Showing posts with label Ithamara Koorax. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ithamara Koorax. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 28, 2023

ITHAMARA KOORAX – Ithamara Koorax Sings The Luiz Bonfá Songbook + Bossa Nova Meets Drum 'N' Bass + Cry Me A River + Obrigado Dom Um Romão (1996-2009) 4 Albums | WV / Mp3

1996 • Ithamara Koorax & Luiz Bonfá – Ithamara Koorax Sings The Luiz Bonfá Songbook (Paddle Wheel – KICP 503) @Mp320k
1998 • Ithamara Koorax – Bossa Nova Meets Drum 'N' Bass (Paddle Wheel – KICP 665) WV
2001 • Ithamara Koorax – Cry Me A River (HUKS MUSIC – DBKHD 0062) @Mp320k
2009 • Ithamara Koorax & Peter Scharli Trio – Obrigado Dom Um Romão (TCB Records – TCB 27702) Mp320k

 

Sunday, June 25, 2023

ITHAMARA KOORAX – Serenade in Blue (1995) FLAC (tracks), lossless

When the 20th Century was coming to a close Ithamara Koorax was a major name in Brazilian pop-jazz but didn't have any CDs out in the United States. That changed in 2000, when Fantasy licensed Serenade in Blue from Jazz Station and put it out on Milestone in the United States. Koorax is from Rio de Janeiro, and her Rio upbringing is evident throughout this excellent pop-jazz effort (which was recorded in 1997 and 1998). Whether she's turning her attention to Jorge Ben's "Mas Que Nada," Ary Barroso's "Brazil," Henry Mancini's "Moon River," or the French pop classic "A Man and a Woman" ("Un Homme et Une Femme" in French), Rio's sensuous, caressing influence asserts itself. Koorax, to her credit, has no problem singing convincingly in three languages: Portuguese, English, and French. When Koorax sings in English on "The Shadow of Your Smile" and "Moon River," she does so with a Brazilian accent. But her English is excellent, and the carioca (Rio native) is easy to understand -- if anything, her accent is a major asset because it's quite charming. Serenade in Blue makes one hope that a lot more Koorax albums will become available in North America. Alex Henderson  
Tracklist + Credits :


Friday, June 23, 2023

ITHAMARA KOORAX – Rio Vermelho (1995) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Any American who is seriously into Brazilian music knows that he/she cannot rely on U.S. labels alone; it is important to look for CDs that come out on Brazilian labels but make it to the U.S. as imports. Ithamara Koorax is a perfect example of a Brazilian pop-jazz vocalist who was well-known in Brazil before she had any North American releases. Although she didn't have anything out in the U.S. until Fantasy licensed Serenade in Blue from Brazil's Jazz Station label in 2000, she had provided several excellent albums for Brazilian and Japanese labels in the '90s. One of them was 1995's Rio Vermelho, which came out on Imagem in Brazil and Paddle Wheel in Japan. Emphasizing ballads, this pop-jazz effort is a fine example of Brazilian torch singing -- Rio Vermelho is mood music with a very Rio de Janeiro-ish sound. Rio de Janeiro, in fact, is where percussionist/arranger Arnaldo DeSouteiro produced this CD. Saying that Rio Vermelho is mood music isn't saying that Koorax's performances should fade into the background quietly -- she brings so much soul, depth, and emotion to the lyrics (most of them in Portuguese) that listeners would be doing themselves a disservice if they didn't turn up the volume and pay very close attention. And all of the songs that Koorax picks are perfect for a torch album, including Antonio Carlos Jobim's "É Preciso Dizer Adeus," the title track (a Milton Nascimento gem), and Arthur Hamilton's "Cry Me a River." The latter is one of only two English-language performances on this CD; the other is Luiz Bonfá's "Empty Glass," which also appears on Koorax's superb Bonfá tribute, Almost in Love: Ithamara Koorax Sings Luiz Bonfá. But whether she is singing in Portuguese or English, Rio Vermelho is a first-rate torch album. Alex Henderson  
Tracklist + Credits :

Friday, June 16, 2023

ITHAMARA KOORAX - Love Dance : The Ballad Album (2003) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

 

 Although Ithamara Koorax is a major star in Brazil and has more than a few albums available in that country, Love Dance: The Ballad Album is only her second U.S. release (and her second album for Milestone/Fantasy). The Brazilian singer has no problem handling uptempo material, but she favors a totally romantic setting on the ballad-oriented Love Dance. The interesting thing is that Koorax manages to maintain a torchy mood while being unpredictable; in terms of material, she is impressively far-reaching. Koorax sings in three different languages (Portuguese, English, and Spanish), and her choices range from Brazilian songs (including Ivan Lins' "Love Dance" and Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Amparo") to an American standard ("April in Paris") to a well-known Spanish-language bolero (Luis Demetrio's "La Puerta"). It should be noted that Koorax's husband Arnaldo DeSouteiro produced this CD in 2000 and 2002 in five countries: Brazil, the U.S., Germany, England, and Monaco. And by doing so, he gives Koorax a chance to interact with a variety of musicians, who range from the late Brazilian icon Luiz Bonfá (acoustic guitar) on "April in Paris" to German pianist Jürgen Friedrich on Claus Ogerman's "I Loved You" to Cuban pianist Gonzalo Rubalcaba on "Amparo" and "La Puerta." Meanwhile, British fusion heavyweight John McLaughlin plays electric guitar on Bonfá's "Man Alone," and his encounter with Koorax is historic because he had never backed a vocalist before. Some people will complain about the absence of uptempo performances, but then, Love Dance is exactly what it's meant to be: a torch song/mood music CD. And even though romantic albums of jazz or jazz-influenced pop can easily become predictable -- especially when the artist records overdone Tin Pan Alley standards exclusively -- Koorax and DeSouteiro manage to keep us guessing on this fine addition to her catalog. Alex Henderson  
Tracklist:
1 Ligia  5:13
Acoustic Bass – Sergio Barroso
Arranged By – Arnaldo DeSouteiro
Clarinet – Juarez Araujo
Composed By – Antonio Carlos Jobim
Drums – João Palma
Electric Piano – José Roberto Bertrami
Percussion – Dom Um Romao
Vocals – Ithamara Koorax
2 I Loved You 2:16
Arranged By – Claus Ogerman
Composed By – Claus Ogerman, Alexander Pushkin
Concert Grand Piano – Jürgen Friedrich
Vocals – Ithamara Koorax
3 Love Dance 7:20
Arranged By – José Roberto Bertrami
Backing Band – Azymuth
Composed By – Gilson Peranzzetta, Ivan Lins, Paul Williams 
Drums – Ivan Conti
Electric Bass – Alex Malheiros
Electric Piano – José Roberto Bertrami
Percussion – Sidinho Moreira
Vocals – Ithamara Koorax
4 La Puerta 4:15
Composed By – Luis Demetrio
Concert Grand Piano – Gonzalo Rubalcaba
Vocals – Ithamara Koorax
5 Man Alone 9:52
Acoustic Guitar – Luiz Bonfá
Arranged By, Concert Grand Piano – Nelson Angelo
Composed By – Luiz Bonfá, Stanley J. Gelber
Concert Flute – José Carlos 
Drums – João Palma
Electric Bass – Jorjão Carvalho
Electric Guitar – John McLaughlin
Flute – José Carlos Machado Ramos
Percussion – Sidinho Moreira
Soprano Saxophone – Jose Carlos Bigorna
Vocals – Ithamara Koorax
6 Amparo 5:38
Composed By – Antonio Carlos Jobim, Chico Buarque, Vinicius De Moraes
Concert Grand Piano – Gonzalo Rubalcaba
Vocals – Ithamara Koorax
7 Someday 4:20
Acoustic Bass – Manuel Gusmao
Composed By, Arranged By, Keyboards – Mario Castro Neves
Drums – Cesar Machado
Electric Bass, Chapman Stick – Jorge Pescara
Percussion – Sidinho Moreira
Vocals – Ithamara Koorax
8 Flame 4:58
Composed By – Paulo Sérgio Valle
Composed By, Arranged By, Keyboards – Marcos Valle
Vocals – Ithamara Koorax
9 April In Paris 2:11
Acoustic Guitar – Luiz Bonfá
Composed By – E.Y. Harburg, Vernon Duke
Vocals – Ithamara Koorax
10 Blauauge 7:29
Composed By – Almut Kresse
Composed By, Concert Grand Piano – Jürgen Friedrich
Vocals – Ithamara Koorax

Tuesday, June 13, 2023

ITHAMARA KOORAX ft. DOM UM ROMÂO, RAUL DE SOUZA, AZIMUTH, THIAGO DE MELLO, GONZALO RUBALCABA – Brazilian Butterfly (2006) Mp3

It took three long years to record Brazilian Butterfly, by Rio de Janeiro vocalist Ithamara Koorax. It was worth the wait. A look at the cast on this enigmatic set reveals a cast of all-stars. That said, the treasure is bittersweet on at least one level. Three of Brazil's greatest musicians -- and integral parts of this album -- all passed away after these sessions were recorded: the inimitable drummer and percussionist Dom Um Romão, bassist Manuel Gusmão, and percussionist Eloir de Moraes. The core band on most of these sides includes Romão, electric pianist and keyboardist Paula Faour, and other electric bassist Jorge Pescara and/or acoustic and arco bassist Gusmão. That said, there are a slew of guests on the record as well, including Azymuth, Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Ron Carter, Nelson Ângelo, Raul de Souza, Thiago de Mello, José Carlos "Bigorna" Ramos, the Francesco Gazzara Group on one cut, and numerous others. Produced by Arnaldo DeSouteiro, who also did many of the album's arrangements and played percussion on some tracks, the set was recorded live in Brazil with the exception of "Butterfly," which was cut in Italy with Gazzara's group. According to DeSouteiro, Dom Um Romão did the only overdubs, layering percussion on the tracks where he also played drums, and on the title track where Koorax fronted Gazzara's band in Italy.

Musically, this is the showcase for Koorax's voice that fans have been waiting for, and it awaits a wider audience who need only to hear this once to be enthralled and entranced by its sophistication and heart. She is a diverse, adventurous, and utterly gifted vocalist who cannot be reined in by the stereotypical categorization of what the current generation calls a "female jazz singer." Here she digs deep into Brazilian and Latin and even African and Cuban folk forms, modern and classic samba, electric jazz, vocalese, and more -- anything to allow the song itself to come through. Does that make Brazilian Butterfly a fusion record? Yes, but not any kind of fusion outing you've ever heard. People who need categories will call this "world fusion". But in truth, this set creates something new and should perhaps be called "organic jazz fusion", or "new Brazil." There are so many elements woven into a tapestry so colorful, so brilliantly melodic, harmonically adventurous and multi-textured, it cannot be contained in any preset box. That said it has a very classic feel to it. One can hear traces of the early CTI sound here, but that is in the elegance, grace, and soulfulness of the grooves rather than in the musical style, for which there is no equivalent. The production and sound quality of this disc are simply gorgeous. From the opening track, the mysterious ambience that is Dorival Caymmi's "O Vento" beckons. Ramos' flute and Romão's shimmering cymbals introduce it, along with percussion by DeSouteiro and de Moraes; the listener can hear the spacious tantalizing strangeness in this mix. Koorax begins singing languidly, as if from a distance, seamlessly bridging the instruments and a creating certain lushness even before the rest of the band enters. Over eight minutes in length, there are fine solos by Faour and Ramos before Koorax and Romão trade up call-and-response vocal improvisation. (Romão is not a singer, but he was such a genius that his voice was as skilled a percussive instrument as his hands and feet.) Koorax engages him in this solo and even gets guttural; it is startling and entrancing, and could have gone on for another five minutes it's so inventive. It is followed by "Escravos de Jó," with de Moraes doing his own vocal improvisation and rap as Koorax digs deep into a modally constructed, almost droning samba melody. Carlos Fuchs adds his acoustic piano to the electric one by Faour, and the layered percussion by Koorax, de Moraes, Romão, and DeSouteiro give it an almost hallucinatory feel. The funky fretless bassline and hi hat work with de Souza's trombone on Romão's "Amor em Jacumã" makes it an utterly contemporary and forward-looking jazz tune. Here is where DeSouteiro evokes the beautiful arrangements of the early CTI groove tunes. Rubalcaba's taut piano solo offers a knotty and funky groove even in counterpoint with the bassline and Ângelo's shimmering, acoustic guitar work as Romão lays down breaks against a spacious yet kinetic four-piece percussion section! Koorax's voice rises and glides above that intimidating group with ease. Her voice is as rhythmic as Romão's kit. She phrases to suit the song: her chameleon-like quality is what gives her a unique identity. She doesn't play the fragile beauty on these tracks, she gets into the vamps and grooves as much as the players do: check her wailing soprano solo near the end of this cut for evidence of her ability to solo with any instrumentalist. The band pushes a steady, funky, airy, Latin-cum-samba groove behind her.

Each track on Brazilian Butterfly uncovers a new mystery, reveals a hidden treasure, proving, of course, that Koorax is virtually limitless in her abilities. The interplay between Romão and Faour's keyboards and Pescara's bass on "Lamento Negro" puts it all in high gear. Romão gives voice to his approval and Koorax is so heavy and deep in the cut that she's downright funky, but Brazilian funky, which means of course that it isn't only about chop, it's about chops in the song. Her reading of Herbie Hancock's "Butterfly" is a completely new interpretation. Arranged by and co-produced by Gazzara in Italy, his utterly haunting nylon string guitar and Rhodes and acoustic piano work present this beautiful jazz tune in an almost ethereal way. His manner of adorning Koorax's voice is not as strident as what is heard on the rest of the recording, but that said it serves a wonderful purpose in showcasing her voice in a context she is very familiar with as a wonderful singer of ballads. The Italian, Spanish, and soul touches he and his band play underneath her interpreting of those lyrics allows her to inhabit the song fully and, perhaps even Hancock would agree, make it her own. This is only the first half of the recording and it's already better than any vocal record issued in 2006.

The latter half is the same wondrous, seamless, classy yet gritty amalgam of seemingly disparate elements that work marvelously as a whole: there are fine solos by many performers on this set, as Koorax and DeSouteiro allow plenty of room for improvisation as long as it fits the songs like a glove. But the real treasure here -- and one that unfortunately not many Americans have had the real pleasure of encountering -- is her voice. Her confidence is legion. If all you ever heard from this disc was Geraldo Vandré's "Fica Mal com Deus," with its driving rhythms and her voice punching right through them to add yet another layer to them, you'd be left dumbstruck. The song is outstanding. Her chant-like vocal, which introduces "Noite de Temporal," another of the three tunes here by Caymmi, offers more of that "world music" vibe to the mix, but in the best possible manner: the fretless and arco basses playing off one another, the tribal drums and double percussion of DeSouteiro and Sidinho Moreira in the extended intro are deceptive, because as Faour's keyboards enter, this sounds like an ancient song being brought into the new world, Killer reggae piano, funk electric bass, bowed classical folk lines, and Koorax's voice coming out of the ether of antiquity and into the flesh in the present is worth the price of admission alone. The album's final track, "Frenético," is very special since it is a duet. Koorax and de Moraes engage in a work of pure improvisation with only their voices and percussion instruments. De Moraes does his own awesome and effective take on scat as Koorax uses her voice as an effect, a percussion instrument with chatters, skitters, swoops, and washes of guttural onomatopoeia. It's almost nine minutes long and goes by in a flash; it's a hell of a way to close what is already your greatest recording, stamping it so individually it becomes almost iconoclastic. It cannot be touched. On Brazilian Butterfly, Koorax has set a new bar for jazz vocalists who come after her. As she does, they will need to embody many traditions and musical histories, root them in the tradition, and be able to comfortably combine as well improvise seamlessly with and between them. Thus far, Brazilian Butterfly is the jewel in Koorax's crown and a watermark in the 21st century, not only for Brazilian jazz, but for jazz and world music as a whole. Thom Jurek  
Tracklist + Credits :

ITHAMARA KOORAX & JUAREZ MOREIRA – Bim Bom : The Complete João Gilberto Songbook (2009) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Brazil is unusually rich in excellent singers, but even in a crowded field of brilliant vocalists, Ithamara Koorax stands out (and not only because she has the most awesome name in all of jazz). In a way, this album comes as something of a surprise -- João Gilberto is such an important name in Brazilian music that it's difficult to believe that either his entire compositional output can fit on a single disc, or that a "songbook" project like this has never been attempted. But both actually seem to be the case, and it's hard to imagine a better pair to take on the project than Koorax and the equally gifted guitarist Juarez Moreira. Both the singing and the playing are consistently brilliant throughout the program -- while the guitar instrumental "An Embrace to Bonfá" is pretty but unexceptional, the songs are all gems, from the sweet and tender "Hô-Bá-Lá-Lá" to the nimbly jazzy "Bim Bom," and from the lightly dancing "Minha Saudade" to the simple and heartbreakingly beautiful "Undiu." The latter exemplifies one of Gilberto's interesting tendencies -- writing songs composed of either a single word ("Undiu") or no words at all, only vocalese ("Valsa (Bebel)"). Absolutely wonderful. Rick Anderson  
Tracklist + Credits :

ITHAMARA KOORAX – Autumn In New York + Tributo à Stellinha Egg (2004-2007) Two Albums | 2CD | Mp3

ITHAMARA KOORAX – Autumn In New York
Ithamara Koorax has a beautiful voice and a wide range. She often emphasizes long tones on this set, picking the best note for the right moment and holding it. The music alternates between heartfelt slow ballads and a more medium-tempo pace, with Koorax's haunting voice usually in the forefront. The trio is excellent, pianist Jurgen Friedrich has many short solos, and the repertoire is strong. This Japanese release has an alternate version of Jobim's "You Were Born to Be Mine" at the set's conclusion. Highlights include a slow "I Fall in Love Too Easily," the happy "Walking Down the Street," Dave Brubeck's "Unisphere," and a coolly emotional "Goodbye." Ithamara Koorax deserves to be much better known, for she has a sound of her own. Scott Yanow
Tracklist + Credits :

ITHAMARA KOORAX – Tributo à Stellinha Egg

ITHAMARA KOORAX – My Favorite Things (Live In Asia) Áudio DVD (2010) Mp3

Tracklist + Credits :