Brook Benton & Quincy Jones Orchestra - Why Not Take All Of Me (1962/2018)
Artist: Brook Benton & Quincy Jones Orchestra
Title: Why Not Take All Of Me
Year Of Release: 2018
Label: Black Cat Productions
Genre: Soul, R&B, Jazz, Blues, Oldies
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 30:04 min
Total Size: 169 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Why Not Take All Of Me
Year Of Release: 2018
Label: Black Cat Productions
Genre: Soul, R&B, Jazz, Blues, Oldies
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 30:04 min
Total Size: 169 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. When I Grow Too Old To Dream 2:15
2. There Goes That Song Again 2:29
3. All Of Me 2:32
4. I Love Paris 2:47
5. I Didn't Know What Time It Was 2:01
6. Trouble In Mind 2:42
7. Blues In The Night 2:32
8. I Don't Know Why (I Just Do) 2:28
9. Breezin' Along With The Breeze 2:40
10. After You've Gone 2:16
11. I'll Get By (As Long As I Have You) 2:48
12. Let Me Sing And I'm Happy 2:25
Silky smooth: that was Brook Benton's byword from his first record to his very last, as the singer parlayed his rich baritone pipes into seven number one R&B hits and eight Top Ten items. Stints on the gospel circuit preceded Benton's first secular session for Okeh in 1953, but his career didn't begin to take off until he teamed with writer/producer Clyde Otis. Benton co-wrote and sang hundreds of demos for other artists before frequent collaborator Otis signed his friend to Mercury; together they pioneered a lush, violin-studded variation on the standard R&B sound, which beautifully showcased Benton's intimate vocals.
Benton crashed the top spot on the R&B charts in early 1959 with his moving "It's Just a Matter of Time," then rapidly encored with three more R&B chart-toppers: "Thank You Pretty Baby," "So Many Ways," and "Kiddio." Pairing with Mercury labelmate Dinah Washington, their delightful repartee on "Baby (You've Got What It Takes)" and "A Rockin' Good Way" paced the R&B lists in 1960.
The early '60s were a prolific period for Benton, but he left Mercury a few years later and bounced between labels before reemerging with the atmospheric Tony Joe White ballad "Rainy Night in Georgia" on Cotillion in 1970. Benton later made a halfhearted attempt to cash in on the disco craze, but his hitmaking reign was at an end long before his death in 1988. ~ Bill Dahl.
Benton crashed the top spot on the R&B charts in early 1959 with his moving "It's Just a Matter of Time," then rapidly encored with three more R&B chart-toppers: "Thank You Pretty Baby," "So Many Ways," and "Kiddio." Pairing with Mercury labelmate Dinah Washington, their delightful repartee on "Baby (You've Got What It Takes)" and "A Rockin' Good Way" paced the R&B lists in 1960.
The early '60s were a prolific period for Benton, but he left Mercury a few years later and bounced between labels before reemerging with the atmospheric Tony Joe White ballad "Rainy Night in Georgia" on Cotillion in 1970. Benton later made a halfhearted attempt to cash in on the disco craze, but his hitmaking reign was at an end long before his death in 1988. ~ Bill Dahl.