Jazz
Charlie Alexander
108 products
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MOZART: SONATAS FOR FORTEPIANO & VIOLIN VOL.4
$22.49CDHARMONIA MUNDI
Feb 27, 2026HMF902617.2 -
LIVE AT THE CURIE SELECT JAZZ FESTIVAL 1991
$15.49CDULTRA VYBE
Aug 22, 2025UVYE8073233.2 -
SPUNKY
$18.49CDUNIVERSAL JAPAN
Nov 21, 2025UNIJ3180235.2 -
SATURDAY NIGHT
$11.99CDSOLID
Dec 19, 2025SODI8074151.2 -
ALIVE IN PHILADELPHIA 1
$12.40CDCELLAR LIVE
Mar 27, 2026CELV32726.2 -
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STRAVINSKY: THE SOLIDER'S TALE
HARMONIA MUNDI
Available as
CD
$19.49
Aug 27, 2021
HARMONIA MUNDI - Stravinsky: The Soldiers Tale (English Version) - Isabelle Faust / Alexander Melnikov / Dominique Horwitz, Isabelle Faust, Lorenzo Coppola, Javier Zafra, Reinhold Friedrich, J�rgen van Rijen, Wies de Boeve, Raymond Curfs 2021 release.
MOZART: SONATAS FOR FORTEPIANO & VIOLIN VOL.4
HARMONIA MUNDI
Available as
CD
$22.49
Feb 27, 2026
This fourth and last volume devoted to Mozart's Violin and Piano Sonatas is a virtual journey of initiation, from his light-filled Palatine Sonatas to the later, more intense and complex Viennese masterworks, with Mozart completely revitalizing the genre and opening up new aesthetic horizons.
RECADO BOSSA NOVA
IMPORTS
Available as
CD
$14.49
Nov 27, 2015
RECADO BOSSA NOVA
GENTLE BALLADS
IMPORTS
Available as
SACD
$37.99
Mar 03, 2015
Japanese SACD pressing. Venus. 2015.
VENUS JAZZ WINE BAR: ANATA TO BORDEAUX
IMPORTS
Available as
CD
$18.49
Oct 02, 2012
VENUS JAZZ WINE BAR: ANATA TO BORDEAUX
SATURDAY NIGHT: LIMITED
IMPORTS
Available as
CD
$11.99
Jun 03, 2016
SATURDAY NIGHT: LIMITED
D-DAY
PEEWEE!
Available as
CD
$16.49
Apr 05, 2024
D-DAY
CHICAGO TO NEW YORK
CELLAR LIVE
Available as
CD
$12.49
Apr 04, 2025
2025 release from NY saxophonist Eric Alexander. Boasting a warm, finely burnished tone and a robust melodic and harmonic imagination, tenor saxophonist Eric Alexander has been exploring new musical worlds from the outset. His new album 'Chicago to New York' pays tribute to the intersection and interplay that still exists between Chicago and New York. Unlike Alexander's 2014 album, Chicago Fire that featured an all-NYC rhythm section, the stellar casting on this new album is split evenly with LeDonne and Alexander representing New York, and the always excellent bassist Dennis Carroll and drummer George Fludas representing Chicago, where this dynamic rhythm section continues to live and work. The record's theme cleverly explores the shared interconnection between two far-flung cities and benefits from a proximity that all four individuals share in terms of musical approach, supreme accomplishment on their instruments, and an adherence to a group aesthetic that prioritizes groove, swing, and the "give-and-take interplay" that is the hallmark of the best jazz. Coupled with thoughtful selection choices by John Coltrane, Matt Dennis, and Mongo Santamaria (among others), the recording's repertoire provides Alexander and company excellent improvisatory vehicles with which to skillfully traverse the nearly 800-miles that separate these two great American jazz cities... enjoy the drive!
LOVE YOU MADLY LIVE AT BUBBA'S
2XHD
Available as
Vinyl
$107.49
Mar 07, 2025
This 2021 winner of Postive Feedback's Writer's Choice Award for it's reel-to-reel edition, recorded in 1982 by the legendary Mack Emerman, documents an underrepresented chapter of Monty Alexander's recording output, live at Fort Lauderdale's Club Bubba. It's Monty at his best, with a great band and incredibly high-energy performance! Now available as a 200-gram 45 RPM double LP set! Recorded live at Bubba's Jazz Restaurant in Fort Lauderdale, Florida on August 6, 1982. 'The more of these albums the 2xHD label uncovers, remasters and releases, the more you appreciate the work it's doing in letting us rediscover superb performances. These live recordings, taken from pianist Monty Alexander's own collection and made in August 1982 at a Florida 'Jazz Restaurant', were captured by engineer Mack Emerman, founder of Criteria Studios - home of many a big-selling recording. Here we find a tight quartet featuring bassist Paul Berner, Duffy Jackson on drums and extra percussion from Robert Thomas, Jr. Performing truly spirited, generous 92 minutes of an exceptionally well-recorded and finely remastered performance. You really don't have to be a beard stroking Jazzer to enjoy this. An ear for a great recording of fine performances will do.' - 5/5 stars, Andre Everard, Hi-Fi News & Review Monty Alexander - Love You Madly 200-gram 45 RPM double LP set 2xHD mastering on Nagra equipment by Rene Laflamme Lacquers cut all-analog at Bernie Grundman Mastering on tube cutting equipment Tracklist: Side A Arthur's Theme Blues For Edith Side B Love You Madly Samba de Orfeu Side C Reggae Later SKJ Side D Fungii Mama
LIVE AT THE CURIE SELECT JAZZ FESTIVAL 1991
ULTRA VYBE
Available as
CD
$15.49
Aug 22, 2025
Japanese resissue, part of the Timeless 50th Anniversary (1975-2025) campaign. Ultra-Vybe. 2025.
SPUNKY
UNIVERSAL JAPAN
Available as
CD
$18.49
Nov 21, 2025
From the "Jazz Masterpieces Best & More" series once released by EMI, 30 carefully selected works are being reissued on SHM-CD. None of the titles overlap with "Jazz Department Store" or "Everything Jazz"! - Universal. 2025.
SATURDAY NIGHT
SOLID
Available as
CD
$11.99
Dec 19, 2025
The Jazz Platinum 1100 - Jazz Expo 2025-2026' is a special, limited-time campaign where 19 record labels, ranging from prestigious to unique, have gathered to offer a curated selection of 187 jazz titles, including both classic staples and hidden masterpieces. Solid. 2025.
MEMENTO
CELLAR LIVE
Available as
CD
$12.40
Jun 21, 2024
MEMENTO
ALIVE IN PHILADELPHIA 1
CELLAR LIVE
Available as
Vinyl
$31.89
May 01, 2026
Vinyl LP pressing. NYC bass wizard Alexander Claffy brings his favorite musicians back to hallowed Philly ground on this live album recorded at Chris' Jazz where he has played since he was 14. A full circle moment captured on tape, across two nights. This is the first of two volumes of live experimentation featuring the stellar lineup of Seamus Blake, Kevin Hays, Bill Stewart, Jaleel Shaw and Sean Jones.
ALIVE IN PHILADELPHIA 1
CELLAR LIVE
Available as
CD
$12.40
Mar 27, 2026
ALIVE IN PHILADELPHIA 1
RAGOLOGY
TURTLE BAY RECORDS
Available as
Vinyl
$33.06
Feb 20, 2026
RAGOLOGY
DON'T YOU WORRY 'BOUT A THING
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$11.98
Oct 04, 2011
After his storied stint with Ray Charles and years of solo LPs on Atlantic, Hank came to Kudu in the '70s. This funk-soul-jazz delight from '75 teams his sax with Bob James, Randy Brecker and Pepper Adams among others; the title Stevie Wonder tune joins Sho Is Funky; Groovy Junction; Jana, and more!
Chopin: Polonaises, Etc / Alexander Brailowsky
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
CHOPIN: POLONAISES, ETC ALEXA
MASON, Alexander: Beyond the Score - Improvisations for Whit
Signum Classics
Available as
CD
Classical Music
Chopin: 14 Waltzes, Piano Sonata No 3 / Alexander Brailowsky
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
Chopin: Waltzes & Piano Sonata No. 3, Op. 53
Weber: Clarinet Concerto No 1; Rossini, Mozart / Stoltzman
RCA
Available as
CD
$17.99
Mar 04, 2008
"[This collection] shows Richard Stoltzman, with his succulent tone and infectious bravura (so easily displayed in the finale of the Weber and the very operatic Rossini Variations), at his best...One tends to think of Weber's concertos as being rather more than halfway between the classical and romantic traditions, here the romanticism is very much in the ascendent. But overall the performance of the F minor Concerto combines a lively impetus in the outer movements with warmth in the Adagio whilst the orchestra—notably the horns—add much to the listener's enjoyment."
-- Ivan March, Gramophone [10/1989]
-- Ivan March, Gramophone [10/1989]
A New Heaven - Korndorf: Hymn Ii & Iii / Lazarev, Bott
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$17.99
Mar 05, 2009
Who is Nikolai Korndorf? Have no fear, if the name is unfamiliar to you at present the ensuing popularity (which I’m sure this disc will attract) will have it tripping off the tongue as readily as Gorecki, Part, Schnittke or Tavener. For the uninitiated (and that included myself prior to hearing this release) Korndorf was born in Moscow in 1947 and started out as an 'avant-garde' composer, but (and here’s where he shares similarities with the names listed above) he suddenly changed to a more tonal, simple and above all spiritual style in the early 1980s. In 1991 he moved to Vancouver, Canada, and since then his music has been steadily gaining admirers and exponents in the West.
Sharing the same title, and possibly general sentiments, Korndorf’s three orchestral Hymns would appear to constitute a cycle but, as Korndorf himself has said, he prefers that they should not be performed or considered as such. However, this debut disc offers us Hymns II and III, though I would strongly echo the composer’s wishes and urge listeners to program a suitable break before moving from Hymn II to III. In terms of musical style the works presented on this disc share much in common with Gorecki’s Third Symphony – slow moving, seamless textures, minimal material, peaking climaxes and, in Hymn III, an ethereal, wordless soprano part. If anything Korndorf’s music is even more static than either Gorecki or Part, and generally the impression is of vertical rather than linear movement – walls of ‘bell-like’ pulsating chords dominate and seem to suggest a kind of ‘summoning prelude’ to a great event – Korndorf himself would suggest perhaps the dawning of a new spiritual age.
Hymn III was composed in response to a commission by the Kohler-Osbahr Foundation for a piece in honour of Gustav Mahler, and there are certainly Mahlerian echoes to be found here – not least the off-stage trumpets heard at the beginning and the high sustained string texture which recall the First Symphony. Generally speaking, if you have enjoyed the sound world of Gorecki and Part then you will probably enjoy discovering Korndorf too. As for the performances, the BBC Symphony Orchestra play this music with great conviction and the soprano solo in Hymn III is beautifully delivered by Catherine Bott.
-- Michael Stewart, Gramophone
Sharing the same title, and possibly general sentiments, Korndorf’s three orchestral Hymns would appear to constitute a cycle but, as Korndorf himself has said, he prefers that they should not be performed or considered as such. However, this debut disc offers us Hymns II and III, though I would strongly echo the composer’s wishes and urge listeners to program a suitable break before moving from Hymn II to III. In terms of musical style the works presented on this disc share much in common with Gorecki’s Third Symphony – slow moving, seamless textures, minimal material, peaking climaxes and, in Hymn III, an ethereal, wordless soprano part. If anything Korndorf’s music is even more static than either Gorecki or Part, and generally the impression is of vertical rather than linear movement – walls of ‘bell-like’ pulsating chords dominate and seem to suggest a kind of ‘summoning prelude’ to a great event – Korndorf himself would suggest perhaps the dawning of a new spiritual age.
Hymn III was composed in response to a commission by the Kohler-Osbahr Foundation for a piece in honour of Gustav Mahler, and there are certainly Mahlerian echoes to be found here – not least the off-stage trumpets heard at the beginning and the high sustained string texture which recall the First Symphony. Generally speaking, if you have enjoyed the sound world of Gorecki and Part then you will probably enjoy discovering Korndorf too. As for the performances, the BBC Symphony Orchestra play this music with great conviction and the soprano solo in Hymn III is beautifully delivered by Catherine Bott.
-- Michael Stewart, Gramophone
The End Of The Affair - Original Soundtrack
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
A while ago, when commenting on Michael Nyman's "The Piano," I spoke (or pontificated, rather) to some colleagues regarding my dismay over Nyman's 'art.' I mention guilty pleasures on occasion, but a greater potential irrationality of criticism is the personal determination of whether one should praise certain scores or composers for daring to be abstract, or lambaste them for not getting their points across. I have done both, with disliked emphasis on the latter, when listening to Nyman's compositions. It is with "The End of the Affair," performed by the Michael Nyman Orchestra, that I realize I ought to place my views firmly, diplomatically in the middle.
The music really depends on how the listener feels, as opposed to being the sort of film score that alters how he feels. Reliant on the mood and the focus of attention, the score delights as confidently as it bores. It stands precariously on the divide between art and self-importance. Its incessant, top heavy strings play ad nauseam -- will they never end? -- but the themes they play indulge in the attention. It is exceedingly predictable, just as a fair deal of minimalist music is. And compared to the film scores of minimalist Philip Glass it is neither technically brilliant nor dramatically solid. It is challenging primarily to the amplitude of one's attempt to fall in love with its tedium. Cinematic evolution gets thrown out of the window for a beginning, middle, and end that are practically unidentifiable from one another. As I am not a huge supporter of the minimalist music movement I may be missing some key thought, others may see this score far differently, but to my ears it reaches a point of despotic annoyance. Call me unfashionable. Yet I cannot help praising "The End of the Affair" for its abstract grandeur. The scope, though minimal, gets the most out of the repeating elements, and the cues, taken individually as small concert works rather than part of a theatrical whole, become fascinating essays in contemporary classical music. Nyman has an unconventional way with counterpoint (and lack thereof) that is lush and thoroughly amazing, and the themes are memorable and inhabit the soundscape aggressively well. When these ideas stick out from the common backdrop, it is mesmerizing.
What fascinates me most personally is that this is one of the few soundtracks I know of featuring such a strong dichotomy... I am not sure I appreciate it...
-- Jeffrey Wheeler, MusicWeb International
The music really depends on how the listener feels, as opposed to being the sort of film score that alters how he feels. Reliant on the mood and the focus of attention, the score delights as confidently as it bores. It stands precariously on the divide between art and self-importance. Its incessant, top heavy strings play ad nauseam -- will they never end? -- but the themes they play indulge in the attention. It is exceedingly predictable, just as a fair deal of minimalist music is. And compared to the film scores of minimalist Philip Glass it is neither technically brilliant nor dramatically solid. It is challenging primarily to the amplitude of one's attempt to fall in love with its tedium. Cinematic evolution gets thrown out of the window for a beginning, middle, and end that are practically unidentifiable from one another. As I am not a huge supporter of the minimalist music movement I may be missing some key thought, others may see this score far differently, but to my ears it reaches a point of despotic annoyance. Call me unfashionable. Yet I cannot help praising "The End of the Affair" for its abstract grandeur. The scope, though minimal, gets the most out of the repeating elements, and the cues, taken individually as small concert works rather than part of a theatrical whole, become fascinating essays in contemporary classical music. Nyman has an unconventional way with counterpoint (and lack thereof) that is lush and thoroughly amazing, and the themes are memorable and inhabit the soundscape aggressively well. When these ideas stick out from the common backdrop, it is mesmerizing.
What fascinates me most personally is that this is one of the few soundtracks I know of featuring such a strong dichotomy... I am not sure I appreciate it...
-- Jeffrey Wheeler, MusicWeb International
Isaac Stern - A Life In Music - Brahms: Violin Sonatas
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
Brahms: Violin Sonatas Nos. 1, 2 & 3
MAHLER, G.: Symphony No. 8 (Stokowski) (1950)
Music and Arts Programs of America
Available as
CD
$18.99
Jan 01, 2004
Classical Music
