Earl Klugh - Midnight in San Juan (1991) 320 kbps
Artist: Earl Klugh
Title: Midnight in San Juan
Year Of Release: 1991
Label: Warner Bros, Wea
Genre: Smooth Jazz, Jazz Fusion
Quality: MP3/320 kbps
Total Time: 41:35
Total Size: 101 MB(+3%)
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: Midnight in San Juan
Year Of Release: 1991
Label: Warner Bros, Wea
Genre: Smooth Jazz, Jazz Fusion
Quality: MP3/320 kbps
Total Time: 41:35
Total Size: 101 MB(+3%)
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Midnight in San Juan
2. Every Moment With You
3. Kissin' on the Beach
4. She Never Said Why
5. Mobimientos del Alma (Rhythms of the Soul)
6. Jamaican Winds
7. Theme for a Rainy Day
8. Take You There
personnel :
Earl Klugh - Guitar, Keyboards, Producer, Main Performer
Harvey Mason, Sr.- Drums
Mark Nilan - Keyboards
Richard Tee - Piano, Piano (Electric)
Toots Thielemans - Harmonica
Buddy Williams - Drums
Jose Oribe - Guitar
Ruben Rodriquez - Piano
Paul McGill - Guitar
Robert Ameen - Drums
Paulinho Da Costa - Percussion
Eliane Elias - Piano
Sammy Figueroa - Percussion
Barnaby Finch - Keyboards
Oscar Hernandez - Bass
Lucio Hopper - Bass
Ralph Irizarry - Percussion
Abraham Laboriel - Bass
Chuck Loeb - Guitar
Bob Ludwig - Mastering
Ron Carter - Bass
Ronnie Foster - Keyboards
The majority of Earl Klugh's albums have been throwaways not because he's choosing pop-flavored jazz and jazzy instrumental pop over straight-ahead jazz, but because of their total lack of substance and musical integrity. One of his more listenable commercial efforts, Midnight in San Juan finds the guitarist placing an unusually heavy emphasis on Latin and Caribbean elements. The CD is decent more often than not, and listeners are reminded of the fact that commercial pop-jazz can be tasteful or not so tasteful. Some of the more worthwhile tunes include the Brazilian-flavored "Kissin' on the Beach," and the salsa-influenced "Mobimientos del Alma," the haunting "She Never Said Why" and the Joe Sample-ish title tune. Harmonica player Toots Thielemans has a melodic cameo on the pensive "Theme for a Rainy Day," and pianist Eliane Elias is in good form on the vibrant "Take You There." Meanwhile, Klugh tosses good taste to the wind on "Every Moment with You," a glaring example of the type of insipid, toothless schlock he so often stoops to playing. This is far from an essential purchase, but overall, it was certainly superior to most of his other commercial albums. ~ Alex Henderson, All Music Guide