some prog fans consider inside the sphere of Prog (see what I did there?) I can’t say I agree with that when discussing the subgenre’s early history, but at the moment a lot of such bands are creating a true fusion of prog rock and jazz.
One of those is, obviously, Helmet of Gnats. HOG (as I refer to the band) is a band that consists of Berkley College of Music grads (and dropouts, a la Dream Theater) from Connecticut. They play an eclectic range of jazz styles, going from Return to Foreveresque light synth solos to heavy guitar jams something like Mahavishnu Orchestra, and I even hear bits that sound similar to The Tangent and Van Der Graaf Generator. Usually though it doesn’t sound like anything I’ve ever heard before, and I imagine it only sounds similar to Corea because they use similar sounding instrument settings. The musicianship is very tight and virtuosic (they are Berkley grads, after all), and I can find nothing to complain about, no matter how hard I try (and I try pretty damn hard).

Prof Note: This album should please almost any jazz fan, particularly the old guys who grew up listening to The Dixie Dregs during the 1970s. Remember them? Steve Morse, Andy West, Allen Sloan, Rod Morgenstein, and Steve Davidowski?

Track reviews

Tsunami – 11:00 – The first track of four begins with a delightfully melodic guitar intro, which is completely misleading given the name, but it moves after a minute into a moderately energetic guitar/organ duet. This track is mostly guitar driven after the end of that, with an almost funky blueslike melody throughout. A few minutes toward the end there’s an excellent synth solo, before the guitar comes back to dominate. By the end the track begins to live up to its name and builds in intensity faster and faster. I must say I generally prefer my jazz albums to begin with something that has a little more “oomph”, but this does quite nicely regardless.

Tin Whiskers – 10:26 – If Tsunami was guitar-dominated, Tin Whiskers is certainly keyboard-dominated. Lots of excellent stuff here, Corea-style electric piano, hammonds, mellotrons, you name it. The bass-work is also quite funky, and definitely adds to the piece. There’s a sort of groove I can get into when I listen to REALLY good jazz piano, and I feel it with this track. Excellently done. Later on, however, there’s an excellent guitar solo that gives me the same groovy sensation. I feel like I’m betraying jazz piano in saying so, though. I hope it will forgive me.

Dozer – 12: 43 – Like Tsunami, the track name is not fitting at all. It certainly wouldn’t put me to sleep, it’s too enjoyable for that. Dozer is very melodic in the beginning, probably to trick the listener into thinking it IS supposed to be a “dozer”, but the drumming heats up a bit a little before the quarter mark, just as some more of that wonderful piano-work comes in. A little after that, it gets a bit heavy, and we get a very intense guitar/keyboard duet. The rest of the track is rather fast, but not necessarily heavy, except in sections.

High Street – 30:11 – Oh dear, they’re really marching into the realm of prog with this one. A half-hour-long epic, replete with dynamic sections and completely different themes competing with each other. In the band’s entire discography, this is the track that seems to have the most influence from Return to Forever. I just hear it a lot, what can I say. I would say that is the reason it’s my favorite, though not to say the band is simply imitating, they create a cosmic elegance of their own, even if they might borrow some of Chick Corea’s. I say so I don’t have to say it’s my favorite track just because it’s a half hour long, ha! - Dan Thaler, prog-sphere.com

Credits
Chris Fox - Guitars
Matthew Bocchino - Keyboards
Wayne Zito - Bass
Mark Conese - Drums, Percussion

Tracks
1. Tsunami - 11:00
2. Tin Whiskers - 10:26
3. Dozer - 12:43
4. High Street - 30:11

VA - Jam Miami: A Celebration of Latin Jazz

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VA - Jam Miami: A Celebration of Latin Jazz
2000 - Concord Jazz - CBR@320 KB/s



first posted by Professor freddy several times @ easytunz.com

Maybe the Prof has posted this album too often, but IFHO it is the finest hot, live, Latin jazz album ever recorded and is lovingly presented to you once again. - Professor freddy, PFJ&BU

This album was recorded on 18 May 2000 in Miami, Florida, with the live performance dedicated to bandleader and timbales king Tito Puente. At the time, Tito Puente had suffered a heart attack and was in the hospital. Tito Puente died 31 May 2000 in New York City.

REVIEW: "I just want to celebrate" is the theme of Jam Miami: A Celebration of Latin Jazz, recorded live in Miami, Florida, by legendary jazz masters Chick Corea, Arturo Sandoval, Pete Escovedo, and Poncho Sanchez. The heat and energy emanating from this incredible concert, one that was dedicated to their friend and mentor Tito Puente, is preserved in an excellent collection of ten songs that feature an array of stellar arrangers, composers, and musicians. Ray Vega, Steve Turre, Avishai Cohen, Dave Samuels, Dave Valentin, Ed Calle, Nestor Torres, Oscar D'Leon, Horacio Hernandez, Claudio Roditi, Hilton Ruiz, Origin, and the Latin Jazz All-Star Band are having the time of their lives and really do jam on this one. Opening with the Latin soul hit "Guachi Guaro," this great collective introduces their stylistic diversity in a blaze of Sandoval trumpet glory that defies the conventional range of the instrument. Their spirits continue to soar with Dave Valentin blowing awesome flute trills in his solos on Ray Vega's arrangement of "Medley Para Tito." Vega's heartfelt salute featuring "Ran Kan Kan" and "Oye Como Va" is a definite jam, and from the sound of the cheers coming from the audience, the spirit of the recently departed Tito Puente must have filled the room. "Wigwam," the Grammy-nominated song by Chick Corea, features Origin at the core of its big-band arrangement. This expanded version offers listeners an exceptional opportunity to hear great improvisations and solos by the quintet backed by an exciting big-band format. Poncho Sanchez's conga mastery is historic on "Poncho Con Su Tambor," and for two minutes, he unloads his percussive thunder on this solo triumph. "A Mis Abuelos," a ten-minute masterpiece written by Arturo Sandoval, features his brilliant trumpet and flügelhorn playing surrounded by a dramatic display of Spanish beauty, spirituality, and fire. Horacio Hernandez on drums, Leo Quintero on guitar, and Chick Corea on Fender Rhodes are blazing against a backdrop of blaring horn charts that will send good chills down your spine. They end the set with a fiery jam of Desi Arnaz's, "Theme From I Love Lucy." This CD contains one great show that celebrates the innovative music of a multi-generational Latin jazz "family" and together they capture the ambience and heritage of many phenomenal Latin jazz experiences. - Paula Edelstein, AMG

Credits
Jeff Ballard - Percussion, Drums
Joe Barati - Trombone
Richard Bravo - Percussion
Michael Brignola - Sax (Baritone)
Ed Calle - Sax (Tenor)
Jason Carder - Trumpet
Avishai Cohen - Bass
Chick Corea - Fender Rhodes
Steve Davis
Oscar d'León - Vocals
Pete Escovedo - Timbales
Tim Garland - Sax (Tenor)
Horacio "El Negro" Hernández - Percussion, Drums
The Latin Jazz All Stars Big Band
Nicky Orta - Bass
Leo Quintero - Guitar
Eddie Resto
Claudio Roditi - Trumpet
Robert Rodriguez - Performer
Billy Ross - Sax (Alto)
Hilton Ruiz - Piano
Dave Samuels - Vibraphone
Poncho Sanchez - Congas
Arturo Sandoval - Trumpet, Flugelhorn
Dana Teboe - Trombone
Nestor Torres - Flute
Steve Turre - Trombone, Conch Shell
Dave Valentin - Flute
Ray Vega - Trumpet
Steve Wilson

Tracks
1 Guachi Guaro (Soul Sauce) - 6:37
2 A Night in Tunisia - 7:08
3 Ran Kan Kan/Oye Como Va - Puente - 8:29
4 Ican - 7:07
5 Wigwam - 5:31
6 Ven Morena - 8:45
7 Poncho con Su Tambor - Sanchez - 7:38
8 Bésame Mama - 2:01
9 A Mis Abuelos - 10:51
10 Theme from I Love Lucy - 7:04

Releases
2000 CD Concord Jazz 4899

File Sizes: 95.8, 64.6 MB
Sound Quality: CBR@320 KB/s

Sarah Vaughn With Clifford Brown

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Sarah Vaughn With Clifford Brown
1954 - Emarcy - CBR@320 KB/ps


REVIEW: This 1954 studio date, a self-titled album recorded for Emarcy, was later reissued as Sarah Vaughan with Clifford Brown to denote the involvement of one of the top trumpeters of the day. Vaughan sings nine intimate standards with a band including Brown on trumpet, Herbie Mann on flute, and Paul Quinichette on tenor, each of which have plenty of space for solos (most of the songs are close to the five-minute mark). Vaughan is arguably in the best voice of her career here, pausing and lingering over notes on the standards "April in Paris," "Jim," and "Lullaby of Birdland." As touching as Vaughan is, however, Brown almost equals her with his solos on "Lullaby of Birdland," "Jim," and "September Song," displaying his incredible bop virtuosity in a restrained setting without sacrificing either the simple feeling of his notes or the extraordinary flair of his choices. Quinichette's solos are magnificent as well, his feathery tone nearly a perfect match for Vaughan's voice. Ironically though, neither Brown nor Quinichette or Mann appear on the album's highlight, "Embraceable You," which Vaughan performs with close accompaniment from the rhythm section: Jimmy Jones on piano, Joe Benjamin on bass, and Roy Haynes on drums. Vaughan rounds the notes with a smile and even when she's steeping to reach a few low notes, she never loses the tremendous feeling conveyed by her voice. In whichever incarnation it's reissued, Sarah Vaughan With Clifford Brown is one of the most important jazz-meets-vocal sessions ever recorded. - John Bush, AMG

Tracks
01 (4:00) Lullaby 0f Birdland
02 (5:44) September Song
03 (5:09) I'm Glad There's You
04 (4:43) You're Not The Kind
05 (5:50) Jim
06 (4:11) He's My Guy
07 (6:20) April In Paris
08 (4:55) It's Crazy
09 (4:49) Embraceable You
10 (3:59) Lullaby Of Birdland

Files Sizes: 98 and 10.5, split archive
Sound Quality: CBR@320 KB/ps

Arthur Doyle Plus 4 - Alabama Feeling

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Arthur Doyle Plus 4 - Alabama Feeling
1978 - Dra - CBR@320 KB/ps



first posted by the daft yin 13 Jan 2007 @ (no way) .blogspot.com

This is the CD version of the original vinyl record recorded in 1978. Front insert is slightly
wrinkled. Disc is perfect. 100% guaranteed. DRA Records release. - USD 90.18
Availability: ONE IN STOCK - www.gemm.com

Born 26 Jun 1944, Birmingham, Alabama

BIO: Saxophonist/flutist/singer Arthur Doyle is hardly alone in his position as a marginal jazz figure. In an art form known for its many trials and tribulations (both artistic and financial), Doyle hasn't made his situation any easier by attempting to carve a singular path along the music's outskirts. The fact that he has done so, however, is what makes his music so unique. Performing in a style he calls "free jazz soul," Doyle combines the liberated freedom flights of the avant-garde with the gritty, gut-wrenching emotion of gospel and R&B.
The second of five children, Arthur Doyle was born in Birmingham, Alabama, on 26 June 1944. He attended college at Tennessee State University where he quickly built a circle of contacts in the Nashville music scene, playing with Louis Smith (Horace Silver) and Walter Miller (Sun Ra). Following brief stints in Detroit, playing in a big band led by Charles Moore, and back home in Alabama with R&B outfit Johnny Jones & the King Casuals, Doyle left for New York at the age
of 23.
Still essentially a bop player, Doyle quickly became acclimated to the more radical environment surrounding the city's bustling loft scene. Shortly after his arrival, the saxophonist hooked up with drummer Milford Graves and began sitting in on dates with Pharaoh Sanders and Sun Ra's Arkestra. Declining a possible job with the latter outfit, Doyle instead joined a small combo led by Noah Howard, performing on the sessions that produced The Black Ark (1969).
Concerted efforts by jazz's mainstream to stifle the practitioners of the "new thing" took their toll, however, and Doyle vanished from the scene from 1972-1974. He would not appear on an album again until 1976, ending a seven-year period of recorded silence with his blazing tenor work on Graves' Babi Music. The following year, he led a quintet of his own in a performance at a New York loft dubbed the Brook. The results were documented on his landmark Alabama Feeling and released in a limited pressing of 1000 copies.
Amongst the crowd that night was an admiring guitarist named Rudolph Grey. The pair met that evening and soon devised plans for an outfit of their own. Debuting at Max's Kansas City as the Blue Humans, they proceeded to play a series of New York dates with drummer Beaver Harris. Doyle abandoned the project shortly after, the increasingly bleak situation for free jazz players in the states convincing him to move to Paris in 1982. Not long after his arrival, however, the saxophonist was arrested on false charges, spending the next five years in prison. Horn-less, Doyle wrote prolifically nonetheless, producing the first compositions for his songbook: a massive, 300-piece aural memoir.

[Another account: "Arthur was playing and supporting himself in Paris when personal problems landed him in prison. There was talk of a government conspiracy and Arthur, even after serving time, maintains his innocence. While in prison Doyle wrote about 150 songs."]

Once released, Doyle returned to New York where he recorded the new music, capturing his hollers, shouts, and singing (along with his flute and tenor work) in gritty fidelity on a boombox. These recordings subsequently appeared on the albums Plays and Sings from the Songbook (1992), Songwriter (1994), and Do the Breakdown (1997).
The 1990s saw Doyle performing with a number of different musicians from the jazz and improv schools including bassist Wilber Morris, drummers Rashid Bakr and Sunny Murray, and guitarists Keiji Haino, Thurston Moore, and old spar Rudolph Grey. The first studio recordings since his 1969 date with Howard emerged as well: Dawn of a New Vibration (with Murray) and Prayer for Peace (with Jim Linton and Scott Rodziczak). - Nathan Bush, AMG

REVIEW: In late 1977, Arthur Doyle brought his quintet to New York to play at the Brook, a loft space on West 17th Street managed by Charles Tyler, with whom Doyle formed the label Dra that same year. The saxophonist/flutist/vocalist was joined by old friends from his hometown of Birmingham, Alabama, Charles Stephens on trombone, and Rashied Sinan on drums (whose only other memorable appearance was on Frank Lowe's 1973 ESP album Black Beings). Sinan turned up with a student of his, Bruce Moore, "to give it more rhythmic feel," and Richard Williams was brought in on Fender Bass to take on both drummers. From the opening splendidly titled "November 8th or 9th -- I Can't Remember When," Alabama Feeling pounds the listener into the ground with thrilling energy, playing easily on a par with classic albums on labels such as ESP and BYG Actuel. Doyle released this recording of the concert, whose dreadful sound quality was perfectly in keeping with the prevailing no wave ethos of the period (Doyle was, incidentally, one of the first jazz musicians to play Max's Kansas City in 1978, with Rudolph Grey and Beaver Harris as the Blue Humans), on Dra in an edition of 1,000, and the first CD reissue 20 years later in 1998 (also limited to 1,000 copies) was transferred by Glenn Branca's house percussionist, Wharton Tiers, direct from vinyl, complete with surface noise and dodgy editing. Connoisseurs of Sun Ra (with whom Arthur Doyle also played but, alas, never recorded) have long been prepared to forego quality sound in the name of great music, and any listener prepared to do the same will not be disappointed. It's worth it for Doyle's snarling entry on "Ancestor" alone. - Dan Warburton, AMG

ORIGINAL POSTER'S COMMENTS: This would be one of my top 10 free jazz albums of all time and would be among the first entries. Nobody played like Arthur. In the world of top fireblowers he stands apart. I wish I owned this vinyl. The CD is out of print.

Credits
Arthur Doyle - Sax (Tenor), Clarinet (Bass), Flute
Richard Williams - Bass (Fender)
Rashied Sinan - Drums
Bruce Moore - Drums
Charles Stephens - Trombone

All compositions by Arthur Doyle

Tracks
1. November 8th or 9th – I Can’t Remember When
2. Something for Caserlo, Larry, & Irma
3. A Little Linda, Debra, Omita, Barry & Maria
4. Ancestor
5. Mother Image, Father Image
6. Development
a. BaBi Music for Milford & Huge
b. Alabama Soul for Arthur
c. Ramie & Master Charles of the Trombone

File Size: 51.5 MB
Sound Quality: CBR@320 KB/ps

Ray Brown - Something for Lester

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Ray Brown - Something for Lester
1977 - OJC - CBR@320 KB/s



REVIEW: This excellent trio session forms a sort of transition between bassist Ray Brown's work with the Oscar Peterson Trio and his own small-group sessions of the '80s and '90s. With pianist Cedar Walton and drummer Elvin Jones, Brown explores seven strong melodies (four standards, two by Walton, and the bassist's "Slippery") in typically swinging and bluish fashion. - Scott Yanow, AMG




Tracks
1 Ojos de Rojo - Walton - 5:13
2 Slippery - Brown - 7:24
3 Something in Common - 4:46
4 Love Walked In - Gershwin, Gershwin - 5:22
5 Georgia on My Mind - Carmichael, Gorrell - 7:08
6 Little Girl Blue - Hart, Rodgers - 6:16
7 Sister Sadie - Silver - 4:57

check out the number of releases below ...

Releases
1992 CD Original Jazz Classics OJCCD-412-2
CD Original Jazz Classics OJC-12
195- LP Contemporary 7641
1991 CS Original Jazz Classics 412
1992 LP Contemporary OJC-412
1992 CS Contemporary OJC-5412
1995 LP Original Jazz Classics 412
CD Original Jazz Classics 412
2002 CD Japanese Import 60789
2002 CD Japanese Import 60789
2006 CD JVC Victor 41600
1999 CD Ojc 4122
1997 CD Ace 4122

Professor freddy

Herbie Hancock - The Piano

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Herbie Hancock - The Piano
1978 - Columbia - CBR@192 KB/s



first posted by alvaro3000 @ jazzymusic.org

REVIEW: Recorded after the funky fusion of Head Hunters, Thrust, Sextant, and other
electric albums, and before the dawn of "Rockit" and more commercially viable and hip-hop-
oriented material, Herbie Hancock took time out in 1978 to touch base again with his piano.
Recorded completely solo, this set was issued only in Japan as the truly awful Feets, Don't Fail
Me Now was issued stateside. A curious set, the first half of the album features Hancock playing
jazz standards in truly elegant and restrained fashion. His treatments of "My Funny Valentine," "Green Dolphin Street," and "Someday My Prince Will Come" — all tracks he performed as part of the Miles Davis Quintet — are elongated, morphed, and beautifully woven together as a suite. The latter half of the recording is comprised of four tracks, "Harvest Time," "Sonrisa," "Manhattan Island," and "Blue Otani," all of which are originals. These pieces are concerned with Hancock's preoccupation with the piano as a solo instrument. They are composed as formalist treatments that are extrapolated upon at several different junctures, or "turning points," within them. They embody notions of classical music à la Anton Webern, blues, Erroll Garner's lyrical phrasing, and Bill Evans' harmonic sensibilities. They are, in sum, inseparable from one another and are usually performed as a suite. This is a stunning triumph for Hancock, and it's too bad that the album has never been issued in the U.S., as it would undoubtedly be a popular addition to his vast catalog. About the closest one can come are the tracks from here included in The Herbie Hancock Box. Maybe someday. - Thom Jurek, AMG

Amazon.com REVIEW: The recognition of Herbie Hancock has already reached the
appropriate levels of praise, so adding to it would be possibly repeating what you've already
heard or read. Still, the man is one of those rare musicians and composers who has shaped
contemporary music. To think anything less would be insufficient, unjust, even petty. Whether
you've loved every turn of his musical career, or had troubles with one or another phase of
evolution of his boundless imagination and sense of adventure, Hancock remains a national
treasure. This collection, previously unavailable unless you own a copy of the limited edition
Japanese album when it came out in 1978, is Hancock as a pianist at his astonishing best.
Particularly in the first three tunes--"My Funny Valentine," "On Green Dolphin Street" and
"Someday My Prince Will Come--his playing is reminiscent of his great with Miles' quintet,
subtle, deep and always flawless. The rest of the original material is just as beautiful. Rarely a
pianist can match virtuosity with deep feeling as Herbie manages to in this album. "Harvest
Time" and "Sonrisa" make that point gloriously. In addition to the original album's recordings, we are treated to alternate takes of the first four songs already mentioned, and they are worthy of their inclusion. For a change "alternate" is not a synonym for "throwaway."

Tracks
1 My Funny Valentine - Hart, Rodgers - 7:41
2 On Green Dolphin Street - Kaper, Washington - 3:20
3 Someday My Prince Will Come - Churchill, Morey - 4:37
4 Harvest Time - Hancock - 4:47
5 Sonrisa - Hancock - 3:44
6 Manhattan Island - Hancock - 3:56
7 Blue Otani - Hancock - 3:24

Releases
1980 LP Columbia 1033
1997 CD Sony 65458
2004 CD Sony Japan 9197
2004 CD Sony Jazz 87083

File Size: 73 MB
Sound Quality: CBR@192 KB/s

Professor freddy