(JazzPlanet) George Benson - That`s Right (Eac Flac Cue)(UF)(TNT) (Size: 384.38 MB)
| | Boocklet P2.jpg | 1.33 MB | | | Boocklet P3.jpg | 1.14 MB | | | Boocklet P1.jpg | 1.09 MB | | | Back.jpg | 729.67 KB | | | Front.jpg | 599.21 KB | | | CD.jpg | 185.02 KB | | | Back resize.jpg | 96.5 KB | | | Front resize.jpg | 81.83 KB | | | CD resize.jpg | 32.86 KB | | | 11 - George Benson - When Love Comes Calling.flac | 42.73 MB | | | 12 - George Benson - Where Are You Now.flac | 35.21 MB | | | 02 - George Benson - The thinker.flac | 35.11 MB | | | 03 - George Benson - Marvin Said.flac | 34.72 MB | | | 05 - George Benson - Holdin' On.flac | 34.16 MB | | | 01 - George Benson - That's Right.flac | 30.71 MB | | | 04 - George Benson - True Blue.flac | 30.48 MB | | | 08 - George Benson - Summer Love.flac | 30.24 MB | | | 07 - George Benson - Johnnie Lee.flac | 29.29 MB | | | 09 - George Benson - P Park.flac | 28.93 MB | | | 06 - George Benson - Song For My Brother.flac | 28.18 MB | | | 10 - George Benson - Footprints In The Sand.flac | 19.35 MB | | | info.txt | 12.17 KB | | | info ita.txt | 10.22 KB | | | George Benson - That's Right.log | 5.49 KB | | | That's Right flac.cue | 2.15 KB | | | That's right.cue | 2.14 KB | | | George Benson - That's Right.m3u | 1.02 KB |
Description
George Benson - That's Right
Artist: George Benson
Title: That's Right
Label: GRP
Catalog: GRP 9824 2
Country: Europe version
Released: 1996
Genre: Jazz
Style: Smooth Jazz
Format: CD 1
Source: Original CD
Extractor: EAC 0.99 prebeta 4
Used drive: HL-DT-STDVDRAM GSA-E10L
Read mode : Secure
Utilize accurate stream : Yes
Defeat audio cache : Yes
Make use of C2 pointers : No
Codec: Flac 1.2.1; Level 8
Single File.flac, Eac.log,
File.cue Multiple wav file with Gaps (Noncompliant)
Accurately ripped (confidence 3)
Size Torrent: 384 Mb
Cover Incluse
TrackList:
1 That's Right 5:00
2 The Thinker 5:37
3 Marvin Said 5:20
4 True Blue 5:05
5 Holdin' On 5:25
6 Song For My Brother 4:15
7 Johnnie Lee 5:36
8 Summer Love 4:36
9 P Park 4:50
10 Footprints In The Sand 3:44
11 When Love Comes Calling * 6:27
12 Where Are You Now? * 5:37
* 2 bonus track(11 - 12)
Personnel
George Benson (vocals, guitar);
Eric Leeds (saxophone);
Ricky Peterson (electric piano, organ, keyboards, synthesizer, programming);
Paul Peterson (keyboards, guitar, bass);
Joe Mardin (keyboards, drums, programming);
Robbie Buchanan (keyboards, programming);
Curtis Williams (keyboards);
Michael Bland (drums);
Ralph MacDonald (congas);
Paulinho DaCosta (cowbell);
Nicki Richards (background vocals).
Listen to samples
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Biography
George Benson (born March 22, 1943) is a multi Grammy Award winning American musician, whose recording career began at the age of twenty-one as a jazz guitarist. He is also known as a pop, R&B, and scat singer. This one-time child prodigy topped the Billboard 200 in 1976 with the triple-platinum album, Breezin'.He was also a major live attraction in the UK during the 1980s. Benson uses a rest-stroke picking technique similar to that of gypsy jazz players such as Django Reinhardt.
Early career
Benson was born and raised in the Hill District in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. At the age of 7, Benson first played the ukulele in a corner drug store for which he was paid a few dollars; at the age of 8, he was playing guitar in an unlicensed nightclub on Friday and Saturday nights which was soon closed down by the police. At the age of 10, George recorded his first single record with RCA-Victor in New York, called 'She Makes Me Mad'.
Benson attended the Connelly High School although he left before graduation. As a youth, instead, he learned how to play straight-ahead instrumental jazz during a relationship performing for several years with organist Jack McDuff. At the age of 21, he recorded his first album as leader, The New Boss Guitar, featuring McDuff.[1] Benson's next recording was It's Uptown with the George Benson Quartet including Lonnie Smith on organ and Ronnie Cuber on baritone saxophone. Benson followed it up with The George Benson Cookbook, also with Lonnie Smith and Ronnie Cuber on baritone and drummer Marion Booker.
Miles Davis employed Benson in the mid 1960s, featuring his guitar on "Paraphernalia" on his 1968 Columbia release, Miles in the Sky. Benson went to Verve Records afterwards. Then, he signed with CTI Records, where he recorded numerous albums with jazz heavyweights guesting to limited financial success. Benson also did a version of The Beatles's 1969 album Abbey Road called The Other Side of Abbey Road, also released in 1969, and a version of "White Rabbit", originally written and recorded by San Francisco rock group Jefferson Airplane, around this time.
1970s and 1980s
By the mid to late 1970s, as he recorded for Warner Bros. Records, a whole new audience began to discover Benson for the first time. With the 1976 release Breezin', Benson began to put his vocal on tracks such as "This Masquerade". He had used his vocals infrequently on songs earlier in his career, notably his rendition of "Here Comes the Sun" on the Other Side of Abbey Road album. Breezin was a significant album in terms of popular music history - the first jazz release to go Platinum and the first indication that something new was about to happen. In 1976, Benson toured with soul singer, Minnie Riperton, who had been diagnosed with terminal breast cancer earlier that year. "This Masquerade" won a Grammy Award for Record of the Year and the live take of "On Broadway", recorded two years later from the 1978 release Weekend in L.A., also won a Grammy.
The first recipient of this stellar team effort was Benson, and the Qwest label's first official release was Benson's breakthrough pop album Give Me The Night. Benson made it into the pop and R&B top ten with the song "Give Me the Night", produced by Quincy Jones having previously been almost unknown to the younger audience. More importantly, Quincy Jones encouraged Benson to search his roots for further vocal inspiration and he re-discovered his love for Nat Cole, Ray Charles and Donny Hathaway in the process influencing a string of further vocal albums into the 90's. Despite returning to his jazz and guitar playing most recently, this theme was reflected again much later in Benson's 2000 release Absolute Benson featuring a cover of one of Hathaway's most notable songs, The Ghetto. Benson accumulated three other platinum LPs and two gold albums. He also recorded the original version of "Greatest Love of All" for the 1977 Muhammad Ali bio-pic, The Greatest, which was later recorded as a cover by Whitney Houston. During this time Benson recorded with the German conductor, Claus Ogerman.
Later and current career
In 1985 Benson and guitarist Chet Atkins went on the smooth jazz charts with their collaboration "Sunrise", one of two songs from the duo released on Atkins' disc Stay Tuned. In 1992, Benson appeared on Jack McDuff's Colour Me Blue album. Benson toured with Al Jarreau in America, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand to promote their 2006 album Givin' It Up. He played during the second Monsoon Cup in Terengganu in 2006 and also Malaysia's 50th Merdeka celebration alongside Jarreau in 2007.[citation needed] In May 2008, for the first time Benson took part in Mawazine Festival in Morocco.
To commemorate the long term relationship between Benson and Ibanez and to celebrate 30 years of collaboration on the GB Signature Models, Ibanez created the GB30TH, a very limited edition model featuring a gold foil finish inspired by the traditional Japanese Garahaku art form. In 2009, Benson was recognized by the National Endowment of the Arts as a Jazz Master, the nations highest honor in Jazz. Benson performed at the 49th issue of The Ohrid Summer Festival in Macedonia on July 25, 2009, and his tribute show to Nat King Cole "An Unforgettable Tribute to Nat King Cole" as part of the Istanbul International Jazz Festival in Turkey on July 27. In the fall of 2009, Benson finished recording a new album titled Songs and Stories, with Marcus Miller, producer John Burk, and session musicians David Paich and Steve Lukather. As a part of the promotion for his recent Concord Music Group/Monster Music release Songs and Stories, Benson has appeared and/or performed on The Tavis Smiley Show, Jimmy Kimmel Live and Late Night with Jimmy Fallon.
He is currently touring and performing in support of his recent release Songs and Stories (Concord Music Group/Monster Music.
Benson will tour throughout 2010 in North America, Europe and the Pacific Rim.
reviews
Someone seems to have left the exit door at GRP wide open; much of the label's talent, including some big names such as Lee Ritenour, Chick Corea, Gary Burton, and Dave Valentin, seems to be bolting as soon as they fulfill their current contracts. However, George Benson has just left his home for the past twenty years, Warner Brothers, and joined GRP. This may be largely due to the fact that super-producer Tommy LiPuma, who produced many of George Benson's classics, is now at the reins of GRP.
Whatever the case, I was anxious to see if Benson and LiPuma could produce a new-label debut to match Benson's Warner debut, Breezin', one of the classic and best-selling contemporary jazz albums of all time.
There's plenty of quality here — this is one of the best albums George Benson has put out in a long time. There's more emphasis on his expert guitar playing, which has been sadly underplayed on many of his recent albums. He's also in fine vocal form on four of the ten tunes, and he takes some of his wild trademark guitar-and-scat solo rides on others. As on many of Benson's better works, this album blends the best of smooth R&B and groovin' contemporary jazz.
The core unit on most of the tunes is co-producer Ricky Peterson on keyboards, organ, and drum programming, Paul Peterson on bass and rhythm guitar, Michael Bland on drums, and Benson on lead guitar and vocals. Real strings grace seven tunes. But then there's the drum machines. If you've been reading my reviews for awhile, you know that I'm really getting to detest these things. At least there are real drums happening as well, and touches like the gritty, soulful organ and live strings help to save the day.
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George Benson, Tommy LiPuma and GRP? Yes, I too had to look at the press release once again to make sure I got it right. GRP certainly needed an injection of fresh ideas and a man with Tommy LiPuma's experience was a good move. I suppose it was inevitable that Tommy would would to invite a few of his longstanding stars along to the party.
"That's Right" is George Benson's first new album for a few years now and was worth the wait. More often than not when I read the jazz newsgroups on the internet about his work, many often criticise that he he turned away from his real jazz roots, many say he became too much of a singer and didn't play enough on his albums. I think that this album addresses many of these ponits, subjective though it might be.
I believe the album is a wonderful balance of guitar ballads à la "In Flight" and "Breezin" but as George was quoted in an recent interview, "like to try and get a modern feel in the music too." His vocals come across as stunningly as ever and the killer cut "Marvin said" is one of the finest Benson tracks of all time (and I have almost thirty of his albums). Indeed this rates in my all time Top 20 too.
One of the distinct characteristics of the album is the keyboard talents of co-producer Ricky Peterson who plays a wonderful Hammond on "The Thinker" which also features the Benson scat cum lead trade mark.
The Benson ballads are represented by "Song for my brother", the wonderful "Summer Love" the smoocher "Footprints in the sand" and the album's closing cut "Where are you now" whilst the solid instrumentals are the laid back "Johnnie Lee" and the up-tempo "Song for my brother". If you are more into the "Love Ballad" type Benson cuts, check out the funky "P Park" or the title track .
This album will was again re-establish George at the top of the contemporary jazz charts and is an excellent addition to your own collection. It is perfect for the 'Wind down zone' at the end of the day.
Even when Allen gets more intense, as she does on the modal workout "Holdin' Court," there is still an underlying feeling of optimism. You can sense that incontestable vivaciousness, even on the tender "Unconditional Love" and lightly swinging title track. And her treatment of the three standards, especially the lush version of Mal Waldron's "Soul Eyes," featuring a three-piece horn section, is poignant without being maudlin.
Geri Allen has been, to some extent, a musician's musician for far too long. With The Life of a Song she delivers a lighthearted yet never insubstantial or compromising album that will hopefully bring her the more widespread attention she so richly deserves.
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