Recommended music - other than classical and pop



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I also found his first CD released just this year. I haven't heard all of it, but it sound very promising.

http://www.amazon.com/My-Favorite-Things-Joey-Alexander/dp/B00TZE3W0C/ref=sr_1_1?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1435542754&sr=1-1&keywords=joey+alexander
I also found his first CD released just this year. I haven't heard all of it, but it sound very promising.

http://www.amazon.com/My-Favorite-Things-Joey-Alexander/dp/B00TZE3W0C/ref=sr_1_1?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1435542754&sr=1-1&keywords=joey+alexander


Yep, been listening to it via Sonos and Rdio. Have to wonder where he'll be in 10 years...
Here's an opportunity to help keep jazz alive. Help fund Tessa Souter's next album. She's not well known outside the Manhattan jazz clubs (where she performs with greats like Alan Broadbent), but is widely respected by fellow jazz musicians. Trained under the great Mark Murphy, who asked her to help lead his singing workshops. Her last album, Beyond the Blue, is a fav of mine.

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/tessasouter/help-make-tessa-souters-next-cd
I don't understand. Would one not just buy/stream the CD/music if one likes it? Like that of every other artiste since the recording era began?

And with self publishing, I think it isn't as expensive to do this as in the past.
It's very expensive to pay for the studio time, the recording engineers, the musicians, etc. She details all that on the Kickstarter site.

If you are a jazz artist, no matter how superb an artist you are, and you don't stoop to "smooth jazz" and the like to get airtime, it's very difficult to get backing, since your album sales will be small. Therefore, you either front the money yourself, or get creative.

Tessa, IMO, is right up there with Irene Kral, a superb ballad singer well known only to other jazz artists.
Interesting concept, and she has certainly been creative with the rewards.
Irene Kral, a superb ballad singer well known only to other jazz artists.
Very good, that singer. New find, thank you!
I was reading up about her and she could have used kickstarter as evidenced by this quote:
"Kral paid for the Where is Love? session out of her own pocket and shopped the tape everywhere. The few interested labels all wanted to 'sweeten' the material by heaping string tracks onto the songs. Kral's uniform response — as her friend Lee Wilder told me — was a curt "**** you."
Lol. And that album, it appears, was her summit.
Yes, it's one of the best ballads album out there, IMO. Alan Broadbent provides the perfect accompaniment, another jazz treasure. Tessa had several gigs with him in Manhattan last month; wish it wasn't 3,000 miles distant! A Broadbent/Souter album would be fascinating.
Broadbent is also good in jazz piano trio format - I have his Gianelli Square and Pacific Standard Time. Both very good efforts.
And as part of a Quartet. He was a longtime member of Charlie Haden's Quartet West. Listening to their Haunted Heart album now, in fact.
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Only read part of the thread, but for my diverse taste I can recommend best of Stan Getz the Verve Years and any 1985 or prior Dead Kennedy's.
First listen of Kurt Elling's new album tonight. Excellent, recommended to any jazz vocal fan. Here's Will Friedwald's review: http://kurtelling.com/news/press_article_948.php
I find that my preferences in jazz seem to cycle through piano trios through small jazz combos with horns and then to guitar led trios/quartets. Currently I have piano trios in heavy circulation and recent excellent discoveries:
1. Gary Peacock and Marilyn Crispell - Azure and Amaryllis
2. Gary Peacock led trio - Now This
3. Giovanni Guidi - City of Broken Dreams
4. Jarrett/Peacock/De Johnette - Somewhere
Largely quiet and contemplative music, that works equally well for ambient, but good for attentive listening as well. All ECM records, and to their usual standard of mastering quality. Recommended.
Testing YouTube link. It won't accept m.youtube.com links from my iPad, has to be the PC link, apparently.

My favorite of the Novo Fadistas

All I see is a black rectangle.

No, I had to set my browser, it works fine now! Music always sounds better when the singer is beautiful!
And now I have Rdio, I have the album on play right away! Excellent.

Is the Spanish or Portuguese?
And now I have Rdio, I have the album on play right away! Excellent.

Is the Spanish or Portuguese?


Portuguese, but Katia probably speaks Spanish, too! She speaks perfect French, there's an hour long video of her performing in the more traditional Fado style for French TV. And she's an MD, who apparently still practices! Dunno how she finds the time.
I find that my preferences in jazz seem to cycle through piano trios through small jazz combos with horns and then to guitar led trios/quartets. Currently I have piano trios in heavy circulation and recent excellent discoveries:
The box set (6 cds) from the Brad Mehldau Trio, which is modestly titled The Art Of The Trio :8, contains some great music.
I have a couple of albums from that - Brad leads an excellent trio too.

Portuguese, but Katia probably speaks Spanish, too! She speaks perfect French, there's an hour long video of her performing in the more traditional Fado style for French TV. And she's an MD, who apparently still practices! Dunno how she finds the time.

Nice clip. I like fado.
I have seen Mariza live. Portuguese by way of Mozambique. A very powerful concert. Great grace and passion.

I have seen Kurt Elling in concert too. Was good, but the Mariza one is one of the most moving I have been to.

An hour long clip of a great concert of hers here.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n6LdDqvrIHE

But this a shorter taste.
Yep, Mariza's star certainly shone brightly for several years. I think she's the only fadista besides Amalia Rodrigues to have sold more than a million records. The current critics favorite is a young girl from up north, with tattoos, tennis shoes, and a powerful, emotionally charged voice, who grew up listening to Amalia and loving the poetry of Fado: Gisela João. Enjoying her one and only (so far) self-titled release. Much more to come from this talent.

A couple of recent Charlie Haden albums found, duos with piano. The very recently released Tokyo Adagio, recorded live in Japan in 2005 with Gonzalo Rubalcaba and an older one, Nightfall - John Taylor on piano. Excellent late night music with the lights down low. Master musicians at work, and highly recommended for jazz piano fans.
And another Haden/Rubalcaba album, The Land of the Sun, with a Latin flavour and a larger ensemble. Also very listenable.
Time to rediscover Monk with two excellent live albums and Monk seems to do best in a live format:
1. Live at the It club
2. In Tokyo
Both very well recorded too.
And some new finds with the horn players as lead artistes:
1. Stan Getz - Anniversary, Serenity and People Time. All recorded live in Copenhagen towards the end of Stan's life. As good as he ever was, even when suffering from terminal cancer.
2. Scott Hamilton - many excellent ones. I liked Nocturnes and Serenades as well as his album with Harry Allen, Stompin the Blues. Jazz Signatures is also good.
3. Jane Ira Bloom on the soprano sax on Sixteen Sunsets.
4. Excellent trombone jazz from John Allred, In the Beginning.
Lucy Ann Polk isn't well known these days, but she was a pretty good jazz singer with a sexy voice. Her Lucky Lucy Ann album on the Mode label is her best work, IMO.