Sunday, September 16, 2012

New CD - 2012

Fred Hersch Trio
Alive At The Vanguard



By Dan McClenaghan
Pianist Fred Hersch has found a place to come alive: The Village Vanguard, where so many great live albums have been recorded. Saxophonists John Coltrane and Sonny Rollins, pianist Bill Evans and drummer Paul Motian also found the New York City venue a prime spot for live recordings. Hersch revisits the venue with Alive the the Vanguard, following Live at the Village Vanguard (Palmetto Records, 2003), an excellent trio affair with bassist Drew Gress and drummer Nasheet Waits, and Alone at the Vanguard (Palmetto Records, 2011), an extraordinary solo outing.
The "Alive" part of the disc's title may, in part, be a celebration of Hersch's recovery from a life-threatening eight-week coma in 2008; or, perhaps, it is an acknowledgment of his renewed focus and enlivened sense of freedom, the positive outcome of his brush with death. But this certainly is his finest trio outing.
Hersch has found musical soul mates in drummer Eric McPherson and bassist John Hébert, who played in pianist Andrew Hill's last rhythm section. They are players who can set up a fluid flow or pack a prodding punch, and who seem always capable of enhancing Hersch's exquisite sense of melody, beginning with the pianist's gorgeous original opener, "Havana," filled with a feeling of spicy romance and a vibrant momentum.
The two discs of music mix Hersch originals with jazz and Great American Songbook standards. The much-covered "Softly As in a Morning Sunrise" prances with a jaunty insouciance, with Hersch's supple touch on full display, McPherson's whispering brushes, and Hébert putting a bounce in the tune's step.
"Lonely Woman"—surely alto saxophonist Ornette Coleman's most covered tune—gets paired with trumpeter Miles Davis' "Nardis," for a haunting twelve-minute search through the labyrinths of these two masters' melodies, while Sonny Rollins' "Doxy" gets a playful and easy swing treatment.
Either one of these two discs could have served as another superb Fred Hersch trio recording, but what's offered up is a nicely sequenced document of a two-set evening (one per disc) Set two opens with Hersch's aptly named "Opener," which he wrote for McPherson. Hersch teases the pretty melody out of the keys with adept delicacy, as Hébert and McPherson provide a sizzling rhythm that gives way to an orchestral drum solo—snares, cymbals and bass drum telling a tale with a controlled clamor.
"I Fall in Love Too Easily" speaks in soft tones to wistful, perhaps unrequited romance, while Hersch's "Sartorial" is nod to Coleman and the free jazz legend's habit of decking himself out in very cool, oddball resplendence.
Closing with the familiar "The Song Is You," paired with pianist Thelonious Monk's "Played Twice" places longing side-by-side with Monk's playful quirkiness for a superb wrap-up to a great night of music.
Track Listing:
CD1: Havana; Tristesse; Segment; Lonely Woman/Nardis; Dream of Monk; Rising, Falling; Softly As In a Morning Sunrise; Doxy. 
CD2: Opener; I Fall in Love Too Easily; Jackalope; The Wind/Moon and Sand; Sartorial; From This Moment On; The Song is You/Played Twice.
Personnel: Fred Hersch: piano; John Hébert: bass; Eric McPherson: drums.

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Opera Divas & JAZZ: The Previn/Hersch/Mehldau Project

Anne Sofie Von Otter Meets Elvis Costello
For The Stars

Cover (For the Stars (Anne Sofie von Otter Meets Elvis Costello):Anne Sofie von Otter)


Anne Sofie Von Otter & Brad Mehldau
Love Songs


Love Songs


Kiri Te Kanawa/ André Previn/ Ray Brown/ Mundell Lowe
Kiri Sidetracks: The Jazz Album

Cover (Kiri Side Tracks: The Jazz Album:Kiri Te Kanawa)


Brad Mehldau & Renée Fleming
Love Sublime

Cover (Love Sublime:Renée Fleming)


Renée Fleming with Fred Hersch and Bill Frisell
Haunted Heart

Cover (Haunted Heart:Renée Fleming)


Dawn Upshaw with Fred Hersch
Sings Rodgers & Hart


Cover (Dawn Upshaw Sings Rodgers & Hart:Dawn Upshaw)


Sylvia McNair with André Previn/ David Finck
Sure Thing: The Jerome Kern Songbook





Sylvia McNair with André Previn/ David Finck
Come Rain or Come Shine: The Harold Arlen Songbook

Come Rain Or Come Shine: The Harold Arlen Songbook

By Leonardo Barroso
Opera Divas are always celebrated and praised for their beautiful voices and performances on/off stages through out the World.
I'm not a fan of Opera at all, but those sopranos and mezzo-sopranos, really moves me, I don't know why. Tried for more than twenty years, to find the reason for this strange attraction, and no clue by now.
It all started at my JazzGuru, Mr.Bob Barroso, house in 1992, when at some point into that always wonderful jazz nights, he did put the recent André Previn's Jazz CD with a singer we all should guess who it was. Half through the CD and I had no clue of who the singer was, but at that point Bob showed me the cover album....I could not believe that the sweet and poweful voice I was delighted with, was the Grand-Diva Kiri Te Kanawa. From Mozart, Puccini and Verdi to Arlen, Mercer, Van Hausen, Mandel, Rodgers and Hart.....has the world gone crazy, I did recall back then. Her singing at "It Could Happen To You" was just breathtaking.
When the record finished I was just amazed. I thought to myself: this is a once in a lifetime thing.
Two years later, André Previn must have loved Kiri's album too, because as I was looking for some new releases I saw this CD with Diva Sylvia McNair having a great time, and she really did. A great album again with Previn on piano (always great playing) and bassist David Finck. Oh my God ! Lighting did strike twice, what a great CD...you should hear Sylvia singing "Remind Me" (Peggy Lee's rec.also great).
I was truly satisfied with both great cd's, mixing the jazz world with opera divas has been great.
1996 saw a new Previn/McNair/Finck cd, again just as good as their last one, but with H.Arlen songbook. Also in'96 another Diva, Dawn Upshaw, came with a Rodgers/Hart cd with Fred Hersch on piano, and in the song "Why Can't I ?" with his Trio, just great. These were great time for JAZZ !
Enough of Sopranos, in 2001, Mezzo Anne-Sofie Von Otter came with a release with Elvis Costello and a swedish group jazzin' through 18 songs: Bacharach,Beatles,Tom Waits, Costello and ABBA's Benny Andersson. Recorded on HDCD-encoded, this a favorite of mine. A great surprise !
Then my heart almost stopped, it was 2005, a new Diva/Jazz album was released, Amercan soprano-Diva Renée Fleming was giving her shot in Jazz. Well nothing new there, Fred Hersch was up again now with guitarist Bill Frisell. Not my guitar pick, but okay, let's start..........well........she started with one of my all-time best song "Haunted Heart"! This is just eargasm !!! Fred's Steinway-piano and Renée's dark, down-bottom voice was just amazing! EARGASM ! MUST HEAR !
Now Brad Mehldau has recorded with both: Von Otter and Fleming, recording opera-like songs and jazz arrangements. Just great !
Well these are my thoughts on this strange musical mix, great voice and great playing couldn't go wrong. At least on these cases. This is what music is all about, JAZZ is all about freedom, and playing whatever you feel like, not knowing what the results are going to be.
Go on and hear it !!! Enjoy and Eargasm for all !!!!!
THIS IS THE PREVIN/HERSCH/MEHLDAU PROJECT !