Ben Webster Meets Oscar Peterson (1959) [APO Remaster 2011] [SACD / Analogue Productions – CVRJ 6114 SA]

Ben Webster Meets Oscar Peterson (1959) [APO Remaster 2011]

Title: Ben Webster Meets Oscar Peterson (1959) [APO Remaster 2011]
Genre: Jazz
Format: SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

Saxophonist Ben Webster is joined by legendary jazz pianist Oscar Peterson. Webster, known for his association with Duke Ellington’s Jazz Orchestra playing lead tenor, frequently played with Peterson in the 1950s and are joined here by some of the best jazz musicians of the time. Ben Webster Meets Oscar Peterson was originally released in 1959, and this studio album is a compilation of seven great jazz tracks, including “How Deep is the Ocean”, “In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning”, and “Bye, Bye, Blackbird”.

Another fine Webster release on Verve that sees the tenor great once again backed by the deluxe Oscar Peterson Trio. In keeping with the high standard of their Soulville collaboration of two years prior, Webster and the trio – Peterson is joined by bassist Ray Brown and drummer Ed Thigpen – use this 1959 date to conduct a clinic in ballad playing. And while Soulville certainly ranks as one of the tenor saxophonist’s best discs, the Ben Webster Meets Oscar Peterson set gets even higher marks for its almost transcendent marriage of after-hours elegance and effortless mid-tempo swing – none of Webster’s boogie-woogie piano work to break up the mood here. Besides reinvigorating such lithe strollers as “Bye Bye Blackbird” (nice bass work by Brown here) and “This Can’t Be Love,” Webster and company achieve classic status for their interpretation of the Sinatra gem “In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning.” And to reassure Peterson fans worried about scant solo time for their hero, the pianist lays down a healthy number of extended runs, unobtrusively shadowing Webster’s vaporous tone and supple phrasing along the way. Not only a definite first-disc choice for Webster newcomers, but one of the jazz legend’s all-time great records.

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2 min read

Ben Webster and Harry ‘Sweets’ Edison – Ben and ‘Sweets’ (1962) [Reissue 2015] [SACD / Original Recordings Group – ORG 117]

Ben Webster and Harry 'Sweets' Edison - Ben and 'Sweets' (1962) [Reissue 2015]

Title: Ben Webster and Harry ‘Sweets’ Edison – Ben and ‘Sweets’ (1962) [Reissue 2015]
Genre: Jazz
Format: SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

The two jazz giants Ben Webster and Harry “Sweets” Edison had long wanted to record an album together, and in 1962, they did. Although associated with two different orchestras (Edison was with Basie and Webster was with Ellington), these two swing kings found that they had a lot in common. This album features both horn men on three medium tempo blues, “Better Go”, “Kitty”, and “Did You Call Her Today”. Other than this, Webster gets two tenor features, contributing absolutely luscious solos on both “How Long Has This Been Going On”, and “My Romance”. Newly remastered for Hybrid SACD. “Wanted to Do One Together” (also released as Ben and “Sweets”) is an album by Ben Webster and Harry “Sweets” Edison that was recorded in 1962 and released by the Columbia label. Webster had previously recorded with Edison on his albums Sweets (Clef, 1956) and Gee Baby, Ain’t I Good to You (Verve, 1957).

Tenor saxophonist Ben Webster and trumpeter Harry “Sweets” Edison, both veterans of the swing era (although associated with different orchestras), had long wanted to record a full album together. The results, a swinging quintet set with pianist Hank Jones, bassist George Duvivier, and drummer Clarence Johnston, are quite rewarding. There are two ballad features for the tenor (“How Long Has This Been Going On” and a beautiful version of “My Romance”) and one for Edison (“Embraceable You”), along with three medium-tempo collaborations. Nothing unexpected occurs but the melodic music is quite enjoyable.

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2 min read

Benny Waters ‎- Live At The Pawnshop (1999) [Reissue 2000] [SACD / Opus 3 – CD 19911]

Benny Waters ‎- Live At The Pawnshop (1999) [Reissue 2000]

Title: Benny Waters ‎- Live At The Pawnshop (1999) [Reissue 2000]
Genre: Jazz
Format: SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

In April 1976, at the age of 74, the legendary swing saxophonist Benny Waters made a momentous appearance at the internationally famous jazz-blub Stampen often known as “The Pawnshop”, in Stockholm. This album is a memento of this concert and a wonderful musician. Worthy of note is the fact that the pianist on this recording is the late, great and unfortunately the most “underrecorded” Swedish swing piano player Björn Milder – yes, Joakim Milders father! – who was considered by many visiting musicians to be “world class”. And they should know!

A superb tenor saxophonist and a fine clarinetest and alto player, Benny Water’s career spans the growth and development of jazz and American popular music. His huge tone and swaggering tenor style were honored in the swing era, as was his darting clarinet and tart alto approaches. Waters played piano and reed instruments as a child, then worked with Charlie Miller from 1918 to 1921. He studied at the New England Conservatory and later became a teacher. Waters recorded with King Oliver and Clarence Williams in the ’20s and ’30s, while writing arrangements for Charlie Johnson. For a few months, he also played in Roy Milton’s r&b orchestra. Waters worked with traditional jazz leader Jimmy Archey in 1949, and opted to stay in Europe during a group tour. He settled in Paris and remained there until the end of the ’60s. He was a regular at the club La Cigale. Waters was a festival favorite throughout Europe in the ’70s and ’80s, and paid some visits to New York in the ’80s.

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2 min read

Benny Goodman – Supreme Jazz (2006) [SACD / Supreme Jazz – 223276-207]

Benny Goodman - Supreme Jazz (2006)

Title: Benny Goodman – Supreme Jazz (2006)
Genre: Jazz
Format: MCH SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

Benjamin David “Benny” Goodman was an American jazz clarinetist and bandleader known as the “King of Swing”. In the mid-1930s, Goodman led one of the most popular musical groups in the United States. Goodman’s bands launched the careers of many major jazz artists. During an era of racial segregation, he led one of the first well-known integrated jazz groups. Goodman performed nearly to the end of his life while exploring an interest in classical music.

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1 min read

Bennie Wallace – The Nearness Of You (2003) [SACD / Enja Records – ENJ-9469 2]

Bennie Wallace - The Nearness Of You (2003)

Title: Bennie Wallace – The Nearness Of You (2003)
Genre: Jazz
Format: SACD ISO + DSF DSD64 + Hi-Res FLAC

Bennie Wallace has long been known for his sudden interval leaps and somewhat angular approach, and this studio date is no exception, though it focuses exclusively on standards written between the 1930s and 1950s. The tenor saxophonist chose two top-caliber musical partners, pianist Kenny Barron and bassist Eddie Gomez, to join him on his excursions, all of which are delightful. Barron’s blues-drenched piano sets the table for Wallace’s mournful sax in “Willow Weep for Me,” while Gomez provides a series of intriguing responses to the leader in an anything but hackneyed treatment of “Cocktails for Two.” Hoagy Carmichael’s warm ballad “The Nearness of You” is clearly in the hands of three masters as it is recast with a distinctively modern touch. This is easily a high point in Bennie Wallace’s long career.

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1 min read

Bengt Berg – The Birds And The Springs (1974) [Reissue 2006] [SACD / Proprius – PRSACD 7742]

Bengt Berg - The Birds And The Springs (1974) [Reissue 2006]

Title: Bengt Berg – The Birds And The Springs (1974) [Reissue 2006]
Genre: Classical
Format: MCH SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

This disc is a compilation of two legendary organ recordings that were issued on LP in 1974. It reminds us once again that a first-class organ, a brilliant organist and state-of-the-art sound recording produce a musical result that remains as satisfying today as it seemed at the time. The disc also shows how convincingly a “modern” organ can perform both sonorous classical music as well as mysterious impressionism of later French music. One only needs to put the disc in the player to be transported to the Matteus Church in Stockholm or the Vanga Church with its cathedral-like atmosphere.

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1 min read

Benoit Delbecq Unit – Phonetics (2004) [SACD / Songlines Recordings – SGL SA1552-2]

Benoit Delbecq Unit - Phonetics (2004)

Title: Benoit Delbecq Unit – Phonetics (2004)
Genre: Jazz
Format: MCH SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

Phonetics from Paris-based pianist and composer Benoît Delbecq presents an artist at the height of his imaginative and synthesizing powers. Recorded with an international quintet and featuring prepared piano on several tracks, this album showcases Delbecq’s broad and deep vision of music, burnished by the audiophile recording. Phonetics was named one of the 12 best records of 2004 (“Choc de l’année”) by Jazzman, the leading jazz magazine in France.
Paris-based pianist-keyboardist-composer Delbecq has had four previous releases on Songlines since 1997, discs that have been praised in France for their individuality; two of them were honored among the 12 records of the year (“Choc de l’anneé”) by Jazzman, the leading French jazz magazine, and Phonetics has just become the third. “One of the avatars of prepared piano for over a decade” (Shoemaker), Delbecq is long overdue for greater recognition in North America, and this new international quintet should help focus attention on his broad and deep vision of music. The idea for the band involved some educated hunches: “I wanted to provoke an encounter between musicians I knew from different scenes, Europe meets North America meets Africa [Emile Biayenda is Congolese and leads the percussion ensemble Les Tambours de Brazza]. When I started writing I had a sound in mind… a very open but very rhythmic way of playing… and different directions I wanted us to explore collectively. The mixed timbres of tenor and viola were in a sense the key to the group.” Prepared piano is also featured on several tracks: “I wanted to leave space for the guys to improvise, and accompanying with prepared sounds allows the music to sound very open harmonically, while it places me on a different axis in the rhythmic web. It also allows the mind to escape the piano in some way, and this can lead to rare blends, such as with viola playing pizzicato.” Shoemaker notes of Delbecq’s previous Songlines SACD, the solo piano record Nu-turn, that his “affinity for African and Asian folk music and his Paul Bley-derived lyricism and floating pulse constantly dovetail about one another. This accentuates the exotic, mysterious qualities of his music,” with its fugutive harmonies and eddying polyrhythms. Expanding these moods and concepts in a five-way dialogue demanded an unusual degree of concentration and intuitive understanding from everyone involved – particularly as each piece has its own specific underlying structures, as well as its own potential for “mutation” of these points of departure. “I change the tools for each piece, and each piece is trying for a different character in the playing for each person… On ‘Multikulta’ it’s a strict rhythmic fabric that patterns the composed material, but I was interested in letting the bass and drums spontaneously mutate the form of it during Oene’s soloing. ‘Au Louvre’ is an actual mutation of ‘Maat,’ one of the pieces I wrote in 1990 for the collective group Kartet. Each phrase of the theme begins at a different point in the bass line’s cycle, kind of in the African way, and out of this Emile constructs these rhythmic micro-forms, which sets the bass line in motion along several different axes, a bit as if one were turning an actual object round in one’s hands to view it better or explain it. The downbeat or accenting is not an imposed hierarchy – you’ll see that Emile never really plays the crash cymbal as the marker of a rhythmic hierarchy, that’s so elegant!” On “4MalW” (a hushed yet astringent tribute to his mentor Mal Waldron), Delbecq sampled the band at rehearsals: “I would then be able to trigger these scraps of memory as the piece unfolded. What I love about samples is that they play tricks on your memory, they move the relationship we have with what is played or is going to be played somewhere else.” Counting among his inspirations Cowell, Cage, Ligeti, Aka pygmy song, Balkan dance, Abdullah Ibrahim, Cecil Taylor, Steve Lacy, Miles, Monk, Ornette, and colleagues such as Steve Argüelles, Marc Ducret and the deconstructionist poet Olivier Cadiot, Delbecq has developed an unmistakable yet richly varied musical idiom. Intellectually intriguing, emotionally evocative, palpably elegant, Phonetics presents an artist at the height of his imaginative and synthesizing powers.

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4 min read

Benoit Delbecq Unit – Phonetics (2004) [SACD / Songlines Recordings – SGL SA1552-2]

Benoit Delbecq Unit - Phonetics (2004)

Title: Benoit Delbecq Unit – Phonetics (2004)
Genre: Jazz
Format: MCH SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

Phonetics from Paris-based pianist and composer Benoît Delbecq presents an artist at the height of his imaginative and synthesizing powers. Recorded with an international quintet and featuring prepared piano on several tracks, this album showcases Delbecq’s broad and deep vision of music, burnished by the audiophile recording. Phonetics was named one of the 12 best records of 2004 (“Choc de l’année”) by Jazzman, the leading jazz magazine in France.
Paris-based pianist-keyboardist-composer Delbecq has had four previous releases on Songlines since 1997, discs that have been praised in France for their individuality; two of them were honored among the 12 records of the year (“Choc de l’anneé”) by Jazzman, the leading French jazz magazine, and Phonetics has just become the third. “One of the avatars of prepared piano for over a decade” (Shoemaker), Delbecq is long overdue for greater recognition in North America, and this new international quintet should help focus attention on his broad and deep vision of music. The idea for the band involved some educated hunches: “I wanted to provoke an encounter between musicians I knew from different scenes, Europe meets North America meets Africa [Emile Biayenda is Congolese and leads the percussion ensemble Les Tambours de Brazza]. When I started writing I had a sound in mind… a very open but very rhythmic way of playing… and different directions I wanted us to explore collectively. The mixed timbres of tenor and viola were in a sense the key to the group.” Prepared piano is also featured on several tracks: “I wanted to leave space for the guys to improvise, and accompanying with prepared sounds allows the music to sound very open harmonically, while it places me on a different axis in the rhythmic web. It also allows the mind to escape the piano in some way, and this can lead to rare blends, such as with viola playing pizzicato.” Shoemaker notes of Delbecq’s previous Songlines SACD, the solo piano record Nu-turn, that his “affinity for African and Asian folk music and his Paul Bley-derived lyricism and floating pulse constantly dovetail about one another. This accentuates the exotic, mysterious qualities of his music,” with its fugutive harmonies and eddying polyrhythms. Expanding these moods and concepts in a five-way dialogue demanded an unusual degree of concentration and intuitive understanding from everyone involved – particularly as each piece has its own specific underlying structures, as well as its own potential for “mutation” of these points of departure. “I change the tools for each piece, and each piece is trying for a different character in the playing for each person… On ‘Multikulta’ it’s a strict rhythmic fabric that patterns the composed material, but I was interested in letting the bass and drums spontaneously mutate the form of it during Oene’s soloing. ‘Au Louvre’ is an actual mutation of ‘Maat,’ one of the pieces I wrote in 1990 for the collective group Kartet. Each phrase of the theme begins at a different point in the bass line’s cycle, kind of in the African way, and out of this Emile constructs these rhythmic micro-forms, which sets the bass line in motion along several different axes, a bit as if one were turning an actual object round in one’s hands to view it better or explain it. The downbeat or accenting is not an imposed hierarchy – you’ll see that Emile never really plays the crash cymbal as the marker of a rhythmic hierarchy, that’s so elegant!” On “4MalW” (a hushed yet astringent tribute to his mentor Mal Waldron), Delbecq sampled the band at rehearsals: “I would then be able to trigger these scraps of memory as the piece unfolded. What I love about samples is that they play tricks on your memory, they move the relationship we have with what is played or is going to be played somewhere else.” Counting among his inspirations Cowell, Cage, Ligeti, Aka pygmy song, Balkan dance, Abdullah Ibrahim, Cecil Taylor, Steve Lacy, Miles, Monk, Ornette, and colleagues such as Steve Argüelles, Marc Ducret and the deconstructionist poet Olivier Cadiot, Delbecq has developed an unmistakable yet richly varied musical idiom. Intellectually intriguing, emotionally evocative, palpably elegant, Phonetics presents an artist at the height of his imaginative and synthesizing powers.

(more…)

4 min read

Bela Fleck – Drive (1988) [MFSL 2005] [SACD / Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab – UDSACD 7003]

Bela Fleck - Drive (1988) [MFSL 2005]

Title: Bela Fleck – Drive (1988) [MFSL 2005]
Genre: Country
Format: SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

Béla Anton Leoš Fleck is an American banjo player. Widely acknowledged as one of the world’s most innovative and technically proficient banjo players, he is best known for his work with the bands New Grass Revival and Béla Fleck and the Flecktones. “Drive” was produced toward the end of Fleck’s New Grass Revival career and before the Flecktones were formed and included an all-star list of bluegrass performers.
Premier banjo player Béla Fleck is considered one of the most innovative pickers in the world and has done much to demonstrate the versatility of his instrument, which he uses to play everything from traditional bluegrass to progressive jazz.

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1 min read

Herbert Kegel, Dresdner Philharmonie – Beethoven: Symphonies 3 &1 (2003) [SACD / Capriccio – 71 008]

Herbert Kegel, Dresdner Philharmonie - Beethoven: Symphonies 3 &1 (2003)

Title: Herbert Kegel, Dresdner Philharmonie – Beethoven: Symphonies 3 &1 (2003)
Genre: Classical
Format: MCH SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

Known in the United States primarily as the conductor of a surefire recording of Orff’s Carmina Burana, Herbert Kegel was respected in Europe as a pivotal figure in establishing the works of such individual Modernists as Blacher, Dallapiccola, Dessau, Penderecki, and Nono in the concert hall and on discs. He was one of the first to champion Britten’s War Requiem, while his recording of Schoenberg’s Moses und Aron was instrumental in keeping this difficult and challenging work before the public. His involvement with Orff’s music typifies the duality of a distinguished career whose impact is not yet fully appreciated and whose legacy remains to be assimilated, for beside the ever-popular Carmina Burana, Kegel also recorded — superbly — the remaining cantatas, Catulli Carmina and Trionfo di Afrodite, speech-inflected works the composer regarded as parts of a single cycle of Trionfi and that look ahead to the uncompromising utterance of his Antigonae and Oedipus der Tyrann. Kegel studied at the Dresden Conservatory, where Karl Böhm was one of his teachers, from 1935 to 1940, beginning his career, after serving as a conscript during the war in 1946, as kapellmeister of the Volkstheater Rostock. From 1949 to 1978 he was associated with the Leipzig Radio Orchestra & Choir, becoming choirmaster, music director, and principal conductor of the Great Radio Orchestra and Radio Choir in 1953. He became principal conductor of the Leipzig Symphony Orchestra & Choir in 1960. In 1977 he was named principal conductor of the Dresden Philharmonic, a post he held until 1985. From 1985 until his death he frequently appeared as guest conductor at the Dresden and Leipzig opera houses, the Staatsoper Berlin, and the NHK Orchestra, Tokyo. Teaching engagements included a professorship with the Mendelssohn Bartholdy Hochschule für Musik in Leipzig from 1975 until 1978, and a Dresden master class in 1980. Kegel’s grasp extended over the standard repertoire, from Bach to Stravinsky, though his center of interest revolved around the German Romantics, Bruckner and Mahler in particular, and the Modernists, great and minor — Hartmann, Honegger, or Theodorakis no less than Bartók, Berg, and Hindemith — with a smattering of such audience pleasers as Carmen and Margarethe (that is, Gounod’s Faust for German audiences). Several recordings — including Carmina Burana and Mahler’s Symphony No. 4 — feature distinguished solo work by Kegel’s second wife, soprano Celestina Casapietra. His manner was without affectation or grandiosity, rhythmically alert and lyrically poised, always efficient and often inspired. He committed suicide in Dresden on November 20, 1990. ~allmusicguide

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3 min read