Emily Remler - Cookin' At the Queens: Live In Las Vegas (1984, 1988) 2CD, 2024, Resonance Records
Жанр: Hard Bop, Bossa Nova, Guitar Jazz
Издание: Resonance Records - HCD-2076
Продолжительность: 02:38:32
Кодек: FLAC (tracks+.cue)
Битрейт: Lossless
Источник (релизер): AudioClothСтрана-производитель диска: USA
Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: да
Треклист:
CD1:
01. Moanin' [9:42]
02. How Insensitive (Insensatez) [9:53]
03. Autumn Leaves [8:03]
04. Polka Dots and Moonbeams [10:01]
05. Samba de Orfeu [8:52]
06. Hot House/What Is This Thing Called Love? [5:58]
07. You Don't Know What Love Is [11:00]
08. West Coast Blues [11:56]
♦ CD1
Треклист:
01. Moanin' [9:42]
02. How Insensitive (Insensatez) [9:53]
03. Autumn Leaves [8:03]
04. Polka Dots and Moonbeams [10:01]
05. Samba de Orfeu [8:52]
06. Hot House/What Is This Thing Called Love? [5:58]
07. You Don't Know What Love Is [11:00]
08. West Coast Blues [11:56]
09. Tenor Madness [4:51]
Продолжительность: 01:20:17 ♦ CD2
Треклист:
01. Out of Nowhere [8:18]
02. Manha de Carnaval [13:36]
03. Cisco [6:14]
04. Yesterdays [8:18]
05. All Blues [13:16]
06. Someday My Prince Will Come [9:02]
07. So What/Impressions [11:13]
08. D-Natural Blues [8:19]
Продолжительность: 01:18:15 Дополнительная информация:
Cookin at the Queens: Live in Las Vegas, 1984 & 1988 is the first Emily Remler album to appear since 1990's This Is Me, completed just before her death at 32. Remler was an abundantly gifted guitarist and composer; her sense of time, striated harmony, and rootsy swing were trademarks that evolved from straight-ahead hard bop to modal, Brazilian, and contemporary jazz.
This compilation pairs two radio broadcast dates with the extant material left out for time considerations. Producers Zev "Jazz Detective" Feldman and Bill Milkowski, with executive producer George Klabin, unearthed more than 60 minutes that were previously unreleased in a truly handsome, 17-track package containing three LPs or two CDs, rare photos, a fine liner essay by Milkowski, and tributes and reminiscences from other musicians. Remler's 1984 quartet included pianist Cocho Arbe, bassist Carson Smith, and drummer Tom Montgomery; her 1988 trio included Smith and drummer John Pisci.
A furious rendition of Bobby Timmons' "Moanin" opens disc one. It's raw, kinetic, and swings like mad. Not enough has been written about Remler's approach to blues; it almost governs her hard bop style with exquisite timing and technical facility. She delivers an intense solo, juxtaposing biting arpeggios and lyricism. Remler loved Brazilian music and included her interpretations of bossa and samba standards and recorded several. Her ten-minute reading of Tom Jobim's classic "Insensatez" is suite-like. While the pianist carries the changes with lovely flourishes and accents, the bassist and drummer stretch time as Remler floats in, digging deep into the haunting melody with Arbe. Likewise, her reading of "Samba de Orfeu" reflects the joy and excess of Brazil's annual festival amid buoyant swing and lyric invention.
Her approach to jazz standards is equally innovative. Her version of Tadd Dameron's "Hot House" swings with intensity as Remler's fleet single notes meet the bassist's thrumming runs and the pianist's steady groove with aplomb. Likewise, "Autumn Leaves" is delivered at a quick tempo, yet sacrifices none of the original's harmonic invention amid engaged interplay with her band. She approaches the ballads "Polka Dots and Moonbeams" and You Don't Know What Love Is" with sensitivity and subtlety, layering blues elegantly through the changes.
On the second trio disc, she weds "Out of Nowhere," a midtempo ballad, with the brooding, dramatic "Manha de Carnival." Her approach to "All Blues" displays expansive chord voicings under Smith's rocking bass vamp as she creates a Wes Montgomery-esque multi-string solo. Likewise, "So What Impressions" is a blistering take on the classic Kind of Blue tune that veers into modal exploration without abandoning hard swing. Smith rises to Remler's incendiary solo, urging her on before closing the set with "D-Natural Blues." She employs George Freeman's Chicago blues approach with Howard Roberts' grooving jazz swing. When these recordings took place, Remler was riding high in the jazz spotlight with an evolved playing style, stellar compositions, an adventurous spirit, and exquisite taste. Cookin at the Queens is a revelation that not only reveals her abundant gifts, but serves as a reminder of the enormity of her loss. (Thom Jurek)
Состав
Emily Remler - guitar
Cocho Arbe - piano (CD1,CD2(1))
Carson Smith - bass
Tom Montgomery (CD1,CD2(1)), John Pisci (CD2(2-8)) - drums
Recorded live at the 4 Queens, Las Vegas, NV on May 28, 1984 (CD1,CD2(1)) and September 19, 1988 (CD2(2-8)).
Время раздачи: c 15:00 до 22:00 (минимум до появления первых 3-5 скачавших)

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