Saturday, June 26, 2010

The 50 Guitars of Tommy Garrett - Take you to Hawaii



Liner Notes:
Hawaii is one of those fun sun places which everybody has heard of but comparatively few get the chance to visit. It’s rather a long way away in the blue Pacific and nobody in Britain has yet managed to organise a conveniently priced package holiday deal to enable we sun-starved Britons to sample its sun sea and sand.
We all know about its existence of course lots of us were aware of it via soothing and sultry recordings of Hawaiian music featuring those seductively wailing steel guitars and strumming ukeleles long before we made the TV acquaintance of Steve McGarrett and the other sleuths of Hawaii 5-0. Music can be totally expressive and it certainly is in the case of the Hawaiian Islands Lulling languorous sometimes syncopated but always evocative of palm trees gently swaying in a light breeze off an azure sea and miles of golden sand and tropical temperatures. The eight Hawaiian Islands containing people are Hawaii, Maui, Molokai, Lanai, Kahoolawe, Oahu, Kauai and Niihau. They grow sugar cane and pineapples amongst other pleasant sun drenched things and they entertain and charm immense numbers of tourist halidaymakers each year. Captain Cook (British you know) was the first European officially acknowledged to have visited those shares in 1778. Although the Spaniards reckoned they were there briefly at least two hundred years before, Captain Cook didn’t really get the right tourist treatment because when he resigned to those sunny shares in 1779 he got involved in a scuffle with the hitherto friendly natives who believed him to be an incarnation of their god Lono on his first visit. The second time around was not so idyllic and Captain Cook died thereon the beach the first of a considerable number of white people from afar to be eliminated by the indigenous Polynesians. American missionaries pacified the Islands a hundred years and more ago and The Hawaiian War Chant is really the last relic of warlike character of a basically friendly people some of whom settled in New Zealand a long time ago and are known as Maoris. They took to the guitar and gave it a special character and style of their own as well as developing the smaller ukelele in its support. This LP presents the best known tunes that have come out of the Islands played by a famous group of Californian guitarists who have built up a formidable reputation on record over recent years under the skilful direction of Tommy "Snuff" Garrett one of Americas leading record producers.

The 50 Guitars treat the songs of the Islands in authentically mellow style drawing forth the full melodic charm and remembering the Maori element with Now Is The Hour. Also present is the beautiful Hawaiian Wedding Song, the evocative Lovely Hula Hands referring to the enticingly graceful matrons of the pretty wahines or Hawaiian girls who speak a language with their hands as well as their hips when dancing and the famous song of farewell Aloha Oe believed to have been written by Queen Liliukalani the last ruler of the Hawaiian Islands before they went under American administration. It's another winner by the 50 Guitars and redolent of sun sand and surf.
NIGEL HUNTER
Arranger Hank Levine
Produced by Tommy "Snuff" Garrett
Art Direction Pierre Tubbs

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Golden Guitar

The Royal Guitar Ensemble

Sunday, May 30, 2010

The Classical Guitars of Los Indios Tabajaras



Liner Notes:


The Classical Guitars of Los Indios Tabajaras
Produced by Herman Diaz, Jr.

SIDE A
Valse in A Minor, Op. 34. No. 2 (Chopin) 4:46
Für Elise (Bagatelle in A Minor) (Beethoven) 3:03
Recuerdos de Ia Alhambra (Tarrega) 5:00
Hora Staccato (Dinicu-Heifetz) 2:07

SIDE B
Valse in A-Fiat, Op. 69, No. 1 (Chopin) 3:40
La Ronde des Lutins (Antonio Bazzini) 6:50
Serenata Española (Joaquim Malats) 2:56
Romance de Amor (Vincente Gomez) 1:55

Los Indios Tabajaras:
“Innovators with the Souls of True Musicians”

“Classical guitar” may be a relatively new phenomenon in the history of this very folksy, very popular, very romantic instrument. But there are two old hands who have breathed even newer life into it.
The famous pair: Los Indios Tabajaras, two Brazilian brothers who once knew nothing about classical music and who, in fact, had to make sure their first guitar - an abandoned one they found near home on a jungle path - was not a strange weapon. It wasn’t long before they figured out what it was. Magic in their hands.
Like many a great guitarist, Natalicio and Antenor Lima are self-taught (there were few music professors in the rain forest). But they didn’t stop with simply learning to conquer their new-found strings. Nor did they stop with their own country’s music. Nato and Tenor knew there was a world out there. They knew there was music in it. And they set out to find it, first on foot and then through sheer determination.
It was on to Mexico, on to Europe, and on to the discovery of Western music. And to the discovery of the kind of dedication that has made Los Indios Tabajaras unique in today’s music world.
They heard piano music, and they decided to fashion the kind of guitar that could play all the notes a piano could play - even though they had to build it themselves. They heard classical music, they felt its pulse, and it wasn’t long before Chopin, Beethoven and the great Latin and Romantic composers were a favorite part of their astonishing and always growing repertoire.
Like their repertoire, Los Indios Tabajaras keep growing. From Mexico to Japan to Paris to the renowned Amsterdam Concert-gebouw Orchestra to New York’s Town Hall to American network television; they have created a company of millions of fans. But through all of their successes, they remain perfectionists and something more. They continue to be innovators with the souls of true musicians.
Nowhere, does their genius prove itself more beautifully than in their treatment of the classics. You’ll hear it in the majestic precision or Chopin’s waltzes and be amazed that it took only two great guitarists to create the majesty. In the fantasy flight of Beethoven’s Bagatelle in A Minor. In the quiet fires of Serenata Española and Hora Staccato. And in every mood gentled by the guitars of Los Indios Tabajaras.
Los Indios Tabajaras have discovered the world and mastered its music in every delicious variety.
If you haven’t yet discovered Los Indios Tabajaras, do it now. And let them take you to wonderful places where the guitar has never sung so proudly.

Nancy Lawrence

Recorded in RCA’s Studio “B” and “C,” New York City, 1974
Recording Engineer: Ed Begley
Photographer: David B. Hecht
Art Director: Acy Lehman

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Pride of the Pipers


Liner Notes:
PRIDE OF THE PIPERS
Pipes and Drums of the
1st Battalion Scots Guards
with Pipe Major Angus MacDonald

The pipes are capable of producing many moods — tremendously stirring when they play marches, exciting in the reels and jigs, and compellingly plaintive in the laments. All these moods are displayed par excellence on this fine album by the Pipes and Drums of the 1st Battalion Scots Guards, led by Pipe Major Angus MacDonald. It is he who plays the solo pipe in the beautiful ‘Amazing Grace’, accompanied on this record by the pipe organ at the Kingsway Hall, played by David Bell. This is a most interesting experiment which has produced a wonderful sound, providing as it does a harmonic structure of the work of which the pipe is incapable.

This album is obviously not intended just for fans of the pipe but for a much broader public who have recently accepted this instrument as a medium for expressing the poignancy of a beautiful melodic line.

Walter J. Ridley
Click here to download

Friday, July 24, 2009

The Guitar Style of Al Caiola


Liner Notes:
CAIOLA AT HIS BEST - PLUS 5 TOP GUITARS!
Al Caiola is hotter than a pistol in the ping-pong percussion album department. His L.P.’s are high on the best-seller charts and lavishly displayed in record stores across the U.S. But prior to his ascendancy as “ping-pong” champ, Al was long known to the inner circles of music as one of the best guitar picker in America. Audio acrobatics aside, this is the first thing you’d ask of a performer — solid musicianship.
In this album, the manifold musical talents of Al Caiola are artfully showcased as follows: (1) Al has tastefully arranged this fine collection of standard hits for purely pleasant listening, if that’s your mood; (2) Al himself plays lead guitar with style and grace—here is virtuoso guitar; (3) he has surrounded himself with the All-Stars—five of the lightest-fingered gentry in the “pickin’” business, as guitar aficionados will quickly realise by a glance at the performer credits on this page. Notable also in the rhythm section is the redoubtable Don Lamond on drums, one of the great modern stick men.
Repertoire in the album ranges all the way from Sweet Georgia Brown, introduced and co-written by the late great bandleader Ben Bernie, to Tumbling Tumbleweeds, the 1934 hit of top Western songwriter Bob Nolan and one of the first country-style tunes to make it big in the “pop” market. Featured too is the top novelty ditty, Dipsy Doodle, written in 1937 by Larry Clinton Of big swing band fame.
For virtuoso solo guitar backed by a guitar ensemble extra-ordinaire, or for just plain pleasant listening, this is your album.

SIDE 1 SWEET GEORGIA BROWN • DIPSY DOODLE
• IT’S A SIN TO TELL A LIE • TUMBLING TUMBLE-
WEEDS • STRAIT AHEAD

SIDE 2 HINDUSTAN • I LOVE YOU • IDAHO •
ROSETTA • UNDECIDED

Leader (Solo Guitar) ............ Al Caiola
Guitars ................................... George Barnes, Al Casamente, Don Arnone, John Pizzarelli, Billy Bauer
Bass ........................................ Sandy Block
Drums .................................... Don Lamond
Vibes ...................................... Phil Kraus, Ed Costa

Click here to download the album.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Pepe Jaramillo - South of the Border

Liner Notes:
For some years now Pepe Jaramillo has been one of the most popular artistes in Mexico, and in addition, he has performed in various cities of South America and the United States. He was born in the state of Chihuahua, that part of Mexico which contains the upper stretches of the western Sierra Madre. his love of music and his talent for playing it seem to have been inherited from his mother ; at any rate, Pepe began playing the piano when he was only four, working at first entirely by ear, but later - after he had grown up - studying at the Conservatory of Music in Mexico City. Like so many parents, Pepe's father and mother looked on music as a hazardous career, and, while they were happy that their son should make it his hobby, they wanted him to become a dentist. To please them Pepe studied dentistry at the University of Mexico, but after a couple of years he decided this could never be his profession. As his parents insisted that he get some kind of degree, he attended the school of banking, eventually returning to Chihuahua with a degree in banking and secretarial practice.
Pepe worked for a couple of years with a British mining company, spending most of his vacation in Mexico City and, when that job finished, he went back to the capital. There a stroke of luck occurred which changed his entire life. He was having some drinks with a few friends in the bar of the Ritz, the most fashionable hotel in Mexico City, when they noticed there was a piano in the room. "Why don't you play it?" asked his friends, so Pepe sat down and started to entertain them. "Presently the manager came over," recalls Pepe "and asked if I was a professional pianist. "No," I told him, "just playing for my own amusement." When the manager asked if he would like a job performing at the hotel, Pepe thought he was kidding, but decided to keep the joke up. "Well," he said, "if you can pay me what I want, maybe I will". To his astonishment the manager replied, "Come in tomorrow and we'll talk things over".
that is how Pepe Jaramillo became a professional pianist, and for the next three years he performed at he Ritz bar. During that time he also appeared regularly on Radio and TV, as well as being in demand to accompany various singers who visited Mexico City. (He has worked with a great many of the most famous Latin-American and Spanish artists). When Pepe finally left the Ritz, it was to go into a new club - El Quid a very smart restaurant-bar, where he played right up to the moment he would like to see something of the world outside South and North America. After coming to Europe he spent a few months in Paris, then crossed the Channel and come to London early in 1958. Since then he has appeared on radio and TV in this country - including ABC-TV's weekly 'Sentimental Journey' programme - and made his recording debut here with his popular 'Mexico Tropicale' LP. Since then he has made many successful records.

Click here to download the album.