Donald Byrd – Street Lady (1973) [Reissue 2020] [SACD / Vocalion – CDSML 8576]

Donald Byrd - Street Lady (1973) [Reissue 2020]

Title: Donald Byrd – Street Lady (1973) [Reissue 2020]
Genre: Jazz
Format: MCH SACD ISO + DSF DSD64 + Hi-Res FLAC

A landmark album by Donald Byrd – the first one where he really started to click with jazz-funk producer Larry Mizell! Mizell and Byrd had worked together previously on the Black Byrd album – a soaring bit of futuristic jazz funk that took Byrd’s career to a whole new level – but this album’s the one where they really began to make the formula cook, blending together tight funky rhythms, spacey keyboards, soulful vocals, and some of Donald’s best solo work of the 70s! The whole thing’s a masterpiece, and all tracks sparkle – including “Lansana’s Priestess”, “Witch Hunt”, and “Street Lady”, one of the funkiest tracks ever on Blue Note. A haunting record with a beautiful spacey groove, and one of the best-ever albums on Blue Note!

Not so much a fusion album as an attempt at mainstream soul and R&B, Street Lady plays like the soundtrack to a forgotten blaxploitation film. Producer/arranger/composer Larry Mizell conceived Street Lady as a concept album to a spirited, independent prostitute, and while the hooker with a heart of gold concept is a little trite, the music uncannily evokes an urban landscape circa the early ’70s. Borrowing heavily from Curtis Mayfield, Isaac Hayes, and Sly Stone, Donald Byrd and Mizell have created an album that is overflowing with wah-wah guitars, stuttering electric pianos, percolating percussion, soaring flutes, and charmingly anemic, tuneless vocals. It’s certainly not jazz, or even fusion, but it isn’t really funk or R&B, either – the rhythms aren’t elastic enough, and all of the six songs are simply jazzy vamps without clear hooks. But the appeal of Street Lady is how its polished neo-funk and pseudo-fusion sound uncannily like a jive movie or television soundtrack from the early ’70s – you can picture the Street Lady, decked out in polyester, cruising the streets surrounded by pimps with wide-brimmed hats and platform shoes. And while that may not be ideal for jazz purists, it’s perfect for kitsch and funk fanatics.

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2 min read

Donald Byrd – Black Byrd (1973) [Reissue 2019] [SACD / Vocalion – CDSML 8559]

Donald Byrd - Black Byrd (1973) [Reissue 2019]

Title: Donald Byrd – Black Byrd (1973) [Reissue 2019]
Genre: Jazz
Format: MCH SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

A landmark album – Donald Byrd’s first session with producer Larry Mizell, the man who went onto forever change the face of jazz funk! After rumbling around for a few years attempting electric styles that really didn’t fit his mode, Donald wisely hooked up with Larry, and hit a groove here that would carry him for many many years. The album’s a masterpiece of soul – heavy production with great keyboards, creating a nice set of grooves that let Byrd solo over the top, sounding better than he had in years! Great all the way through, and with tracks that include “Flight Time”, “Sky High”, “Black Byrd”, “Slop Jar Blues”, “Mr Thomas”, and the prophetically-titled “Where Are We Going?”.

Purists howled with indignation when Donald Byrd released Black Byrd, a full-fledged foray into R&B that erupted into a popular phenomenon. Byrd was branded a sellout and a traitor to his hard bop credentials, especially after Black Byrd became the biggest-selling album in Blue Note history. What the elitists missed, though, was that Black Byrd was the moment when Byrd’s brand of fusion finally stepped out from under the shadow of his chief influence, Miles Davis, and found a distinctive voice of its own. Never before had a jazz musician embraced the celebratory sound and style of contemporary funk as fully as Byrd did here – not even Davis, whose dark, chaotic jungle-funk stood in sharp contrast to the bright, breezy, danceable music on Black Byrd. Byrd gives free rein to producer/arranger/composer Larry Mizell, who crafts a series of tightly focused, melodic pieces often indebted to the lengthier orchestrations of Isaac Hayes and Curtis Mayfield. They’re built on the most straightforward funk rhythms Byrd had yet tackled, and if the structures aren’t as loose or complex as his earlier fusion material, they make up for it with a funky sense of groove that’s damn near irresistible. Byrd’s solos are mostly melodic and in-the-pocket, but that allows the funk to take center stage. Sure, maybe the electric piano, sound effects, and Roger Glenn’s ubiquitous flute date the music somewhat, but that’s really part of its charm. Black Byrd was state-of-the-art for its time, and it set a new standard for all future jazz/R&B/funk fusions – of which there were many. Byrd would continue to refine this sound on equally essential albums like Street Lady and the fantastic Places and Spaces, but Black Byrd stands as his groundbreaking signature statement.

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3 min read

Donovan – Storyteller (2003) [Audio Fidelity] [SACD / Audio Fidelity – AFZ 015]

Donovan - Storyteller (2003) [Audio Fidelity]

Title: Donovan – Storyteller (2003) [Audio Fidelity]
Genre: Folk Rock
Format: SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

This set makes a nice introduction to Donovan’s peak years in the mid- to late ’60s, including both his Baroque flower power material for Epic Records like “Sunshine Superman” and the fairy tale funky “Hurdy Gurdy Man” as well as his earlier and more folky recordings for Pye Records (they were released in the U.S. by Hickory Records) like “Catch the Wind,” “Colours,” the stylistically prescient “Sunny Goodge Street,” and the beautiful “Turquoise” (which is as gorgeous as it is ridiculous). The sides included here are perfect examples of Donovan’s unique Woody Guthrie meets Timothy Leary style, and having both the Pye and Epic material side by side is a definite plus.

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1 min read

Dolly Parton – Little Sparrow (2001) [Reissue 2003] [SACD / Sugar Hill Records – SUG-SACD-3973]

Dolly Parton - Little Sparrow (2001) [Reissue 2003]

Title: Dolly Parton – Little Sparrow (2001) [Reissue 2003]
Genre: Country
Format: MCH SACD ISO + DSF DSD64 + Hi-Res FLAC

Though Dolly Parton had been exploring her musical roots to various degrees throughout the last half of the ’90s, her true return to form didn’t occur until the release of the Grammy-winning The Grass Is Blue, and its 2001 follow-up, Little Sparrow. Critics and fans alike agreed that the latter record was easily among the best Parton had ever recorded, and that was certainly saying something. One of the leading tracks on Little Sparrow was its love-wary title track, which kicked off an album that was filled with enough heartache-related songs to cover three separate country records. Parton’s lyrics use the familiar folk metaphor of symbolizing a bird as freedom and rebirth, and she looks to it wishing to escape a world that has crumbled due to a insincere lover. She grippingly moans, “Little sparrow, flies so high, feels no pain,” while fantasizing, “If I were a little sparrow, oe’r these mountains I would fly/I would find him, I would find him/look into his lying eye.” Besides simple escape, Parton also wants justification for her sorrow, singing “I would flutter all around him…I would ask him/why he let me love him then.” By the end of the song, however, she realizes she is merely a victim of an “evil cunning scheme,” leaving no other lesson to pass on to her “maidens fair and tender” other than “never trust the hearts of men, for they will crush you like a sparrow.” By this time, Parton has realized that even the sparrow is a victim of man’s evil, and it is only free until it meets up with a man, who will casually destroy it. It’s an ingenious metaphor that, along with a slow, aching melody, and a flawless production and performance, helps round out what is truly one of the best songs Dolly Parton has written in years.

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2 min read

Doc Severinsen – Rhapsody For Now! / Doc (1973/1972) [Reissue 2018] [SACD / Vocalion – CDLK 4609]

Doc Severinsen - Rhapsody For Now! / Doc (1973/1972) [Reissue 2018]

Title: Doc Severinsen – Rhapsody For Now! / Doc (1973/1972) [Reissue 2018]
Genre: Jazz
Format: MCH SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

Two groovy Doc Severinson albums – back to back on a single CD! Rhapsody For Now is kind of a cool concept album for Doc Severinsen – one that has him blowing amidst some larger suites arranged by Oliver Nelson, Harry Betts, and Tommy Newsom – each with a slightly different feel! The set starts out with the hip “Rhapsody For Now” – comprised of some cool 70s tunes like “Live & Let Die”, “Soul Makossa”, “Shambala”, and “Touch Me In The Morning” – done up in hip big band arrangements by Nelson that are totally great. The same groove follows in the shorter “Pictures”, arranged by Lenny Stack – which is a sweet funky number! “Rhapsody For Then” is next – but the “then” is really just the late 60s – as Severinson blows trumpet over big band versions of “California Dreamin”, “Look Of Love”, “A Song For You”, and “Sweet Caroline”. The set ends with straighter jazz on “I Remember Louis” – a suite of tunes associated with Louis Armstrong, but still given a pretty 70s twist in the arrangements. Doc is a set of upbeat, jazzy ditties all arranged by Dick Hyman – with a brightly swinging feel that’s a hip mix of late 60s mod and early 70s funk! Doc’s brassy sound is perfect for the setting – and he really polishes off the top of Hyman’s arrangements nicely – never stretching out too far in his solos, nor straying to far from the melodies – but always providing more than enough “voice” with his horn to deepen the cuts past standard instrumental modes. Titles include “Liberia”, “Theme From Portnoy’s Complaint”, “Living Free”, “Bonnie”, “The Godfather Waltz”, “Lucky Me”, “I Only Want To say”, and “Theme From Summer Of 42”.

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2 min read

Czech Philharmonic Orchestra – Czech Philharmonic Orchestra Plays Studio Ghibli Symphonic Collection (2005) [SACD / Studio Ghibli Records – TKGA-502]

Czech Philharmonic Orchestra - Czech Philharmonic Orchestra Plays Studio Ghibli Symphonic Collection (2005)

Title: Czech Philharmonic Orchestra – Czech Philharmonic Orchestra Plays Studio Ghibli Symphonic Collection (2005)
Genre: Classical
Format: DSF DSD64

The greatest songs from Studio Ghibli films performed by the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra. This is a super-audio CD hybrid disc.

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1 min read

Mischa Maisky, Lars Anders Tomter, Czech Philharmonic Orchestra, Vladimir Ashkenazy – Strauss: Don Quixote (2001/2009) [SACD / Exton – OVGL-00006]

Mischa Maisky, Lars Anders Tomter, Czech Philharmonic Orchestra, Vladimir Ashkenazy - Strauss: Don Quixote (2001/2009)

Title: Mischa Maisky, Lars Anders Tomter, Czech Philharmonic Orchestra, Vladimir Ashkenazy – Strauss: Don Quixote (2001/2009)
Genre: Classical
Format: SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

Mischa Maisky (cello), Lars Anders Tomter (viola) and Czech Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Vladimir Ashkenazy performs Richard Strauss’ “Don Quixote (Fantastic Variations on a Theme of Knightly Character)” & “Symphonic Poem “Death and Transfiguration” on this Japanese SACD. A pure DSD recording.

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1 min read

Cyrille Aimee & Diego Figueiredo – Just The Two Of Us (2011) [Japan 2016] [SACD / Venus Records – VHGD-167]

Cyrille Aimee & Diego Figueiredo - Just The Two Of Us (2011) [Japan 2016]

Title: Cyrille Aimee & Diego Figueiredo – Just The Two Of Us (2011) [Japan 2016]
Genre: Jazz
Format: SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

The young and talented duo of French-born singer Cyrille Aimée and Brazilian guitarist Diego Figueiredo is a perfect match! As a duo, they cover a large musical territory from jazz standards, pops, samba, French chanson and Cuban bolero to original compositions, Aimée’s expressive vocals and Figueiredo’s virtuosic guitar playing combine to create a unique aesthetic that is upbeat and very attractive.

Cyrille Aimée was born in a suburb of Paris to a French father and a Dominican mother, and began singing the so-called French Gypsy jazz. She moved to the United States in 2005 to attend a conservatory at State University of New York Purchase and studied under Pete Malinverni, Jon Faddis and Jimmy Greene. She won the Montreux Festival Jazz Voice Competition in 2007 and was a finalist in the prestigious Thelonious Monk Vocal Competition of 2010. Diego Figueiredo was born in the state of Sao Paulo, Brazil, and began playing the guitar professionally at age 15. He won a music contest in 2009 and obtained a scholarship at Berklee School of Music. Winner of numerous awards, he moved to New York in 2006.

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2 min read

Cyndi Lauper – She’s So Unusual (1983) [Reissue 2000] [SACD / Epic – ES 38930]

Cyndi Lauper - She’s So Unusual (1983) [Reissue 2000]

Title: Cyndi Lauper – She’s So Unusual (1983) [Reissue 2000]
Genre: Rock, Pop
Format: SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

She’s So Unusual is the debut studio album by American pop singer-songwriter Cyndi Lauper. Released in 1983 by Portrait Records, the album catapulted Lauper to stardom with such hits as “Girls Just Want to Have Fun”, “Time After Time”, “She Bop”, “All Through the Night”, and “Money Changes Everything”. All five singles reached the top thirty of the Billboard Hot 100, with first four singles of them becoming Top 5 hits. Lauper thus became the first female singer to have four top five singles on the Hot 100 from one album.

One of the great new wave/early MTV records, She’s So Unusual is a giddy mix of self-confidence, effervescent popcraft, unabashed sentimentality, subversiveness, and clever humor. In short, it’s a multifaceted portrait of a multifaceted talent, an artist that’s far more clever than her thin, deliberately girly voice would indicate. Then again, Lauper’s voice suits her musical persona, since its chirpiness adds depth, or reconfigures the songs, whether it’s the call to arms of “Girls Just Want to Have Fun” or the tearjerking “Time After Time.” Lauper is at her very best on the first side, all of which were singles or received airplay, and this collection of songs — “Money Changes Everything,” “Girls,” “When You Were Mine,” “Time,” “She Bop,” “All Through the Night” — is astonishing in its consistency, so strong that it makes the remaining tracks — all enjoyable, but rather pedestrian — charming by their association with songs so brilliantly alive. If Lauper couldn’t maintain this level of consistency, it’s because this captured her persona better than anyone could imagine — when a debut captures a personality so well, let alone a personality so tied to its time, the successive work can’t help but pale in comparison. Still, when it’s captured as brightly and brilliantly as it is here, it does result in a debut that retains its potency, long after its production seems a little dated.

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2 min read

Curtis Mayfield – Super Fly (1972) [MFSL 2018] [SACD / Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab – UDSACD 2204]

Curtis Mayfield - Super Fly (1972) [MFSL 2018]

Title: Curtis Mayfield – Super Fly (1972) [MFSL 2018]
Genre: Funk, Soul
Format: SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

Super Fly is the third studio album by American soul musician Curtis Mayfield. It was released as the soundtrack for the Blaxploitation film of the same name. Widely considered a classic of 1970s soul and funk music, Super Fly was a nearly immediate hit. This album is one of the few soundtracks to out-gross the film it accompanied. In 2003, the album was ranked number 69 on Rolling Stone magazine’s list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.

The choice of Curtis Mayfield to score the blaxploitation film Super Fly was an inspired one. No other artist in popular music knew so well, and expressed through his music so naturally, the shades of gray inherent in contemporary inner-city life. His debut solo album, 1970’s Curtis, had shown in vivid colors that the ’60s optimist (author of the civil-rights anthems “Keep On Pushing” and “People Get Ready”) had added a layer of subtlety to his material; appearing on the same LP as the positive and issue-oriented “Move On Up” was an apocalyptic piece of brimstone funk titled “(Don’t Worry) If There’s a Hell Below, We’re All Going to Go.” For Super Fly, Mayfield wisely avoids celebrating the wheeling-and-dealing themes present in the movie, or exploiting them, instead using each song to focus on a different aspect of what he saw as a plague on America’s streets. He also steers away from explicit moralizing; through his songs, Mayfield simply tells it like it is (for the characters in the film as in real life), with any lessons learned the result of his vibrant storytelling and knack of getting inside the heads of the characters. “Freddie’s Dead,” one of the album’s signature pieces, tells the story of one of the film’s main casualties, a good-hearted yet weak-willed man caught up in the life of a pusher, and devastatingly portrays the indifference of those who witness or hear about it. “Pusherman” masterfully uses the metaphor of drug dealer as businessman, with the drug game, by extension, just another way to make a living in a tough situation, while the title track equates hustling with gambling (“The game he plays he plays for keeps/hustlin’ times and ghetto streets/tryin’ ta get over”). Ironically, the sound of Super Fly positively overwhelmed its lyrical finesse. A melange of deep, dark grooves, trademarked wah-wah guitar, and stinging brass, Super Fly ignited an entire genre of music, the blaxploitation soundtrack, and influenced everyone from soul singers to television-music composers for decades to come. It stands alongside Saturday Night Fever and Never Mind the Bollocks Here’s the Sex Pistols as one of the most vivid touchstones of ’70s pop music.

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3 min read