Monday, August 18, 2025


Music Week

August archive (in progress).

Music: Current count 44701 [44663] rated (+38), 30 [36] unrated (-6).

I ended last week's post with long list of projects I hoped to get done last week. The only ones I've accomplished are "another newsletter" -- the piece there is titled Sheila Jordan (1928-2025) -- and a Loose Tabs (which ran to 277 links, 20669 words). Which is to say that once again I spent pretty much the whole week at the computer, hacking out long strings of words. Meanwhile, the house projects languished, and the "dinner for some very old friends" fell through. I don't think we even used the new car except for one grocery store trip.

I should do better this week. I did the first tiny bit of "setting up the website framework for the broader Notes on Everyday Life project": the website archive of the newsletters is here. It's currently hand-collated, but I can maintain that until some further inspiration comes along. The second part, which I've referred to as "the pile," will still take some design work, but I have a rough idea what I want to do there: each file will have a set of embedded markup, which can be used both by the PHP code that presents the file and by external programs, which can build up indexes and feed search tools. This doesn't have to be very fancy, but I have to think about index terms and trade-offs between simplified markup and extra work in output. I'm expecting at this point that I'll wind up using this software for several piles. It might even make sense to treat it as an open source software project, but right now I'm thinking that's Version 2, as making software reusable is a much bigger job than just getting something to work. (You'd think that this sort of thing must already exist somewhere, and it probably does, albeit with more complexity and more trouble than I need: one such example is Mediawiki, which was actually my original idea for such a tool.)

It only now occurs to me that the easiest pile to prepare data for might be music reviews. I've long been stymied by the idea of adapting an album-review database, like I used for Christgau, to my data, which has a slightly different granularity. (Apologies for not trying to explain what I mean by that.) But for practical purposes, it might suffice to just offer artist pages, each with an intro and all the relevant albums. As I already have most of the reviews sorted by artist, it wouldn't be hard to move them into the pile. The notebooks, on the other hand, will be more work, as they'll need to be sorted topically. (Perhaps AI could help there?)

Still, I hope to spend more time on the house projects this week. Those will pull me away from the computer, and result in fewer new records rated, but this is a slow season anyway. I'm surprised to find August half gone already. I need to start thinking about some preliminary jazz poll organization. I had hoped to use this time to restructure the website, but haven't come close to working on it. While the quality of what I do still seems satisfactory, the quantity has sunk considerably.

One thing I did take the time to do today was to vote in the DownBeat Readers Poll. I typically have zero effect there, and they don't publish ballots, so unless I publish mine, no one will notice or care who I vote for. I do, however, keep notes, so you can look them over. Main value to me comes from the album lists, as they serve as a checklist for my own listening. In this case, I've noted that I haven't heard 24 new jazz albums (18.8% of 128), 11 historic jazz albums (28.3% of 32), 36 blues albums (75.0% of 48), and 12 "beyond" albums (21.7% of 58). I'll work on whittling that down, but should also note that they didn't nominate tons of really good albums, and they nominated even more not-so-great ones.

I'm generally pleased with the newsletter response so far. I'm just starting to figure it out, and I'm trying to ease into it. I wasn't expecting to do a post on music, at least this early, but it suddenly seemed like the thing to do. Not sure what the next one will be, but I need to go back and re-read Loose Tabs and this one and see what comes to mind.


New records reviewed this week:

Gabriel Alegría Afro-Peruvian Sextet: El Muki (2025, Saponegro): Peruvian trumpet player, established his group in 2005, composed all the pieces. B+(***) [cd]

David Bailis: Running Through My Mind (2025, Create or Destroy): Guitarist, leads a quintet, some nice work by Caroline Davis (alto sax). B+(**) [cd]

Miki Berenyi Trio: Tripla (2025, Bella Union): British singer-songwriter, born in London, father Hungarian, mother Japanese, singer-guitarist in Lush (1987-96), reunited briefly 2015-16, had another short-lived band Piroshka, first album under her own name here, with Oliver Cherer (bass), Moose (guitar), and a drum machine. B+(***) [sp]

Ron Blake: Scratch Band (2021 [2023], 7Ten33 Productions): Saxophonist (tenor/baritone/soprano here), had three albums on Mack Avenue 2003-08, only a couple since (but many more side credits, including 1990s work with Roy Hargrove). Trio with Reuben Rogers (bass) and John Hadfield (drums). I remember the 1990s as a great decade for mainstream tenor saxophonists, full of warmth with a bit of gruff. I wouldn't call this a great example, but it fills the role and fits the need. B+(***) [cd]

Rory Block: Heavy on the Blues (2025, M.C.): Blues singer-guitarist, debut album 1975, 75 now, 37th album, writes some but recent albums have been covers/tributes -- this appears to be a mix. [PS: Christgau notes a "detailed booklet," which I haven't seen, but could motivate extra spins that might put this over. On the other hand, I moved on to Maria Muldaur, which sounded solid A on first play.] B+(***) [bc]

Erika de Casier: Lifetime (2025, Independent Jeep Music): Singer-songwriter, born in Portugal, parents from Belgium and Cape Verde, based in Copenhagen, fourth album since 2019, trip-hop (more or less). B+(**) [sp]

Ryan Davis & the Roadhouse Band: New Threats From the Soul (2025, Sophomore Lounge/Tough Love): Indiana band, second album, singer-songwriter plays guitar/keys/more, has worked his way through several previous bands (State Champion, Tropical Trash, Electric Drywall Band, Equipment Pointed Ankh). Stretches 7 songs to 57:06. [PS: I bump this up after my wife raved about it.] B+(***) [bc]

Mike Freeman Zona Vibe: Circles in a Yellow Room (2019 [2025], VOF): Vibes/marimba player, originally from Omaha, based in New York, seems to have a 1991 debut, another in 2000, third Zona Vibe album since 2011. Sparkling, with trumpet (Guido Gonzalez), tenor sax/bass clarinet (Jim Gailloreto), and a lot of Latin tinge. B+(***) [cd]

Dylan Hicks & Small Screens: Avian Field Recordings (2025, Soft Launch): Singer-songwriter, based in Minneapolis, interesting as such since his 1996 debut, has lately turned toward jazz, or "ambient and meditative instrumentals" as he describes the six interludes separating seven real songs here. I'm not that much into ambient/meditative, and the songs tend to slip past me -- I think I hear a bit of Randy Newman here and there, but not the sarcasm. Or maybe Dave Alvin? Still, working while this is on is a pleasure, and what little attention I do pay is amply rewarded. A- [cd]

Bonnie J Jensen: Rise (2024-25 [2025[, MGM Metropolitan Groove Merchants): Jazz singer-songwriter from Australia, fifth album. B+(*) [cd]

Sheila Jordan With Roni Ben-Hur & Harvie S: Portrait Now (2023 [2025], Dot Time): Jazz singer, got her start chasing Charlie Parker when he played Detroit, and after 1951 in New York, where she married his pianist, Duke Jordan, studied with Lennie Tristano and Charles Mingus. She always sung, but remained a well-kept secret, even after George Russell gave her a feature on his 1962 album, which led to a single Blue Note album, Portrait of Sheila (1963), and well into the 1970s she made her living doing secretarial work. I encountered her on Roswell Rudd's 1974 album Flexible Flyer (or maybe it was Rudd's 1973 Numatik Swing Band -- in either case it must have been 1978 when I caught up), and she's been my favorite jazz singer ever since. (One of the first things that attracted me to Francis Davis was how much he appreciated Jordan.) She cut a second album in 1975, when she was 47, and never again paused. In 1977 she hit on the idea of recording only backed with a bass -- Arild Andersen (one of Russell's now-famous students from his Scandinavian exile days) on Sheila -- a format she's often returned to, notably with Cameron Brown and Harvie S (né Swartz). Harvie returns here, along with guitarist Roni Ben-Hur. Title refers back to her first album, but to make a point of how far she's come. She's not quite in perfect voice, but her ability to accentuate just the right syllables, salvaging standards like "Willow Weep for Me," and still maneuver around a piece as tricky as "Relaxing at the Camarillo" -- and turn it into a riveting story, not just a piece of scat gymnastics -- is uncanny. Regrets after deaths are common. Mine is that she never had a producer who could just let the tape run as they fed her with songs, like Norman Granz with Ella Fitzgerald, or Rick Rubin with Johnny Cash. I imagine it would be like lobbing softballs at Ted Williams. A- [sp]

Maria Muldaur: One Hour Mama: The Blues of Victoria Spivey (2025, Nola Blue): She started in Jim Kweskin's Jug Band back in the 1960s, went solo with a hit song and album in 1973, leaned increasingly to blues in the 1990s, and found her calling with her 2001 Memphis Minnie tribute (Richland Woman Blues), which brought her to Blue Lu Barker (2018) and now to Spivey, whose 1926-36 singles provide the juiciest of these 12 songs, many salacious but ending with the grim "T.B. Blues." Spivey made a comeback in the early 1960s, so there's a personal connection. Also worth noting that Spivey spent a lot of time fronting real jazz bands, so the fit here with backup by Jim Dapogny and Tuba Skinny is natural. Elvin Bishop and Taj Mahal are duet partners. A [sp]

Jesika von Rabbit: Bunnywood Babylon (2025, Dionysus): Singer-songwriter Jessica Leischow, from Wisconsin, second album, formerly fronted the band Gram Rabbit (5 albums, 2006-12). B+(**) [sp]

Jonathan Richman: Only Frozen Sky Anyway (2025, Blue Arrow): Singer-songwriter from Massachusetts, founded the Modern Lovers, their John Cale-produced debut album was recorded in 1972 but didn't appear until the punk/new wave explosion in 1976. I loved that album, and also his 1983 Jonathan Sings!, but not much more, and haven't his later albums, of which there are 20 or more. This is not bad, but unlikely to stick with me. B+(*) [sp]

Ross Thorn: Ross Thorn Tries Fitting In (2025, Casa De Copas): Folkie singer-songwriter from Duluth, has a couple previous albums on Bandcamp but none in Discogs, no credits given but cover pic shows him with a banjo and there's a fair amount of guitar and fiddle in the background. B+(***) [bc]

Chris Wabich: 1978 (Steep) (2024 [2025], ADW): Drummer, albums since 2007, "featuring" names on the cover: Josh Nelson (piano), Dan Lutz (bass). Presumably his pieces. Very nice. B+(***) [cd]

Morgan Wade: The Party Is Over (Recovered) (2025, Ladylike/Sony): Country singer-songwriter, fifth album since 2018, all aces (though I'm having a little trouble focusing here). B+(***) [sp]

Recent reissues, compilations, and vault discoveries:

Lonnie Johnson With Elmer Snowden: Blues & Ballads (1960 [2025], Craft): Bluesman, famed as a guitarist, recorded from 1925 on, landed on Prestige's blues label as the folk blues revival was kicking up. He sings and plays electric here, with Snowden on acoustic guitar. (Snowden is better known as a banjo player and as a jazz bandleader, including of the Washingtonians before Duke Ellington took over.) Also with Wendell Marshall on bass. The blues, including a surprising "St. Louis Blules," are fine. I'm less sure of the ballads. B+(*) [sp]

Edna Martinez Presents Picó: Sound System Culture From the Colombian Caribbean (1950s-70s [2025], Strut): Colombian DJ, based in Berlin, curated these dance tracks -- I hear there's a "detailed booklet," but haven't seen it, leaving me with no more than impressions that the music dates from the 1950s to 1970s, and while played by Colombian sound systems called "picós," the music is more likely African (especially Congolese) than local. (One review also notes Jamaican soca, Ghanaian highlife, Arab disco, and various Caribbean forms, like jibaro, descarga, rhumba, mambo, and gwo ka, as well as salsa, cumbia, and champeta). A- [sp]

Old music:

Alberta Hunter/Lucille Hegamin/Victoria Spivey: Songs We Taught Your Mother (1961 [1962], Bluesville): Three blues singers from the 1920s, rediscovered during the big folk blues revival c. 1960. The trio had their early work compiled by Document into 4-5 CDs each. Hunter (1895-1984) recorded one more album in 1961, then staged a fairly major comeback in 1980 with Amtrak Blues. Hegamin (1894-1970) only appeared on one more album (A Basket Full of Blues, with Spivey and Buddy Tate). Spivey was a decade younger (1906-76), and more active at least through 1965. They take turns, reviving their old hits, backed by a mix of old jazz hands, including Willie "The Lion" Smith (piano), J.C. Higginbotham (trombone), and Zutty Singleton (drums). B+(***) [sp]

Peter Ind: Looking Out (1958-61 [1962], Wave): English bassist (1928-2021), first album, mostly with guitar (Al Schackman or Joe Puma), piano (Ronnie Ball or Sal Mosca), a couple cuts with drums (Dick Scott), one with vocalist Sheila Jordan -- probably her first recording, already distinctive. The rest is equally engaging, with the bass mixed prominently (turns out some of it was overdubbed). B+(**) [sp]

Peter Ind: Jazz Bass Baroque (1987 [1988], Wave): First side continues his bass overdub experiments, ranging from "Bach" to "Lush Life." Second side is a live set with Daryl Anger (violin) and Martin Taylor (guitar). B+(**) [sp]

Peter Ind: Looking Out/Jazz Bass Baroque (1958-87 [1999], Wave): Two (or effectively three) albums crammed together, each interesting, together adds up to a nice overview. B+(**) [sp]

Lonnie Johnson With Victoria Spivey: Idle Hours (1961, Bluesville): Major blues singer-guitarist (1899-1970), made 130 recordings for Okeh 1925-32, still regarded as classics (see Steppin' on the Blues, 58 on Robert Santelli's blues albums list), including some duets with Spivey. He continued to work steady, including some time in dixieland bands, but by 1960 he was recording for Prestige's blues subsidiary. Her early string ended in 1936, but came back for this reunion. B+(**) [sp]

Sheila Jordan/Mark Murphy: One for Junior (1991 [1993], Muse): Two bebop singers, distinctive voices, fast dynamics, quick to sling the scat. I've always adored her, but I've never cared for what little I've heard by him. Title refers to the late painter Helen Mayer (aka Junior Morrow). Backed by Kenny Barron (piano), Harvie S (bass), and Ben Riley (drums), with Bill Mays (piano/synth) on two tracks. She's terrific, of course. He's, well, pretty decent. B+(**) [yt]

Sheila Jordan/Jose Carra/Bori Albero: En La Fundación Valparaiso (2018 [2024], Clasijazz): Part of a Spanish tour just shy of her 90th birthday, from three sets in Mojácar, a small town on the Mediterranean coast east of Granada, backed by local piano and bass (although she cites Cameron Brown as her bassist in "Sheila's Blues"). B+(***) [sp]

Stephan Kramer: Thank You Sheila (2018, House Master): German guitarist, seems to be his only album, cover adds: "with Chris Lachotta and Alexander Hoetzinger feat. Sheila Jordan." Recorded live in Munich, no date given, with Jordan entering on the second cut, and it's her record from then on out. Choice cut: "Lady Be Good" (on Ella Fitzgerald). Ends with a very nice guitar piece. B+(***) [sp]

Steve Kuhn & Toshiko Akiyoshi: Country and Western Sound of Jazz Pianos (1963, Dauntless): Two pianists, Kuhn's first album, Akiyoshi has credits back to 1954, most of the c&w standards ("Trouble in Mind," "Down in the Valley," "Along the Navajo Trail," etc.) not sounding all that country, with sparkling pianos backed by guitar (Barry Galbraith), bass (Dave Izenson/John Neves), and drums (Pete LaRoca). B+(*) [sp]

Steve Kuhn/Gary McFarland: The October Suite (1966 [1967], Impulse): Pianist, and composer/conductor, with Ron Carter (bass) and Marty Morell (drums), plus strings on the first side, woodwinds on the second. McFarland (1933-71) played vibraphone early on, led and/or produced/arranged albums from 1961 on, many with titles like Soft Samba and Big Band Bossa Nova (for Stan Getz). B+(*) [sp]

Steve Kuhn Quartet: Last Year's Waltz (1981 [1982], ECM): Piano trio with Harvie S (bass) and Bob Moses (drums), plus singer Sheila Jordan, a group listed on their previous (1980) album as Steve Kuhn/Sheila Jordan Band. Live at Fat Tuesday's. Starts with three Kuhn originals, which while exciting enough don't give Jordan much to work with. Then we get an 8:19 "I Remember You" which is just extraordinary. Second side starts with a jaunty piece by the bassist, and two more by Kuhn, before Jordan again gets to feast on covers (although don't miss Kuhn's detonation of Monk). A- [sp]

Roswell Rudd/Steve Lacy/Sheila Jordan: Blown Bone (1967-76 [1979], Philips): Trombonist, one stray track from a 1967 session, the rest from two sets in 1976 with Lacy (soprano sax), bass (Wilbur Little), drums (Paul Motian), The first of those 1976 sets adds Enrico Rava (trumpet), plus singer Jordan on two tracks. The other adds electric piano (Patti Brown), clarinet/soprano sax (Kenny Davern), and tenor sax (Tyrone Washington), with Louisiana Red singing a blues. B+(***) [yt]

Victoria Spivey: Complete Recorded Works in Chronological Order: Volume 1 (11 May 1926 to 31 October 1927) (1926-27 [1995], Document): One of the classic female blues singer from the 1920s, recorded singles for Okeh 1926-28 (23 tracks here, plus more on Volume 2), with other labels up to 1937 (4 CDs today in this series). As is often the case for this label, lots of surface noise from the source 78s. But a cleaned up selection could be worth it. B+(**) [sp]

Victoria Spivey: Complete Recorded Works in Chronological Order: Volume 2 (31 October 1927 to 24 September 1929) (1927-29 [1995], Document): Probably the rest of her Okeh singles -- the Victors start later in 1929 -- including duos with Lonnie Johnson and some tracks with jazz groups led by Clarence Williams and Henry Allen. Sound still dubious, but where it clears up some terrific music ensues -- especially with Allen's band riffing. B+(***) [sp]

Victoria Spivey: Complete Recorded Works in Chronological Order: Volume 3 (1 October 1929 to 7 July 1936) (1929-36 [1995], Document): She recorded for Victor in 1930, and Brunswick in 1931. Not sure what else there is before some 1936 Decca sides (this ends with "T.B.'s Got Me Blues"), but this works in pieces with a few other leaders. Sound's better, especially on the closing jazz band sides. A- [sp]

Victoria Spivey: Complete Recorded Works in Chronological Order: Volume 4 (30 August 1936 to 21 July 1937) (1936-37 [1995], Document): This seems to be the end of her early recordings, on Vocalion (some as Jane Lucas), stretched to 22 tracks with 5 extra takes. She continued performing up to 1951, often in music films and stage shows, but I'm not seeing any recordings until 1961, when Bluesville brought her back for several albums. She's become a remarkably poised singer, as songs you don't need her for like "Trouble in Mind" prove, and the bands swing. She clearly deserves a proper compilation. B+(***) [sp]

Victoria Spivey With Lonnie Johnson: Woman Blues! (1962, Bluesville): She gets the leads this time, and plays piano, while he plays guitar, and sings some, mostly seeming superfluous. B+(**) [sp]

Christian Stock Trio & Sheila Jordan & Adrian Mears: Straight Ahead (2000, YVP): German bassist, side-credits back to 1982 but not a lot of them, found himself leading a trio here with Karel Růžička (piano) and Walter Bittner (drums). Twelve tracks, with the singer in on four ("Autumn in New York," "Badbados," "Sail Away," and "Song of Joy"), the trombonist on three others. Nice pieces, limited interest. B+(*) [sp]

Aki Takase: ABC (1982, Union Jazz): Japanese pianist, started playing in US in 1978, moved to Berlin in 1988, where she married another notable pianist, Alexander von Schlippenbach. She recorded this early album in New York, with Cecil McBee (bass), Bob Moses (drums). Sheila Jordan sings to open, but after that the only voice is a bit of shading, if that. B+(**) [yt]


Unpacking: Found in the mail last week:

  • Maria Muldaur: One Hour Mama: The Blues of Victoria Spivey (Nola Blue) [07-21]
  • Aruán Ortiz: Créole Renaissance (Intakt) [08-29]
  • Carlos "Zingaro"/João Madeira: Arcada Pendular (4DaRecord) [07-11]

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