Hugh Masekela “Tomorrow” CD Review

Hugh Masekela with Kalahari

WB 25566 Recorded in London between January and September 1986.

1 Bring Him Back Home (Nelson Mandela) (Became prophetic in the next decade with the release of Nelson Mandela from prison)
2 Mayibuye
3 Ke Bale
4 London Fog – (About human homesickness)
5 Everybody’s Standing Up (This song celebrates the imminent fall of several of the world’s petty dictators)
6 Bird on the Wing
7 Something for Nothing
8 Serengeti

Masekela often performs sophisticated takes on three-chord township jive, leading the massed vocals with his own coarse yet evocatively blunt voice, while leaving himself just enough room to peel off a few patented, repeated-note trumpet licks and double-tracked flugelhorn statements.

from wiki:
Hugh Ramopolo Masekela (b. Witbank, South Africa, April 4, 1939) is an South African trumpeter, flugelhornist, cornetist, composer, and singer. Masekela is an acknowledged master of African music.”

(Cont. on Special Page)

Later on the record, the keys turn minor but the high-tech verve is still there. His backup band, Kalahari, and a quartet of vocalists share Masekela’s passion — and the outcome of this chemistry is one of Masekela’s best albums of the last 20 years.

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Chet Baker “Baker’s Holiday”

A Tribute To Billy Holiday

The late Billie Holiday left behind, as a reminder of her greatness, a huge body of recordings. Her singing was only a part of the legacy, however. Billie’s introduction of many new songs, and what she did with the old songs, helped to swell the storehouse of the jazz repertoire for all the singers and players who grew up with her, as well as those who came after.

From Wiki: 

Chesney Henry “Chet” Baker Jr. (December 23, 1929 – May 13, 1988) was an American jazz trumpeter and singer.
Specializing in relaxed, even melancholy music, Baker rose to prominence as a leading name in cool jazz in the 1950s. Baker’s good looks and delicate singing established him as a promising name in pop music as well. But his success was badly hampered by drug addiction, particularly in the 1960s, when he was imprisoned.
He mounted a successful comeback in the ’70s, but died after falling from a hotel window.”

This is a tribute to Lady Day from one who is both a singer and a player – fluegelhornist Chet Baker. “Her style was so unique – so different,” he says of Billie. “She had a way of combining singing and talking a tune that was very intimate. One thing I really liked about her was that she never raised her voice. At least I never heard her shout. Her way of singing really reflected a lot of soul. Billie Holiday was Billie Holiday – that’s all. She was great. She always did the best tunes, tunes that really lent themselves to her style of singing. She really didn’t have a great voice, but what she did with it…”

Chet, another vocalist who doesn’t shout, began singing long before he took up the trumpet. “When I was 11 or 12, my mother used to drag me around to the amateur contests that they had in Los Angeles on Sunday afternoons. I never won but I was second once. Even at that time, I was singing the current ballads. I sang in a church choir at the same time – 1941 and 1942.

From Wiki: 

Billie Holiday (April 7, 1915 – July 17, 1959), born Eleanora Fagan and later nicknamed Lady Day (see “Jazz royalty” regarding similar nicknames), was an American jazz singer, a seminal influence on jazz and pop singers, and generally regarded as one of the greatest female jazz vocalists. 

On May 31, 1959, she was taken to Metropolitan Hospital in New York suffering from liver and heart disease. On July 12, she was placed under house arrest at the hospital for possession, despite evidence suggesting the drugs may have been planted on her. Holiday remained under police guard at the hospital until she died from cirrhosis of the liver on July 17 1959 at the age of 44. In the final years of her life, she had been progressively swindled out of her earnings, and she died with only $0.70 in the bank and $750 (a tabloid fee) on her person.
Billie Holiday is interred in Saint Raymond’s Cemetery, Bronx, New York.

“My phrasing as a singer,” continues Baker, “has been influenced a lot by my playing. If I hadn’t been a trumpet player, I don’t know if I would have arrived at singing that way eventually. I probably wouldn’t have.

“The things I’m really conscious of when I sing are intonation, good diction without over-enunciating, a casual, relaxed way of phrasing, and singing in tune.”

Produced by Luchi DeJesus. Prepared for reissue by Richard Seidel and Seth Rothstein.

Chet Baker Flugelhorn
Leon Cohen Reeds
Henry Freeman Reeds
Wilford Holcombe Reeds
Seldon Powell Reeds
Alan Ross Reeds
Hank Jones Piano
Everett Barksdale Guitar
Richard Davis Bass
Connie Kay Drums

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Ultimate Kenny G CD Review

CD Track List Follows:

1. Everlasting

2. Havana

3. Brazil

4. What A Wonderful World – (with Louis Armstrong)

5. Look Of Love, The 6. Silhouette

7. One More Time – (with Chante Moore)

8. Theme From Dying Young

9. Forever In Love

10. We’ve Saved The Best For Last

11. Songbird

12. Jasmine Flower

13. The Girl From Ipanema – (with Bebel Gilberto)

14. By The Time This Night Is Over – (with Peabo Bryson)

15. the Champion’s Theme

16. Don’t Make Me Wait For Love

17. The Moment

18. My Heart Will Go On – (from “Titanic”)

19. The Wedding Song

Ultimate Kenny G is the latest Smooth Jazz CD put out by the extremely talented Kenny G who once again has delivered a brilliant collection of tracks. I’m confident Kenny G fans, and Smooth Jazz fans alike will be pleased with this one.

Refreshingly, this was one of those CDs I was able to just pop in and comfortably listen to from beginning to end. Every track is enjoyable and was pretty easy for me to listen to from start to finish.

Ultimate Kenny G has a nicely varied, mix of 19 tracks that are very well written songs by this clearly talented artist. With many of the songs displaying a lot of the kind emotion that makes for a really great listen. Seemingly drawing from what I can only imagine are him own real life experiences. At different points touching on the most real emotions of love, and the pain of failed relationships can certainly be heard.

If you’re even mildly into Smooth Jazz music you’ll enjoy this album. Overall Ultimate Kenny G is an a great release. I give it my double thumbs up. You will not be disappointed with one single track.

Ultimate Kenny G is one of those CDs that grabs your attention with the first note of the first song and doesn’t let go until the very last note of the last track in the collection.

While the entire album is outstanding some of my favorites are Track 2, Havana, Track 6, Silhouette, and The Moment which is Track 17

My SmoothLee Bonus Pick, and the one that got Sore [...as in "Stuck On REpeat"] is Track 11 – Songbird. This is a great track!

Archived under CD Review, kenny g, saxophone, smooth jazz Comments