  |
|
 |
The Spice of Life |
Earl Klugh |
első megjelenés éve: 2008 |
|
(2008)
|
|
 CD |
5.097 Ft
|
|
1. | Ocean Blue
|
2. | Sleepyhead
|
3. | Canadian Sunset
|
4. | Venezuelan Nights
|
5. | Driftin'
|
6. | Snap!
|
7. | Bye Ya
|
8. | Heart of My Life
|
9. | Morning in Rio
|
10. | C'est Si Bon
|
11. | Lucy's World
|
12. | My Foolish Heart
|
13. | The Toy Guitar
|
Jazz
Earl Klugh - Guitar (Acoustic), Keyboards, Percussion, Producer, Rhythm Arrangements, Synthesizer Al Turner - Bass (Electric) Ann E. Lilya - Oboe Brice C. Andrus - French Horn Carl Nitchie - Bassoon Carol Pool - Violin Cenovia Cummins - Violin Dale Stuckenbruck - Violin Daniel Laufer - Cello Debra Shufelt - Viola Eric Degioia - Violin Gordon Gottlieb - Shaker, Vibraphone Grace Paradise - Harp Hubert Laws - Flute, Flute (Alto), Flute (Bass) Jeff Cox - Bass (Acoustic) John Corrozzu - Keyboards, Synthesizer Karen Karlsrud - Violin Keith Underwood - Contrabass Flute, Flute (Alto), Flute (Bass) Kenji Bunch - Viola Laura Bontrager - Cello Laura Oatts - Violin Lenny Price - Saxophone, Wind Synthesizer Martin Agee - Violin Maxine Roach - Viola Pamela Sklar - Flute, Flute (Alto), Flute (Bass) Richard Locker - Cello Rick Dolan - Violin Rob Shaw - Violin Robert Bush - Flute (Alto), Flute (Bass) Ron Otis - Drums Sarah Seiver - Cello Scott Meeder - Drums, Percussion Una Tone - Violin William Paul Murphy - Viola Yonrico Scott - Drums, Percussion
For over three decades and to this very day, the name Earl Klugh is synonymous with "Guitar Legend". He maintains a loyal and devoted fan base, touring all over the US and the world, playing music that is beautiful, lyrical, elegant and eternally cool and classy. With "The Spice Of Life", Earl follows his 2005 Grammy-nominated solo classic "Naked Guitar" with his first full-ensemble album in more than eight years!
Aided by silk-smooth arrangements, courtesy of three-time Grammy winner Don Sebesky, Earl sails through a collection of originals, standards ("C'est Si Bon", "My Foolish Heart"), and even a Thelonious Monk tune ("Bye Ya"). The sound is absolutely true to the Earl Klugh style: timeless, positive, and still fresh, with pristine studio sound.
* Alan Silverman - Mastering * Alessandro Perrotta - Mixing Assistant * Audrey Birnbaum - Production Coordination * Bill Moss - Assistant Engineer * Darren Tablan - Assistant Engineer * Denise Waichunas - Production Coordination * Don Sebesky - Conductor, Orchestration * Eddie Horst - Arranger, Conductor * Eric Morgeson - Engineer * Gary Chester - Mixing * Gene Dunlap - Associate Producer, Drum Programming * Jim Czak - Engineer * John David Miller - Music Coordinator * Kyle Ford - Assistant Engineer * Logan Patton - Engineer * Neville Walker - Engineer * Patti Horst - Music Coordinator * Teresa DeLappe - Photography * Todd Fairall - Assistant Engineer * Tom Tapley - Engineer * Tony Rizzo - Assistant Engineer
Earl Klugh
Active Decades: '70s, '80s, '90s and '00s Born: Sep 16, 1954 in Detroit, MI Genre: Jazz Styles: Instrumental Pop, Jazz-Pop, Crossover Jazz
An acoustic guitarist with a very pretty tone, Earl Klugh does not consider himself a jazz player and thinks of Chet Atkins as being his most important influence. Klugh played on a Yusef Lateef album when he was 15 and gained recognition in 1971 for his contributions to George Benson's White Rabbit record. He played regularly with Benson in 1973, was a member of Return to Forever briefly in 1974, and then in the mid-'70s, began recording as a leader. After a couple well-received solo albums on different Capitol imprints including Blue Note, Klugh hit pay dirt with 1979's One on One, a Grammy-winning collaboration with pianist Bob James. More solo albums followed before the sequel to One on One, Two of a Kind, appeared in 1982. In 1984 he changed labels and released one of his most popular albums, Soda Fountain Shuffle, on Warner Brothers. Klugh made his biggest artistic impression yet in 1989 with the self-explanatory Solo Guitar. Two years later he would return to the "serious jazz" repertoire of Solo Guitar, but this time with bassist Ralphe Armstrong and drummer Gene Dunlap on the acoustic bebop outing The Earl Klugh Trio, Vol. 1. Cool from 1992 found him working with Bob James again and was followed by three more smooth releases for the Warner Brothers family before the jump was made to Windham Hill with 1999's Peculiar Situation. Compilations, live albums, appearances with others, and reissues filled the years leading up to 2005's Naked Guitar, a stripped down, standards-heavy album for the Koch label. --- Scott Yanow, All Music Guide |
|
CD bolt, zenei DVD, SACD, BLU-RAY lemez vásárlás és rendelés - Klasszikus zenei CD-k és DVD-különlegességek |  | Webdesign - Forfour Design |
|
|