Gerald Wilson

Gerald Wilson - Theme for Monterey (1998)  Music

Posted by TmanHome at Oct. 18, 2016
Gerald Wilson - Theme for Monterey (1998)

Gerald Wilson - Theme for Monterey (1998)
Jazz | MP3 320 kbps CBR | 63 min | 145 MB
Label: Mama Records | Rel: 1998

After a half century, the music of big band legend Gerald Wilson continues to represent the best that jazz has to offer. Wilson's latest masterpiece, Theme for Monterey, is an homage to this California coastal town that is home to the world-renowned Monterey Jazz Festival. Commissioned for the Festival's 40th anniversary, this grand suite (which clocks in at nearly 45 minutes) conjures the sites and spirit of Monterey. Also included are Wilson's rendition of Gershwin's Summertime and Parker/Gillespie's Anthropology, which premiered at the Library of Congress in 1996, in honor of the library's archiving of Wilson's life's work.
Charles Lloyd - Trios: Ocean (feat. Gerald Clayton & Anthony Wilson) (Live) (2022)

Charles Lloyd - Trios: Ocean (feat. Gerald Clayton & Anthony Wilson) (Live) (2022)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+log+.cue) - 183 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 101 Mb | 00:41:23
Jazz, Post-Bop | Label: Blue Note Records

Charles Lloyd has long been a free spirit, master musician, and visionary. For more than 6 decades the legendary saxophonist and composer has loomed large over the music world, and at 84 years old he remains at the height of his powers and as prolific as ever. As a sound seeker, Lloyd’s restless creativity has perhaps found no greater manifestation than on his latest masterwork Trio of Trios, an expansive project that encompasses three albums, each a deft change of musical context that presents him in a different trio setting.

Nancy Wilson - Yesterday's Love Songs-Today's Blue - 1964 @320  Music

Posted by pretoria at Dec. 1, 2009
Nancy Wilson - Yesterday's Love Songs-Today's Blue - 1964 @320

Nancy Wilson - Yesterday's Love Songs-Today's Blue - 1964
Cover | Mp3 320 kbps rip with ITUNES | 101,7 MB
1964 Capitol Records

YESTERDAY'S LOVE SONGS, TODAY'S BLUES is a key Nancy Wilson album in which she thoroughly examines her blues roots ("Sufferin' With the Blues," "Send Me Yesterday") and middle-class present with a keen, cool eye and magnificently buffed voice. Arranger Gerald Wilson is also able to inhabit both worlds as he and Wilson invest a tune like "Satin Doll" with a pungency it rarely possesses in other hands, least of all Duke Ellington's. Likewise, the luxurious orchestral trappings the arranger drapes around Nancy Wilson's shoulders as she tackles material like "The Very Thought Of You" and "Never Let Me Go" allow this intense singer to tastefully wrench as much emotion as she can from these classic beauties.Personnel: Nancy Wilson (vocals). The Gerald Wilson Orchestra: Al Porcino, Carmell Jones, Jules Chaikin, Freddie Hill (trumpet); Bob Edmondson, John Ewing, Lester Robertson, Kenny Shroyer (trombone); Paul horn, Joe Maini, Teddy Edwards, Harold Land, Don Ruffell (reeds); Jack Wilson (piano); Joe Pass (guitar); Jimmy Bond (bass); Kenny Dennis (drums).

Nancy Wilson - The Jazz and Blues Sessions "The Best Of" (1996)  Music

Posted by Oceandrop at Oct. 28, 2011
Nancy Wilson - The Jazz and Blues Sessions "The Best Of" (1996)

Nancy Wilson - The Jazz and Blues Sessions "The Best Of" (1996)
Jazz | EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks)+CUE+LOG | mp3@320 | 253 MB. & 111 MB.
500dpi. Complete Scans (JPG) - 28 MB. | WinRar, 3% recovery
Audio CD (1996) | Label: Blue Note/Capitol | Catalog# CDP-7243-8-53921-2-2 | 47:06 min.

Nancy Wilson's not the first name in bluesy jazz (check out Dinah Washington and Joe Williams for that), but she usually can enliven the form with her sophisticated and sultry style. That's made clear on her rendition of "Stormy Monday Blues," where she eschews blues clichés in favor of a husky airiness, at once referencing a lowdown mood and infusing it with a sense of buoyancy. This split is nicely essayed on Capitol's Blues and Jazz Sessions, as half the tracks ooze with Wilson's cocktail blues tone and the other find the jazz-pop chanteuse in a summery and swinging mood. Ranging from the big band blues of "I've Got Your Number" to the lilting bossa nova "Wave," Wilson handles all the varying dynamics and musical settings with aplomb. Featuring cuts from her '60s prime with the likes of Cannonball Adderley, Oliver Nelson, George Shearing, Gerald Wilson, and a host of top sidemen, this best-of disc offers a fine, off-the-beaten-path overview of Wilson's Capitol heyday.
Nancy Wilson - The Very Best Of Nancy Wilson: The Capitol Recordings 1960-1976 (2017)

Nancy Wilson - The Very Best Of Nancy Wilson: The Capitol Recordings 1960-1976 (2017)
FLAC (tracks), Lossless / MP3 320 kbps | 3:21:54 | 472 Mb / 1.1 Gb
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz, Soul

The career of Nancy Wilson has been compiled many times and in many ways, but never like this. Focusing in-depth on her Capitol recordings during the 15 years of her prime, this three-disc set is a wonderful collection for those who appreciate Wilson's ability to combine Broadway power and finesse with jazz rhythm (and a certain degree of improvisation). While the complete record of her '60s and '70s work would require at least a dozen discs she recorded more than 30 original albums between 1960 and 1976 alone the compilers chose these 71 performances with care. They show her excelling in any format, whether small-group or big-band or strings; singing America's greatest show tunes or pop songs of the day; and thriving whether in the controlled confines of a studio or the freewheeling atmosphere of the Cocoanut Grove. (The latter was the place where her 1964 appearances earned her a nationwide profile, and several performances from her accompanying 1965 album finally appear on CD here.) She also worked with superior musicians, including George Shearing, Cannonball Adderley, Billy May, Oliver Nelson, and Gerald Wilson, among others. While some of Wilson's best peers (Sarah Vaughan, Dinah Washington, Nina Simone) could have been expected to deliver as much excellent material during relatively short periods of their careers, The Very Best of Nancy Wilson: The Capitol Recordings 1960-1976 should stand as a revelation to fans of the pop and soul end of vocal jazz.
Nancy Wilson - The Very Best Of Nancy Wilson: The Capitol Recordings 1960-1976 (2017)

Nancy Wilson - The Very Best Of Nancy Wilson: The Capitol Recordings 1960-1976 (2017)
FLAC (tracks), Lossless / MP3 320 kbps | 3:21:54 | 472 Mb / 1.1 Gb
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz, Soul

The career of Nancy Wilson has been compiled many times and in many ways, but never like this. Focusing in-depth on her Capitol recordings during the 15 years of her prime, this three-disc set is a wonderful collection for those who appreciate Wilson's ability to combine Broadway power and finesse with jazz rhythm (and a certain degree of improvisation). While the complete record of her '60s and '70s work would require at least a dozen discs she recorded more than 30 original albums between 1960 and 1976 alone the compilers chose these 71 performances with care. They show her excelling in any format, whether small-group or big-band or strings; singing America's greatest show tunes or pop songs of the day; and thriving whether in the controlled confines of a studio or the freewheeling atmosphere of the Cocoanut Grove. (The latter was the place where her 1964 appearances earned her a nationwide profile, and several performances from her accompanying 1965 album finally appear on CD here.) She also worked with superior musicians, including George Shearing, Cannonball Adderley, Billy May, Oliver Nelson, and Gerald Wilson, among others. While some of Wilson's best peers (Sarah Vaughan, Dinah Washington, Nina Simone) could have been expected to deliver as much excellent material during relatively short periods of their careers, The Very Best of Nancy Wilson: The Capitol Recordings 1960-1976 should stand as a revelation to fans of the pop and soul end of vocal jazz.
Nancy Wilson - Yesterday's Love Songs, Today's Blues (1963) [Reissue 1991]

Nancy Wilson - Yesterday's Love Songs, Today's Blues (1963) [Reissue 1991]
EAC Rip | FLAC (image+.cue+log) - 225 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps (LAME 3.93) - 111 MB | Covers (10 MB) included
Genre: Vocal Jazz | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Capitol Jazz (CDP 7 96265 2)

Originally released in December of 1963, Yesterday's Love Songs/Today's Blues was the eighth in a long series of albums Nancy Wilson was to make for Capitol Records over a period of 20 years. During that time, she became one of the label's most artistically and commercially successful artists. The album was also made during the time when major recording companies were turning out sessions featuring black female singers with a gospel and/or blues background, singing standards and pop hits backed by a large orchestra, usually with strings. Columbia Records had Aretha Franklin, Everest used Gloria Lynne, and Capitol, Nancy Wilson. Here, teamed with the Gerald Wilson Orchestra and his arrangements, Wilson wends her way through 17 standards and traditional pop songs with a good balance between ballads and up-tempo numbers…
Nancy Wilson - The Best of Nancy Wilson: The Jazz and Blues Sessions (1996)

Nancy Wilson - The Best of Nancy Wilson: The Jazz and Blues Sessions (1996)
EAC | FLAC | Tracks (Cue&Log) ~ 268 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 130 Mb | Scans included
Label: Capitol Jazz | # CDP 7243 8 53921 2 2 | Time: 00:47:06
Vocal Jazz, Vocal Pop, Soul-Jazz

Nancy Wilson's not the first name in bluesy jazz (check out Dinah Washington and Joe Williams for that), but she usually can enliven the form with her sophisticated and sultry style. That's made clear on her rendition of "Stormy Monday Blues," where she eschews blues clichés in favor of a husky airiness, at once referencing a lowdown mood and infusing it with a sense of buoyancy. This split is nicely essayed on Capitol's Blues and Jazz Sessions, as half the tracks ooze with Wilson's cocktail blues tone and the other find the jazz-pop chanteuse in a summery and swinging mood. Ranging from the big band blues of "I've Got Your Number" to the lilting bossa nova "Wave," Wilson handles all the varying dynamics and musical settings with aplomb. Featuring cuts from her '60s prime with the likes of Cannonball Adderley, Oliver Nelson, George Shearing, Gerald Wilson, and a host of top sidemen, this best-of disc offers a fine, off-the-beaten-path overview of Wilson's Capitol heyday.

Anthony Wilson - Frogtown (2016)  Music

Posted by mark70 at April 15, 2016
Anthony Wilson - Frogtown (2016)

Anthony Wilson - Frogtown (2016)
MP3 320 kbps CBR | 59:26 min | 137 MB
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz | Label: Goat Hill Recordings

“Frogtown,” a new album of original instrumental and vocal songs, is guitarist Anthony Wilson’s widest-ranging work to date, and his debut as a vocalist.

Nancy Wilson - The Great American Songbook (2005)  Music

Posted by ciklon5 at May 1, 2025
Nancy Wilson - The Great American Songbook (2005)

Nancy Wilson - The Great American Songbook (2005)
FLAC (tracks), Lossless / MP3 320 kbps | 1:57:41 | 750 / 302 Mb
Genre: Jazz, Soul, RnB

The Great American Songbook has many top-drawer interpreters, but Nancy Wilson is rarely spoken of in the same breath as Ella Fitzgerald or Dinah Washington or Frank Sinatra or Mel Tormé. The reason lies less with her talents, which are sizeable, and more with her orientation, which fits the show tunes concept of putting the song across with precise diction as well as emotion instead of the jazz vocal tradition of personalizing a song. Those who know only Wilson's crossover work and think she intrudes in the field of vocal jazz should simply listen to her 1959 performance of "On the Street Where You Live," where she often varies notes and tempo but preserves the essential ebullience of the song intact – an excellent musical performance combined with an excellent reading of a classic standard. That song is only one of the treasures present on the two-disc set The Great American Songbook, one in a loose series of three Capitol compilations to compile Wilson's late-'50s and early-'60s prime, the others focusing on blues ballads and lost love. There is a lot of music to wade through (more than twice as much as the other volumes in the series), but the compilers ably mix up the proceedings, balancing small-group performances that have a loose touch from all involved with large-band spectaculars featuring impeccable arrangements (often by masters of the form Billy May or Gerald Wilson).