Monthly Archives: June 2016

06 11, 2016

25 Phenomenal Jazz Albums on Freegal

By |2016-06-11T08:16:27-04:00June 11, 2016|

jazz-63212_1920Want to listen or download some beautiful jazz music without having to spend money on iTunes or Spotify?

Several of best and most famous jazz artists of all time have their music available on Freegal, which is free to use if you have a Mentor Public Library card.

Freegal is one of the library’s digital services, which lets you download DRM-free mp3s of your favorite songs. Moreover, once you download a song, you can keep the mp3 forever. Put it on your phone, your computer, your iPod–wherever you want. It’s yours. You can download up to five songs a week.

You also get unlimited streaming, if you prefer that.

Here are 25 of our favorite jazz albums you can download right now from Freegal:

1. Miles Davis—Kind of Blue

Where do you start with Miles, the guy who revolutionized jazz at least once a decade for 30 years?

Easy, you start with Kind of BlueBlue might not be his best album. After all, artistic rankings are subjective. And who are we to judge you if you prefer Bitches Brew, Miles Ahead or Porgy & Bess?

But Blue is the most important Miles Davis album—the one you own when you only have one jazz album. And here’s a big reason why: it’s eminently listenable. You don’t have to understand what modal jazz is to appreciate what Davis, Bill Evans, Cannonball Adderley, John Coltrane, and the rest of the band are doing.

We intellectualize jazz a lot. But sometimes you just got to feel it. If you have a pulse, you’ll feel Kind of Blue.

2. Herbie Hancock—Head Hunters

It’s apropos that the first song on this album is called “Chameleon,” because Herbie Hancock has never been afraid to change his shade. In his time, he’s been jazz, soul, funk, hip-hop, classical and anything else he wants to be.

He gets funky here with the wiggling baseline of “Chameleon” and bottle-blowing cool of “Watermelon Man.” (By the way, if you love this side of Hancock, check out Secrets“Spider” and “Doin’ It” are two of the funkiest records he ever laid down.)

3. Nina Simone—Sings the Blues

This is raw, uncut Nina. Gone are the orchestras with which she used to perform. She’s pares back her instrumentation to a rhythm section and a harmonica, so the focus is entirely on her vocals.

And what vocals! On the first song, she asks, “Do I Move You?”

The answer is, “yes, now and forever.”

4. Abbey Lincoln—Abbey Is Blue

This is a beautiful set. Lincoln’s voice can get to very specific emotional place. She’ll walk a feeling right to the edge but never dip into hyperbole. It’s always real—big, bright and real.

Lincoln has a murderer’s row of players with her too, including bassist Sam Jones and drummer Philly Joe Jones and pianist Wynton Kelly (who you might remember from Kind of Blue’s “Freddy the Freeloader.”)

thelonious-sphere-monk-1281515_19205. Thelonious Monk—Solo Monk

If you love Monk, you love his idiosyncrasies—the atonal note smashes; stretching a meter until it nearly rips; re-recording “Blue Monk” for the millionth time.

But if you’re not already one of the converted, his musical quirks can be intimidating or off-putting. Solo Monk is a fantastic introduction to Monk because, while it doesn’t scrub away his weirdness or wonder, it all feels much clearer and less chaotic with a single instrument.

6. Rudresh Mahanthappa—Bird Calls

Mahanthappa revisits Charlie Parker here, drawing his inspirations from Bird’s songs, solos and sometimes even a single line. He combines that inspiration with everything from raga to post-bop to create something that’s indebted to the past but completely new.

7. J.J. Johnson—JJ Inc.

Finally, the trombone gets a little respect. This is hard-swingin’, hard-livin’ hard bop. Of the sidemen, trumpet player Freddie Hubbard, in particular, is spitting fire.

8. The Bad Plus—These Are the Vistas

When The Bad Plus played a jazz cover of “Smells Like Teen Spirit” in 2003, it was still a novel idea. (Yes, we know Herbie did it first; but he’s pretty much the jazz Simpsons.) But had you not known Nirvana, you might have thought it was a jazz standard.

But that’s these guys in a nutshell: innovative but in a way that still feels classic.

9. Mary Halvorson—Crackleknob

You’re in open water here. This is improvised, unpredictable and not always comforting music. There’s not always a melody to cling to or a big hook coming along to save you.

But if you’re ready to swim, there’s a lot to experience—blues, folk, and the beauty of a perfectly spontaneous moment.

sarah-vaughan-548963_192010. Sarah Vaughan—Sarah Vaughan in Hi-Fi

This is Sarah Vaughn—she of the mellifluous voice and malleable phrase—at one of her peaks. A young Miles Davis accompanies.

11. Charles Mingus—Mingus Ah Um

Mingus Ah Um is the rare album that works as both an introduction and a summation. If you don’t know Mingus, start here. If you love Mingus, you can always return here too.

And “Better Get Hit In Your Soul” is audio hot sauce, now and forever.

12. Oscar Peterson—Plays the Jerome Kern Songbook

Peterson is more of a stylist than songwriter, but he could take your songs and make them his. See also his takes on the Gershwin songbook.

13. Duke Ellington—Ellington at Newport ’56

Twenty-seven choruses! Paul Gonsalves slays “Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue” for 27 choruses! By the time his solo concludes, the crowd is nearly as loud as the saxophone.

14. Christian McBride—Conversations with Christian

This series of duets demonstrates McBride’s malleability while still letting his friends show off.

billie-holiday-1281326_192015. Billie Holiday—Lady in Satin

By this point in Holiday’s life (this is her second-to-last record), there was no sugar left in her voice. It was all salt and vodka. When she sings “Glad to Be Unhappy,” you believe her.

16. Cecile McLorin Salvent—WomanChild

Salvent has a way with a standard—you need her version of “John Henry” in your life—but she’s at her best when she’s writing the music too.

17. Myra Melford—Life Carries Me This Way

Her first solo piano album after 25 years of leading bands and collaboration. It’s a beautiful introduction for those who don’t know her music and a splendid surprise for those who do.

18. Branford Marsalis—Trio Jeepy

If you don’t think this is Marsalis’s best album, you’ll probably still concede it’s his most fun.

19. Bill Evans—Everybody Digs Bill Evans

Evans is at his best with Philly Joe Jones kicking his butt on drums. Without him, Evans sometimes meanders. Here, Jones— and equally important bassist Sam Jones—reminds Evans that he has higher gears.

ella-fitzgerald-1275553_192020. Ella Fitzgerald—Newport Jazz Festival Live at Carnegie Hall

You can’t summate an artist as prolific and excellent as Fitzgerald in a single recording, but this tribute/celebration concert is a great place to start. She’s measured and masterful but can still bring the ruckus on “Lemon Drop.”

21. Henry Threadgill—Carry the Day

An instance of the avant-garde meeting a major label, and the avant-garde emerging unscathed.

22. Moon Hooch—Moon Hooch

Don’t let Moon Hooch’s conservatory backgrounds or their pretentiously unpretentious song titles deter you. The music is as fun as it is accomplished.

23. Steve Coleman & Five Elements—Black Science

Steve Coleman is what you get when you mix free jazz with funky poly-rhythms and free-flowing mysticism.

24. Dave Brubeck—Time Out

Paul Desmond’s the first cat we heard to make 5/4 swing. Rarely have musical experimentations been this artistically (and commercially) successful.

25. Louis Armstrong—The Best of the Hot Five & Hot Seven Recordings

Louis Armstrong sounds good in just about any setting—with nothing but a rhythm section or accompanied by an orchestra—but nothing tops the music he made with his original recording quintet and sextet.

If their best makes your want more, you can download The Complete Hot Five & Hot Seven Recordings on Freegal, as well.

06 8, 2016

WWII Veteran Shares his Experiences from the Front Line

By |2016-06-08T07:48:18-04:00June 8, 2016|

In commemoration of D-Day, Bob Zonneville—the recipient of two Bronze Stars and a Purple Heart—shared his experiences from World War II with us.

We wanted to share them with you, as well.

In addition to being injured twice during his 21 months of combat, he also helped liberate the concentration camp in Treblinka—all this before he turned 21.

However, the hardships of combat haven’t hardened Zonneville’s heart. He speaks with compassion, and it was an honor to glean a fraction of the wisdom he has acquired in his life.

We hope you enjoy listening to Zonneville as much as we did.

By the way, if you enjoy military history, you may enjoy our Major Battles of World War II series. Our own Dr. John Foster—who, in addition to being a librarian, also has a doctorate degree in history—has discussed Stalingrad and the origins of the German Final Solution.

Our World War II series continues in August with The Battle of the Bulge.

06 6, 2016

MPL Talks: The Battle of Stalingrad

By |2016-06-06T12:25:30-04:00June 6, 2016|


We host a lot of programs at Mentor Public Library and it’s hard to catch them all.

And sometimes you miss one you really wanted to see.

That’s why we’ve started MPL Talks, where we post full programs online for you to watch at your convenience. It’s not quite the same as being there. (For example, you don’t get to ask questions.) But it’s better than missing out.

Recently, our own Dr. John Foster—who, in addition to being a librarian, also has a doctorate degree in history—discussed the Battle of Stalingrad as part of our Major Battles of World War II series.

Foster examined:

  • the ideological differences between Hitler and Stalin’s brands of totalitarianism
  • Hitler’s intention with targeting Russia’s oil fields
  • Operation Barbarossa, which preceded the battle
  • readings from a German’s soldier diary during the battle
  • the battle’s effect on the Eastern European front and war
  • the startling loss of life that made Stalingrad the bloodiest battle in a bloody, bloody war.

Our World War II series continues in August with The Battle of the Bulge.

If you’re interested in seeing more of Dr. Foster’s programs, you can find them on our YouTube page, including his talks on Napoleonic France and the German Final Solution.

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