Chuck Loeb - Listen (1999) CD Rip

  • 02 Dec, 18:04
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Artist:
Title: Listen
Year Of Release: 1999
Label: Shanachie[5057]
Genre: Jazz, Smooth Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks + .cue,log)
Total Time: 60:52
Total Size: 422 MB(+3%)
WebSite:

Tracklist

1 Silver Star
2 High Five
3 Love Is All
4 Right Down Broadway
5 Shhh...
6 Listen
7 Rock With You
8 Geraldine
9 Buttercup
10 Chiringito
11 Blue Kiss
12 Listen To The Sound

personnel :

John Patitucci - acoustic bass
Chuck Loeb - guitar, Fender Rhodes piano, keyboards, drum programming
Lawrence Feldman - flute, saxophone
Jim Pugh - trombone, baritone horn
David Mann - flute, saxophone, soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone
Jay Beckenstein - alto saxophone
Walter Beasley - alto saxophone
Julio Fernandez - guitar
Birch Johnson - trombone
Jim Beard - Fender Rhodes piano, keyboards
Will Lee - bass
Carmen Cuesta - vocals
Kim Waters - soprano saxophone
Bill Evans - soprano saxophone
Bob James - piano
David Charles - percussion
Chuck Loeb - Listen (1999) CD Rip

Chuck Loeb knows the secret to finding enduring success in the genre, even amidst growing competition by more and more up and coming guitarists who approximate his style: keep the listener guessing from tune to tune with unique stylistic and production curveballs. He's so effective at this that it's impossible to resist as he commands in the title of his new Shanachie disc: simply Listen. Keeping his crisp electric lines front and center, he darts and moves from the retro-soul clicking, synth strings, and rising horn combination of "Silver Star" to the fingersnap percussion, hypnotic cymbal rolls, Gary Keller's flute harmony, and Jim Beard's shimmering Fender Rhodes foundation on "High Five." It's a kick keeping up with his mood swings; Loeb restrains himself wrapping around Mark Egan's spacy basslines and Kim Waters' soprano on "Love Is All," then stirs up the frenetic fusion activity of "Right Down Broadway" with Mitch Forman's jump or else piano groove and more of those sassy horns. He even keeps a cover of Michael Jackson's "Rock with You" from slipping away into Muzakville by shifting from high to low string tones and trading off melody lines with Walter Beasley's alto. ~ Jonathan Widran