| フォーマット | CDアルバム |
| 発売日 | 2003年10月21日 |
| 国内/輸入 | 輸入 |
| レーベル | A440 Music Group |
| 構成数 | 1 |
| パッケージ仕様 | - |
| 規格品番 | 4029 |
| SKU | 821254402927 |
構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
Personnel includes: Richard Smith (acoustic & electric guitars); Jeff Kashiwa (saxophone); Tony Guerrero (trumpet); Brian Culbertson (keyboards, trombone); Jeff Lorber (keyboards, guitar); Derrick "D-Loc" Walker (drums); Alex Acuna (percussion).
Recorded at Rainbow Canyon, Los Angeles, California; Valley Village, MixWorks, Sherman Oaks, California.
Personnel: Richard Smith (acoustic 12-string guitar, electric guitar, hand claps); Sean Holt (vocals, saxophone); Jeff Kashiwa (saxophone); Tony Guerrero , Bill Armstrong (trumpet); Brian Culbertson (trombone, keyboards); Dave Ryan (trombone); Dave Kochanski (keyboards, keyboard programming); Freddie Ravel, Jeff Lorber (keyboards); Derek "D 'Loc" Walker (drums); Alex Acuna (hand claps, percussion); Brian Bromberg (hand claps, drum programming).
Audio Mixer: Tom McCauley.
Recording information: B2 Studios, Valley Village, CA; Mixworks, Sherman Oaks, CA; Rainbow Canyon Recording, Los Angeles, CA.
Photographer: Ben Kerns.
As this often rocking, sometimes romantic, brass-splashed collection demonstrates, the reason this talented composer and exciting and versatile guitarist isn't a bigger star on the smooth jazz scene has nothing to do with a lack of great recordings. His output of eight albums is spotty timewise because he spent years touring with Richard Elliot and others, and he has focused much of his time on his music education career. The youngest guitarist ever to head the guitar department at USC, he is a tenured professor and created the world's first doctoral program in jazz guitar. Here's hoping his students won't mind him taking more time off to record engaging efforts like this one, which more than lives up to its vibey name. The title track finds his seductive electric melody riding over a thick, thumping groove (courtesy of producer Brian Bromberg's always intense bass) as a horn section builds around and caresses it. Radio jumped early on the similarly brass-intensive take on Earth, Wind & Fire's "Sing a Song," but Smith's original material is more interesting, starting with the midtempo, hip-hop-flavored "Gotta Have You" (featuring a blend of acoustic and electric) and progressing with the playful funk of "Whatz Up?," penned with and featuring Jeff Lorber. The wild salsa jam "Latisimo" may be too sassy for smooth jazz radio, but it kicks things up a beautiful notch. Smith's discs traditionally feature a tough-edged rock-blues style punctuated with softer acoustic-based tunes that are pure sensuality. He wrote much of this material while living in Europe, and you can hear the romance of Italy on gems like "Beyond the Mountains" and "Intimato." ~ Jonathan Widran
録音 : ステレオ (Studio)
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