HUONG THANH & NGUYEN LE – Fragile Beauty

Far from being a matter of personal preference or utopian ideology, the global citizen is a fact of 21st century city life. Wandering through the streets of any big metropolis in the world, it becomes immediately apparent that the so-called “global village” is a reality, not just a catchphrase. The consequential convergence and blending of cultures has for a long time been the main artistic subject for singer Huong Thanh and guitarist Nguyên Lê. Both are of Vietnamese origin, both have been living in Paris for a long time, and both of them live their, as Lê once put it, “identity as children of the diaspora” in a fusion of western and far-eastern culture.

Fragile Beauty is Huong Thanh’s fourth album under her name on ACT following Moon and Wind (ACT 9269-2), Dragonfly (ACT 9293-2) and Mangustao (ACT 9423-2), all of which feature Nguyên Lê as producer, co-composer, arranger and accompanist on the guitar. As before, the name of the album speaks eloquently of the music. The steady flow of life, its ephemeral nature and fragility are central themes of Buddhist culture. Vietnamese poetry has found a multitude of images to describe this: flowers drifting on water, or the passage of the clouds or the swallows. The team Thanh/Lê draw their inspiration from this rich heritage of images and motifs. Their repertoire ranges from an excerpt from the noble 10th century national epic “The Pavilion of Crystallized Azure” through the modern impressionist “Drifting on the Water” to sometimes melancholy, sometimes happy work songs.

Huong Thanh is a daughter of one of the most famous singers of the new Vietnamese theatre (Cai Luong). Her crystal-clear voice with its strange, yet enthralling quality that uses the syllables, melodies and scales of Vietnamese music, represents the traditional element on this album. Yet her singing remains open to the musical transformations brought to the music by Lê’s Hendrix-legacy, his jazz-innovations and his avant-garde electric playing. European musical tradition forms a kind of connective fabric in this context, given a Mediterranean colour by Paolo Fresu’s gentle trumpet playing and the singing double bass of Renaud Garcia-Fons or a jazz flavour by Dominique Borker’s piano harmonies. Yet a vital factor contributing to the recording’s textural richness is the multitude of string- and percussion instruments from all around the world used on the album: the Vietnamese 16 string zither (dàn tranh) and bamboo balafon play their part as do the African Udu, talking drums, congas and cajon. A further new colour is provided by Mieko Miyazaki, the internationally celebrated young master of the 8th century traditional Japanese instrument the koto. And of course Lê himself subtly yet pointedly utilizes his electronic arsenal of radiator, synthesizers and samplers. “One of the main ideas was to give the Asian instruments a different colour by connecting them to different traditions. Africa has inspired me since my work on ‘Ultramarine’”, says Lê.

African rhythms, Japanese liveliness combined with western melodies and jazz harmony all become part of an exciting venture, the basis and destination of which remains recognizably Vietnamese. A venture, which leads to a fusion of past and present, that points directly to the future.

Drifting flowers over the water, wandering clouds in the wind. Deep in the night she awaits for her love. These themes, often found in Vietnamese poetry, are buddhist-inspired images of the world’s impermanence, of the fragility of our existence. Ephemeral yet always renewed. Thus the Vietnamese musical tradition is transfigured in Fragile Beauty by unexpected encounters (jazz harmonies, African rhythms, Japanese vividness), by new orchestration of ancient instruments (koto, trung or luth) and a true dimension of improvisation and interplay.

Nguyên Lê

1. Drifting On The Water – 03:48 (Nguyên Lê)
2. Weaving & Awaiting – 05:58 (Nguyên Lê)
3. Faithfulness – 03:39 (Nguyên Lê, Houng Thanh, Mieko Miyazaki)
4. Plantation Song – 04:22 (Nguyên Lê / Nguyên Van-Hong)
5. The Five Calls Of The Night – 05:03 (Nguyên Lê)
6. Fragile Beauty – 05:12 (Nguyên Lê)
7. Rowing The Sampan – 03:17 (Nguyên Lê)
8. The Pavilion Of Cristallized Azure – 04:54 (Nguyên Lê, Huong Thanh, Mieko Miyazaki)
9. At Dusk, From The West Balcony – 04:18 (Nguyên Lê / Huong Thanh, Nguyên Van Hong)
10. Go Cong Blues – 03:57 (Renaud Garcia Fons, Huong Thanh / Nguyên Van-Hong)
11. The Swallows’ Bridge – 06:23 (Nguyên Lê / Nguyên Van-Hong)
12. Tales Of The Mountain – 07:18 (Nguyên Lê / Huong Thanh)

Line Up:

Huong Thanh – vocals
Nguyên Lê – electric & acoustic guitar, synthesizer, computer
Mieko Miyazaki – koto
Hao Nhiên Pham – monocorde (dàn bau), 16-strings zither (dàn tranh), sao, meo bamboo flutes
Nguyên Van-Hong – backing vocals
Paolo Fresu – trumpet, fluegelhorn
Stéphane Guillaume – soprano sax, flutes
Renaud Garcia-Fons – pizz & arco acoustic 5-string bass
Etienne Mbappé – fretless bass
Alex Tran – percussions
Francis Lassus – percussions
Illya Amar – bamboo balafon (trung)
Dominique Borker – piano

Recorded and mixed by Nguyên Lê at Studio Louxor, Paris Barbès, France, December 2006 – May 2007
Produced by Nguyên Lê.

download links:

https://rapidshare.com/#!download|644p7|103196410|Huong_Thanh___Nguyen_Le_-_Fragile_Beauty.part1.rar|100431|R~0|0|0

https://rapidshare.com/#!download|306p1|103197541|Huong_Thanh___Nguyen_Le_-_Fragile_Beauty.part2.rar|39087|R~0|0|0


Sketches of Spain (50th Anniversary Enhanced 2 CD Legacy Edition)


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Soriba Kouyaté – Live in Montreux (2000)

Soriba Kouyaté – Live in Montreux
Original: 2000
CD: January 27, 2003

Personnel:
Soriba Kouyaté – kora
Matthieu Michel – trumpet
Linley Marthe – bass
Joël Allouche – drums

Soriba Kouyaté – Live in Montreux Tracks:
01 Diarabi
02 Mariama
03 All Blues
04 Deli Guelema
05 Autumn Leaves
06 Afrilude
07 St Louis-Dakar
08 Kaïra
09 Bani


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John Zorn – Circle Maker

John Zorn is a music innovator with a reputation for blending vastly different styles and creating something new: hardcore punk and jazz, Italian movie music and cartoon themes. Here he combines the tradition of Jewish klezmer with New York avant-garde jazz. The result is both fresh and timeless, touching upon ancient songs no one has heard before.

THE CIRCLE MAKER is actually two separate albums, combined by a theme (as well as packaging). The first features the Masada String Trio, part of Zorn's Masada klezmer project. Because of the instrumentation, it has the more traditional sound of the two CDs. The second disc adds a percussive element by expanding the trio to a sextet. Drummer Joey Baron and percussionist Cyro Baptista give these tracks an international flair. Guitarist Marc Ribot lends his guitarwork to the project, including some fascinating use of controlled feedback.

download links:

http://www.mediafire.com/?0d78y99e2bmajp6

http://www.mediafire.com/?9fbiim3ahwja38w


Pat Metheny & Brad Mehldau with Larry Grenadier and Jeff Ballard – San Sebastian 2007

Pat Metheny – guitar
Brad Mehldau – piano
Larry Grenadier – bass
Jeff Ballard – drums

- Unrequited
- All The Things You Are
- Annie's Bittersweet Cake / Better Days Ahead
- A Night Away
- Santa Cruz Slacker

- En La Tierra Que No Olvida
- Ring of Life
- The Sound of Water
- Secret Beach
- Vera Cruz


John McLaughlin/Jaco Pastorius/Tony Williams: Trio of Doom

Trio of Doom was eminently qualified as a supergroup at the time of their formation. In 1969, drummer Tony Williams formed the prototype of jazz-rock fusion groups with his trio, Lifetime. Having entered and exited those ranks, guitarist John McLaughlin had gone on to form The Mahavishnu Orchestra, thus taking the mainstream acceptance of such music to another level altogether. Bassist Jaco Pastorius was vital in elevating Weather Report to rock band prominence when he joined that group.

It's no doubt intentional that the takes from the Trio's live performance at the Havana Jam in 1979 come first on the CD. The interplay is better defined than during their studio counterparts (recorded in New York a few days later). More importantly, the introductory drum solo by Tony Williams illustrates the intrinsic musicality in his playing.
In his liner notes McLaughlin, who oversaw the project, makes note of the decibel level during the performance, but it's the pastoral quietude of the late bassist's “Continuum” that is perhaps more noteworthy—it defines the dynamics of the Pastorius personality, as well as the collaborative effort that went into subsuming each member's identity to the whole. Although, in the liner notes, jazz critic and journalist Bill Milkowski's essay initially refers to rock power trios as the template for the Trio of Doom (who's influencing who here?), the staccato frenzy and lightning quick turnarounds in the live “Prince of Darkness find their counterpart today in the likes of prog-rock influenced jammers Umphrey's McGee and nouveau-traditionalists Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey. Trio of Doom (named by Pastorius with customary eccentricity and humor) display a recognition of the simplicity of the blues in the easy shuffle of Williams’ original “Para Oriente, which might serve the new generation well. The general brevity of the tracks is perhaps inevitable given the multi-act concept of the label-sponsored concert from whence come these eighteen year-old recordings. Nevertheless, McLaughlin, Pastorius, and Williams didn't just jam for a half-hour, an approach they might well have been capable of given their collective wealth of technique. In both its live and studio renditions, “Are You the One, Are You The One? is indicative of each man's loyalty to composition as well as the spirit of truly working together to make this project a success. Trio of Doom, the CD, may seem more insubstantial than it really is precisely because, as it stands, the music contained herein would barely seem to scratch the surface potential of this personnel alignment.

Nevertheless, whether you find this package satisfying for its very existence or disappointing for its less-than-expansive results, Trio of Doom, the band, remains an exhibition of fundamental musical values in contemporary jazz. It will no doubt continue to be the launch point for fusion music (and beyond) that carries on for some time to come.

Track Listing: Drum Improvisation (Live); Dark Prince (Live); Continuum (Live); Para Oriente (Live); Are You the One, Are You the One? (Live); Dark Prince (Studio); Continuum (Studio); Para Oriente (Alternate Take One/Studio); Para Oriente (Alternate Take Two/Studio); Para Oriente (Studio).

Personnel: John McLaughlin: electric guitar; Jaco Pastorius: electric bass; Tony Williams: drums.

download link: http://www.mediafire.com/?togbfwbfs6gekdv


Ballaké Sissoko And Vincent Segal: globalFEST 2011 live + Chamber Music album

This was one show everyone wanted to catch. Magic happens when Ballaké Sissoko and Vincent Segal perform. This night at globalFEST was no exception. When the kora and a cello sit side by side, there's a clear cultural juxtaposition of African and European musical tradition. But despite the striking contrast, when the Malian kora player Sissoko and French cellist Segal sit down together, nothing sounds more natural. Sissoko plucks sweet harp-like sounds from the 21-stringed kora, while Segal draws unexpected sounds from his cello, sometimes evoking woodwinds. The acoustic pairing and cultural combination has become an exciting new sound in chamber music. Sissoko and Segal have collaborated with accomplished artists from Toumani Diabate and Taj Mahal to Sting and Elvis Costello.

[45 min 25 sec]

http://www.npr.org/2011/06/10/132865673/ballak-sissoko-and-vincent-segal-globalfest-2011


http://www.filestube.com/aFd0RdrcpWzXJjJ4se1gyL/Ballak%C3%A9-Sissoko-amp-Vincent-Segal-Chamber-Music.html


Charles Lloyd – Zakir Hussain – Eric Harland – Sangam (2004)

Tracklisting:

01. Dancing On One Foot
02. Tales Of Rumi
03. Sangam
04. Nataraj
05. Guman
06. Tender Warriors
07. Hymn To The Mother
08. Lady In The Harbor
09. Little Peace

http://www.wupload.com/file/63240797/popl_CharlesLloyd.part1.rar

http://www.wupload.com/file/63235470/popl_CharlesLloyd.part2.rar


McCoy Tyner with Stanley Clarke and Al Foster

4 July 2010 | Jazz , – Fusion |

McCoy Tyner – with Stanley Clarke and Al Foster (2000)

Artist: McCoy Tyner
Title Of Album: with Stanley Clarke and Al Foster
Year Of Release: 2000
Label: TELARC
Genre: Jazz-Fusion, Jazz
Format: MP3
Quality: 160 kbps I 44.1 Khz I Joint Stereo
Total Time: 65:25
Total Size: 75 mb

Tracklist
———
01. Trane-like
02. Once Upon A Time
03. Never Let Me Go
04. I Want to Tell You ‘Bout That
05. Will You Still Be Mine
06. Goin’ Way Blues
07. In The Tradition Of
08. The Night Has A Thousand Eyes
09. Carriba
10. Memories
11. I Want to Tell You ‘Bout That (acoustic bass version – alternate take)

download link: https://rs84l35.rapidshare.com/#!download|84l3|223046544|McCTwSCaAF_by_Nahuel-_-.rar|131788|You%20need%20RapidPro%20to%20download%20more%20files%20from%20your%20IP%20address.%20%288d5611a9%29


John Coltrane Live In Germany And Belgium

John Coltrane concert: ‘Live in Germany (1960/1961) and Belgium (1965)’ The three performances on this DVD show in dramatic relief the most important phases of his career. These newly discovered 1960 performances with Miles Davis's rhythm section find him near the end of his ‘sheets of sound’ period. Coltrane was anxious to form his own group and this final tour with Davis was a favor to the trumpeter. His restlessness shows through in his playing here and elsewhere at the time. It is fascinating to hear him with one of his early idols Stan Getz and his playing seems to challenge Getz to a new level. The 1965 Comblain-La-Tour (Belgium) performance, providing some great visuals, allows us to see the group at the peak of its powers and near the end of its run. By the end of the year, McCoy and Elvin were gone and one of the most innovative and exciting ensembles in jazz was no more. Concert 1: Germany, March 28th, 1960 John Coltrane – Tenor Saxophone Wynton Kelly – Piano Paul Chambers – Bass Jimmy Cobb – Drums Also featuring Oscar Peterson on piano on ‘Moonlight In Vermont’ and ‘Hackensack', as well as Stan Getz on tenor saxophone. Concert 2: Germany, December 4th, 1961 John Coltrane – Tenor Saxophone / Soprano Saxophone Eric Dolphy – Alt Saxophone / Flute McCoy Tyner – Piano Reggie Workman – Bass Elvin Jones – Drums Concert 3: Belgium, August 1st, 1965 John Coltrane – Tenor Saxophone / Soprano Saxophone McCoy Tyner – Piano Jimmy Garrison – Bass Elvin Jones – Drums


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