James Ingram - Greatest Hits [The Power Of Great Music] (1991)
Artist: James Ingram
Title: Greatest Hits [The Power Of Great Music]
Year Of Release: 1991
Label: Warner Bros. Records
Genre: Jazz, Funk / Soul, Pop
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue, log, Scans)
Total Time: 49:30
Total Size: 314 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: Greatest Hits [The Power Of Great Music]
Year Of Release: 1991
Label: Warner Bros. Records
Genre: Jazz, Funk / Soul, Pop
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue, log, Scans)
Total Time: 49:30
Total Size: 314 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Where Did My Heart Go (3:53)
02. How Do You Keep The Music Playing? (Duet with Patti Austin) (4:18)
03. Just Once (4:35)
04. Somewhere Out There (Duet with Linda Ronstadt) (3:59)
05. I Don't Have The Heart (4:14)
06. There's No Easy Way (3:51)
07. Get Ready (4:34)
08. Baby, Come To Me (Duet with Patti Austin) (3:38)
09. One Hundred Ways (4:20)
10. Yah Mo Be There (Duet with Michael McDonald) (4:32)
11. Remember The Dream (4:24)
12. Whatever We Imagine (4:00)
James Ingram racked up a number of adult contemporary-styled R&B pop hits in the 1980s, many of them duets, and the bulk of those hits are collected on this 12-track 1991 compilation. His music may at times seem somewhat melodramatic, registering on the pop spectrum somewhere between Michael Bolton and Billy Ocean, but nonetheless exemplifies top-notch 1980s adult contemporary pop production at its zenith. This set includes his two hit duets with Patti Austin, those being "How Do You Keep the Music Playing" and their timeless chart-topper "Baby Come to Me." Also included is his monster duet with Linda Ronstadt, "Somewhere Out There," and his hit duet with Michael McDonald, the funky "Yah Mo B There" (definitely one of Ingram's coolest songs). A few rarities make an appearance, including "Where Did My Heart Go?" from the film City Slickers, and the BET theme "Remember the Dream." To round out the collection are his solo hits, among them the Grammy-winning "Just Once," "One Hundred Ways," and his only solo chart-topper, "I Don't Have the Heart." Buyer beware, however, because a more "extensive" hits collection, Forever More, was issued in 1999, with newly recorded (and inferior) versions of "Just Once," "One Hundred Ways," and "I Don't Have the Heart." To this date, however, this short set stands as the definitive James Ingram retrospective.