专辑英文名: Jazz for a Rainy Afternoon
专辑中文名: 雨后爵士
歌手: Various Artist
音乐风格: 爵士
资源格式: FLAC
版本: [Disc 1]
发行时间: 1998年03月17日
地区: 美国
语言: 英语
简介:

专辑介绍:
。媲美销售冠军《爵色夜》、《爵士夜》的爵士系列最新作
。葛莱美提名爵士美声卡拉汉伯特领衔,漫步雨中的恬淡忧鬱
。【我们来跳舞】电影主题曲…21首旧曲新唱的雨后沉淀
点点雨丝从天空飘下,映著昏黄的灯光多么美丽。衬托忧鬱情绪的爵士情歌,此时缓缓响起。在女伶们细腻美声的陪伴下,低头望见潮湿的地面,感伤而恬淡的心情,染绘著閒适的美好。媲美《爵色夜》、《爵士夜》、《爵色午后》的爵士系列最新作,《雨后爵士》收录了21首全球当代顶尖爵士歌手精心酝酿的女伶美声,让你重新感受雨后的沉淀心情,在忙碌的生活中,停下脚步遁入爵士的世界里…
The thematic collections of mood music issued by 32 Jazz are drawn from fine jazz records of the past few decades, and they often include performances of serene beauty.
Jazz for a Rainy Afternoon tends toward moody, minor-key tunes, some of them touched by an inner luminosity. Pianists Charles Brown and Hank Jones take very different approaches to The lonious Monk's best known ballads--"Round Midnight" and "Ruby My Dear"--while there's a subtle, burnished glory in the sounds of trumpeters Wallace Roney, Warren Vache, and Woody Shaw. Guitarist Jimmy Ponder's solo version of "Tribute to a Rose" has a special intimacy, and saxophonist Houston Person and bassist Ron Carter have a thoughtful musical conversation on "Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most."
--Adam Rains
引用
Chill out. Calm down. Mellow. Put those financial statements in the desk drawer, throw another log on the fire, curl up on the sofa and listen to this compilation. Producer Joel
Dorn figured these reissued items would have that effect on listeners, and they do.
Warren Vache's portrayal of "I Can't Get Started," with piano trio, lifts his cornet voice high above your head. "St. Louis Blues" comes from the quintet of vibraphonist Johnny Lytle, guitarist Melvin Sparks, organist David Braham and bass & drums. Sonny Criss, Dolo Coker, bassist Larry Gales and drummer Jimmie Smith deliver "My Ideal." Their alto saxophone and piano embellishments make for a lovely ballad.
Woody Shaw's quintet with trombonist Steve Turre, pianist Kirk Lightsey, bassist Ray Drummond and drummer Carl Allen perform "Imagination" with the spotlight lingering on Shaw's pleasant trumpet tone. David "Fathead" Newman's "Everything Must Change" isn't as sonorous as most of the others, Houston Person's "Talk of the Town" is a bit too forceful, and Charles Brown's piano on " `Round Midnight" is just a little too percussive.
However, the background function of the album takes care of everything, as one tune melts into the next. "Blue In Green" comes from the quintet of trumpeter Wallace Roney, tenor saxophonist Gary Thomas, pianist Mulgrew Miller, bassist Charnett Moffett, and drummer Tony Williams in a Miles Davis tribute. The lonious Monk's "Ruby My Dear" is presented by pianist Hank Jones with bassist George Duvivier and drummer Ben Riley. They court this venerable acquaintance with soft brushes over the drum heads and watery melodic figures that run up and down the keyboard. 32 Jazz has released a similar compilation called Jazz For The Quiet Times. I've not yet had a chance to sit down and listen to that one, but hances are it'll be perfect for that next rainy day.
By Jim Santella
