Live at Maybeck Recital Hall

John Colianni - Live at Maybeck Recital Hall (1995) [Maybeck Recital Hall Series, Vol. 37]

John Colianni - Live at Maybeck Recital Hall (1995)
EAC | Flac(Image) + Cue + Log & MP3 CBR 320Kbps
Concord Jazz, CCD-4643 | ~ 261 or 151 Mb | Artwork(jpg) -> 12 Mb
Bop, Swing

~ Recorded live at Maybeck Recital Hall, Berkeley, CA on November 14-16, 1994. ~

Kenny Barron - Live at Maybeck Recital Hall, Volume Ten (1991)  Music

Posted by Designol at Feb. 14, 2023
Kenny Barron - Live at Maybeck Recital Hall, Volume Ten (1991)

Kenny Barron - Live at Maybeck Recital Hall, Volume Ten (1991)
EAC | FLAC | Tracks (Cue&Log) ~ 271 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 148 Mb | Scans included
Post-Bop, Piano Jazz | Label: Concord Jazz | # CCD-4466 | Time: 01:03:24

Producing a darker tone from the Maybeck Yamaha piano than do some other participants in the series, Kenny Barron gets a chance to flaunt a wider range of his influences than he usually does in a group format. Barron opens with a stride-ish "I'm Getting Sentimental Over You," which sports a few minor fluffs (this is live, folks), and then explores a number of diverse styles under the bop umbrella. Barron's "Bud-Like" has reminiscences of "Un Poco Loco," built on an ostinato bass pattern most of the way, with a witty "Bemsha Swing." As usual with Maybeck, the sound of the hall's bright, brittle Yamaha piano is brilliantly captured.

Alan Broadbent - Live at Maybeck Recital Hall, Vol.14 (1991)  Music

Posted by Domestos at Nov. 10, 2019
Alan Broadbent - Live at Maybeck Recital Hall, Vol.14 (1991)

Alan Broadbent - Live at Maybeck Recital Hall, Vol.14 (1991)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+.cue, log) ~ 240.41 Mb | 01:01:12 | Covers
Post-Bop | Country: USA | Label: Concord Jazz - CCD-4488

When Alan Broadbent was given a chance to shine in this solo setting in the Berkeley hills, he kept things relatively spare and to the point, unlike most of the finger-busting pianists in the Maybeck series. But flashier is not necessarily better, and Broadbent gets a lot more music out of fewer notes in these 13 selections. Among them are three originals, the longest of which, "Woody 'N' I" (no doubt a memorial to his late employer, Woody Herman), climaxes in mighty waves closer in idiom to Rachmaninoff than jazz per se. Broadbent is especially adept at getting some great solo breaks with walking bass going, particularly on "Strollin'," "Sweet and Lovely," and "Upper Manhattan Medical Group."

Hal Galper - Live At Maybeck Recital Hall, Vol. 6 (1990)  Music

Posted by Domestos at Sept. 14, 2017
Hal Galper - Live At Maybeck Recital Hall, Vol. 6 (1990)

Hal Galper - Live At Maybeck Recital Hall, Vol. 6 (1990)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+.cue, log) ~ 237.04 Mb | 57:00 | Scans included
Post-Bop | Country: USA | Label: Concord Jazz (CCD-4438)

A deeply rewarding solo recital by one of the unsung masters of jazz piano. Whether delving into the post-bop canon with Benny Golson's "Whisper Not," Thelonious Monk's "Bemsha Swing," or Sonny Rollins' "Airegin," or tapping seldom-heard entries from the Songbook such as Kurt Weill's "It Never Was You" or Ray Noble's "The Touch of Your Lips," Galper goes about each task armed with a keen rhythmic sense and a fount of harmonic knowledge. He's a jazz pianist through and through, lacking the ultra-precise technique that classical training has bestowed on some of his fellow players. But he can unleash his own kind of flash when he needs to – witness his short-and-sweet tour de force "All God's Chillun Got Rhythm." For the best glimpse of Galper's foolproof internal metronome, check out "A Kiss to Build a Dream On." Time that solid is the result of playing with countless rhythm sections, on countless bandstands. Even in a solo setting, Galper is hearing a band.

George Cables - At Maybeck (1994) {Concord Jazz ‎CCD-4630}  Music

Posted by ruskaval at July 17, 2020
George Cables - At Maybeck (1994) {Concord Jazz ‎CCD-4630}

George Cables - At Maybeck (1994) {Concord Jazz ‎CCD-4630}
XLD rip (secure mode) | FLAC (tracks)+CUE+LOG -> 237 Mb | MP3 @320 -> 146 Mb | Artwork | 5% repair rar
© 1994 Concord Jazz ‎| CCD-4630
Jazz / Post Bop / Mainstream Jazz / Piano

Locked right into the mainstream, the ever-reliable Cables gets his shot at a solo recital in Vol. 35 of Concord's voluminous Maybeck series. From the opening track ("Over the Rainbow") onward, Cables immediately settles into the prevailing Maybeck idiom, sporting a do-everything technique rooted in bop, with frequent Tatum flourishes, Evans-influenced voicings, and standards as the specialty of the house. The core of the recital is a three-song, 18½-minute Gershwin medley ("Bess, You Is My Woman Now," "My Man's Gone Now," "Someone to Watch Over Me") which is perfectly listenable but doesn't shed any new or different light on these very-often-covered songs.

Eric Alexander & Mike LeDonne - Together (2024)  Music

Posted by delpotro at July 11, 2024
Eric Alexander & Mike LeDonne - Together (2024)

Eric Alexander & Mike LeDonne - Together (2024)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 192 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 111 Mb | 00:48:29
Mainstream Jazz, Straight-Ahead Jazz | Label: Cellar Live

While solo and duo recordings do not come in all sizes, they indeed have various shapes. Slam Stewart and Don Byas, as the only two musicians to make a nearly snowed-out 1945 Town Hall gig, formed an impromptu, but unquestionably musically satisfying duo (remembered largely for their lickety-split version of “I Got Rhythm”). Jim Hall and Bill Evans are dependably sublime on Undercurrent. Turning to solo work, Evans waxed Alone as a solo pianist, creatively entering a relatively crowded recorded space that also includes contributions from Thelonious Monk (Solo Monk, Alone in San Francisco), Art Tatum’s Piano Starts Here, and Ray Bryant’s Alone With the Blues, not to mention Concord’s voluminous Maybeck Recital Hall series. Solo jazz saxophone recordings, on the other hand, are few and far between, making Eric Alexander’s solo contributions to the recording here all the more unique and important. And although the living master Sonny Rollins recorded in this format (The Solo Concert), contributions here seem most often to coalesce around the avant-garde (Anthony Braxton’s For Alto and Roscoe Mitchell’s Solo Saxophone Concerts).

Eric Alexander & Mike LeDonne - Together (2024)  Music

Posted by delpotro at July 11, 2024
Eric Alexander & Mike LeDonne - Together (2024)

Eric Alexander & Mike LeDonne - Together (2024)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 192 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 111 Mb | 00:48:29
Mainstream Jazz, Straight-Ahead Jazz | Label: Cellar Live

While solo and duo recordings do not come in all sizes, they indeed have various shapes. Slam Stewart and Don Byas, as the only two musicians to make a nearly snowed-out 1945 Town Hall gig, formed an impromptu, but unquestionably musically satisfying duo (remembered largely for their lickety-split version of “I Got Rhythm”). Jim Hall and Bill Evans are dependably sublime on Undercurrent. Turning to solo work, Evans waxed Alone as a solo pianist, creatively entering a relatively crowded recorded space that also includes contributions from Thelonious Monk (Solo Monk, Alone in San Francisco), Art Tatum’s Piano Starts Here, and Ray Bryant’s Alone With the Blues, not to mention Concord’s voluminous Maybeck Recital Hall series. Solo jazz saxophone recordings, on the other hand, are few and far between, making Eric Alexander’s solo contributions to the recording here all the more unique and important. And although the living master Sonny Rollins recorded in this format (The Solo Concert), contributions here seem most often to coalesce around the avant-garde (Anthony Braxton’s For Alto and Roscoe Mitchell’s Solo Saxophone Concerts).

Eric Alexander & Mike LeDonne - Together (2024)  Music

Posted by delpotro at July 11, 2024
Eric Alexander & Mike LeDonne - Together (2024)

Eric Alexander & Mike LeDonne - Together (2024)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 192 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 111 Mb | 00:48:29
Mainstream Jazz, Straight-Ahead Jazz | Label: Cellar Live

While solo and duo recordings do not come in all sizes, they indeed have various shapes. Slam Stewart and Don Byas, as the only two musicians to make a nearly snowed-out 1945 Town Hall gig, formed an impromptu, but unquestionably musically satisfying duo (remembered largely for their lickety-split version of “I Got Rhythm”). Jim Hall and Bill Evans are dependably sublime on Undercurrent. Turning to solo work, Evans waxed Alone as a solo pianist, creatively entering a relatively crowded recorded space that also includes contributions from Thelonious Monk (Solo Monk, Alone in San Francisco), Art Tatum’s Piano Starts Here, and Ray Bryant’s Alone With the Blues, not to mention Concord’s voluminous Maybeck Recital Hall series. Solo jazz saxophone recordings, on the other hand, are few and far between, making Eric Alexander’s solo contributions to the recording here all the more unique and important. And although the living master Sonny Rollins recorded in this format (The Solo Concert), contributions here seem most often to coalesce around the avant-garde (Anthony Braxton’s For Alto and Roscoe Mitchell’s Solo Saxophone Concerts).