Mary Lou Williams Live at The Cookery

Trio 3 + Geri Allen - Celebrating Mary Lou Williams: Live At Birdland New York (2011) {Intakt CD 187}

Trio 3 + Geri Allen - Celebrating Mary Lou Williams: Live At Birdland New York (2011) {Intakt CD 187}
EAC rip (secure mode) | FLAC (tracks)+CUE+LOG -> 363 Mb | MP3 @320 -> 159 Mb
Full Artwork @ 300 dpi (jpg) -> 27 Mb | 5% repair rar
© 2011 Intakt Records | Intakt CD 187
Jazz / Avant-Garde Jazz / Post Bop

In Memoriam. Sad news as Geri Allen has passed away. RIP Geri Allen. Trio 3 played five evenings together with pianist Geri Allen in the New York jazz club Birdland, paying homage to the jazz pianist Mary Lou Williams. They presented fresh and individualistic interpretations of some of the most beautiful pieces of the "First Lady of Jazz". Intakt has recorded these evenings.
Alberta Hunter - Downhearted Blues: Live At The Cookery (2001)

Alberta Hunter - Downhearted Blues: Live At The Cookery (2001)
Blues | 1cd | EAC Rip | Flac + Cue + Log | covers
Varese Sarabande 302 066 247 2 | rec: 1981 | 310Mb

Alberta Hunter is The Blues. She started recording in the early 1920s, six decades before these tracks were recorded. The history that's wrapped up in this one woman is incredible. And you can hear it on this recording. Like she says in the introduction to "Time Waits For No One," "This is the voice of experience." Indeed. And what a voice. And with a sense of humor. She had me laughing through most of "Two-Fisted Double-Jointed Rough And Ready Man," for example. And during "Sometimes I'm Happy."

Robbie Williams - Live At The Albert [DVD9] (2001)  Music

Posted by thingska at Oct. 19, 2010
Robbie Williams - Live At The Albert [DVD9] (2001)

Robbie Williams - Live At The Albert [DVD9] (2001)
Pop, Concerts | DVD Video | DVD-9 | ~5.79 Gb | 01:13:25 | FileServe, Filesonic
MPEG2, PAL 16:9 (720x576) VBR ~7-9Mbps, 25.000 fps | (AC3, 224 Kbps, 2 ch), (AC3, 448 Kbps, 6 ch)

Recorded before the U.K. release of Swing While You're Winning, Robbie Williams's renditions of pop standards on Live at the Albert are at once delightful and disorienting. It's long been known that Williams is enamored of the Rat Pack, and here he lives out an illusion of being one of them. Clearly the jaunty singer is having a ball. The production is impeccable, the chorus girls are beautiful, his voice is in fine form–even his sweat-soaked, cuff-linked shirt hangs on him perfectly. But often Williams's trademark sarcasm and well-documented insecurities overshadow his love of the music. The strangest moment of the show occurs during an intermission, when MC Rupert Everett quizzes the audience on how much they love Robbie Williams. Although delivered with a wink, the stunt is most un-Rat Pack-like. The show as a whole seems like a surreal dream in which Robbie is at once working out his self-doubt and living his fantasy. And on a very conscious level, that is exactly what he is doing.

Robbie Williams - Live At The Royal Albert Hall (2001)  Music

Posted by El Misha at Jan. 30, 2016
Robbie Williams - Live At The Royal Albert Hall (2001)

Robbie Williams - Live At The Royal Albert Hall (2001)
BDRip | MKV | 1280x724 | AVC@7266 Kbps, 29.970 fps | Audio: DTS 5.1@1509 kbps
Genre: Pop, Jazz | 1h 11mn | 4.37 GB

Robbie Williams performs a tribute to the classic songs of the fifties and the legendary singers, Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jnr and Dean Martin, who made them hits. Duets include 'Somethin' Stupid' with Jane Horrocks, and 'It Was a Very Good Year' with a video footage version of Frank Sinatra, among others.

Mary Lou Williams - 1945-1947 (1999)  Music

Posted by gribovar at Aug. 9, 2020
Mary Lou Williams - 1945-1947 (1999)

Mary Lou Williams - 1945-1947 (1999)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+.cue+log) - 157 MB | Covers (4 MB) included
Genre: Jazz, Bop, Piano Jazz, Swing | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Classic Records (CLASSICS1050)

Most of the musicians heard on this fourth installment in the Classics Mary Lou Williams chronology are women. During the second half of the 1940s, this was considered unusual and innovative. Female musicians, with the exception of carefully coiffed vocalists and the occasional pianist, were generally regarded by the public, by the entertainment industry, and by most male musicians as curious anomalies and were not taken very seriously. Mary Lou Williams always preferred to surround herself with musical minds possessing artistic acumen commensurate with her own highly developed musical intellect. The first four tracks were recorded for the Continental label in 1945 with guitarist Mary Osborne, bassist Bea Taylor, and percussionists Margie Hyams and Bridget O'Flynn, a fascinating duo who took turns either handling the vibraphone or the drums…

Mary Lou Williams - 1953-1954 (2006)  Music

Posted by gribovar at Sept. 14, 2022
Mary Lou Williams - 1953-1954 (2006)

Mary Lou Williams - 1953-1954 (2006)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+.cue+log) - 315 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps (LAME 3.93) - 166 MB | Covers - 5 MB
Genre: Jazz, Bop, Piano Jazz | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Classics Records (CLASSICS1417)

This seventh volume in the Classics Mary Lou Williams chronology opens with a pair of gorgeous modern-sounding rhythm quartet tracks recorded in London on June 26, 1953. The next leg of her journey took her onto the northern European mainland. After a period spent gigging in France and Holland the pianist settled in Paris at the Hotel Cristal in St.-Germain-des-Prés, not far from the Deux Magots and the Café de Flore. On December 2, 1953 Mary Lou Williams recorded eight selections for the Vogue label with her good friend the perpetual expatriate tenor saxophonist Don Byas, bassist Buddy Banks, and drummer Gérard Pochonet. This exceptionally satisfying material has popped up here and there over the years but like much of Mary Lou Williams' oeuvre (and most jazz in general) it seems to have eluded the public…
Mary Lou Williams & Cecil Taylor - Embraced (1977) {Pablo PACD 2620-108-2 rel 1995}

Mary Lou Williams & Cecil Taylor - Embraced (1977) {Pablo PACD 2620-108-2 rel 1995}
EAC rip (secure mode) | FLAC (tracks)+CUE+LOG -> 446 Mb | MP3 @320 -> 183 Mb
Full Artwork @ 600 dpi (jpg) -> 85 Mb | 5% repair rar
© 1977, 1995 Pablo Records / Fantasy | PACD 2620-108-2
Jazz / Post Bop / Stride / Piano

A masterful meeting of two important piano modernists – Mary Lou Williams and Cecil Taylor – sounding incredibly wonderful here in each other's company! The set features a core rhythmic pulse from Mickey Roker on drums and Bob Cranshaw on bass – and Williams and Taylor really take off on their twin pianos – with Cecil almost leading Mary Lou more into territory of his own, although she also brings an undercurrent of soul to the set that makes the record unlike any other that Taylor ever recorded! The approach shouldn't work, but it's captivatingly brilliant from the start.

Mary Lou Williams - 1944-1945 (1998)  Music

Posted by gribovar at July 28, 2020
Mary Lou Williams - 1944-1945 (1998)

Mary Lou Williams - 1944-1945 (1998)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+.cue+log) - 113 MB | Covers (4 MB) included
Genre: Jazz, Piano Jazz, Swing | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Classics Records (CLASSICS1021)

One thing about chronologically arranged reissues - you never know exactly what you're going to bump into. The third volume of the complete recordings of Mary Lou Williams, for example, opens with a pair of tunes sung by Josh White. It's good to hear the lyrics to Williams' cool, bluesy "Froggy Bottom," but "The Minute Man" is one of those obligatory, rhetorical patriotic numbers that cropped up everywhere during WWII and are relevant today only as historical curiosities. Most of the music reissued in this compilation originally appeared on scratchy 78-rpm records bearing the Asch label. Tenor sax archetype Coleman Hawkins is featured on the lush "Song in My Soul" and trumpeter Bill Coleman presides over a laid-back strolling blues with the worrisome title "Carcinoma"…
Mary Lou Williams - Plays In London (1954) {Vogue--Legacy No. 05 rel 2013}

Mary Lou Williams - Plays In London (1954) {Vogue–Legacy No. 05 rel 2013}
EAC rip (secure mode) | FLAC (tracks)+CUE+LOG -> 287 Mb | MP3 @320 -> 166 Mb
Full Artwork @ 300 dpi (jpg) -> 17 Mb | 5% repair rar
© 1953-54, 2013 Vogue / Legacy / Sony Music | No. 05 / 88725443772-05
Jazz / Bop / Mainstream Jazz / Piano

Mary Lou Williams traveled to London, England in the winter 1953 and sometime in 1954 for these sessions, likely spaced about a year or so apart, with two different British rhythm sections, the common denominator throughout being bongo player Tony Scott. This Vogue album originally titled Mary Lou Williams Plays in London and issued in the U.S. on the GNP Crescendo label as In London, is back on Vogue as The London Sessions.

Mary Lou Williams - 1927-1940 (1992)  Music

Posted by gribovar at July 26, 2020
Mary Lou Williams - 1927-1940 (1992)

Mary Lou Williams - 1927-1940 (1992)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+.cue+log) - 251 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps (LAME 3.93) - 175 MB | Covers (4 MB) included
Genre: Early Jazz, Piano Jazz, Swing | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Classics Records (CLASSICS 630)

This CD features the great pianist Mary Lou Williams during her earliest period. She is heard in 1927 on six selections with The Synco Jazzers (a small group that included her then-husband John Williams on alto) and then on the first 19 selections ever recorded under her own name. Performed during the long period when she was the regular pianist with Andy Kirk's 12 Clouds of Joy, Williams is featured on two hot stride solos in 1930, leading trios in 1936 and 1938, playing "Little Joe from Chicago" unaccompanied in 1939 and heading septets in 1940; among her sidemen were trumpeter Harold "Shorty" Baker and the legendary tenor Dick Wilson. Many of the compositions were written by Williams including "Night Life," "New Froggy Bottom," "Mary's special," and "Scratchin' the Gravel;" her version of Jelly Roll Morton's "The Pearls" is a highpoint.