Quincy Jones – Q’s Jook Joint (1995)

  • 26 Mar, 15:16
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Artist:
Title: Q’s Jook Joint
Year Of Release: 1995
Label: Qwest Records
Genre: Jazz, RnB, Swing, Funk, Big Band
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 01:09:51
Total Size: 522/824 Mb (full scans)
WebSite:

Quincy Jones – Q’s Jook Joint (1995)


Tracklist:

01. Quincy Jones – Jook Joint Intro (1:32)
02. Quincy Jones – Let The Good Times Roll (2:56)
03. Quincy Jones – Cool Joe, Mean Joe (Killer Joe) (7:32)
04. Quincy Jones – You Put A Move On My Heart (6:13)
05. Quincy Jones – Rock With You (4:09)
06. Quincy Jones – Moody’s Mood For Love (4:19)
07. Quincy Jones – Stomp (6:16)
08. Quincy Jones – Jook Joint Reprise (0:56)
09. Quincy Jones – Do Nothin’ Till You Hear From Me (3:58)
10. Quincy Jones – Is It Love That We’re Missin’ (4:46)
11. Quincy Jones – Heaven’s Girl (5:27)
12. Quincy Jones – Stuff Like That (5:46)
13. Quincy Jones – Slow Jams (7:31)
14. Quincy Jones – At The End Of The Day (Grace) (7:43)
15. Quincy Jones – Jook Joint Outro (0:48)

The multi-talented Quincy Jones has excelled at idiomatic combinations in his albums since the '60s, when his mix-and-match soundtracks for television and films alerted everyone that he'd switched from a pure jazz mode to a populist trend. Q's Jook Joint blends the latest in hip-hop-flavored productions with sleek urban ballads, vintage standards, and derivative pieces; everything's superbly crafted, though few songs are as exciting in their performance or daring in their conception as past Jones epics like Gula Matari or the score from Roots. Still, you can't fault Jones for his choice of musical collaborators: everyone from newcomer Tamia to longtime stars like Ray Charles, rappers, instrumentalists, male and female vocalists, percussionists, and toasters. The CD really conveys the seamless quality one gets from attending a juke joint, though it lacks the dirt-floor grit or blues fervor of traditional Southern and chitlin circuit hangouts. But no one's more knowledgeable about the spectrum of African-American music, nor better able to communicate it via disc, than Quincy Jones. ~ by Ron Wynn


  • mufty77
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Many thanks.