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Right Here, Right Now

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Download links and information about Right Here, Right Now by Benoît David / Benoit David. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to Jazz, Contemporary Jazz, Crossover Jazz genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 49:04 minutes.

Artist: Benoît David / Benoit David
Release date: 2003
Genre: Jazz, Contemporary Jazz, Crossover Jazz
Tracks: 10
Duration: 49:04
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Watermelon Man 5:22
2. Right Here, Right Now 4:37
3. Le Grand 5:25
4. Don't Know Why 4:30
5. Jellybeans and Chocolate 5:12
6. Third Encounter 5:44
7. Swingin' Waikiki 5:35
8. Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight 4:10
9. Wistful Thinking 4:31
10. Quiet Room 3:58

Details

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A true elder statesman of contemporary jazz (whose seminal mid-'80s recordings helped pave the way for the smooth jazz genre), pianist David Benoit stayed relevant, fresh, and funky due to three factors — brilliant melodies, stylistic diversity from track to track, and working with hip, edgy producers. Rick Braun co-produced two of Benoit's recent, similarly brilliant offerings, Professional Dreamer (1999) and Fuzzy Logic (2001), and on Right Here, Right Now assumes the helm fully, guiding Benoit through a wide terrain of musical territory, sometimes adding his own trumpet expertise. There's the ongoing fun of funk/soul triumphs like "Watermelon Man" (Herbie Hancock's classic fashioned with the old-school bounce of another Benoit influence, Ramsey Lewis), the retro-minded title track, and the brassy jam "Jellybeans and Chocolate" (featuring Brian Culbertson and Euge Groove). Benoit's more thoughtful side emerges on the film score-like "Le Grand," an unofficial tribute to the style of Michel Legrand featuring a dense percussion atmosphere, and the understated, melancholy "Quiet Room," a tribute to Benoit's late father (featuring Braun and guitarist Pat Kelley) and something of a sequel to his Grammy-nominated piece "Dad's Room." Benoit's other stops include hitching posts in "Swingin' Waikiki" (ah, the joy of bossa, featuring saxman Andy Suzuki) and a mystical, bass-throbbing "Third Encounter." Aside from his occasional Vince Guaraldi reduxes, Benoit with a few exceptions never much relied on cover tunes, but here includes two besides the Hancock tune — a dreamy "Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight" with Peter White and an orchestra, and a sparse easy listening cover of "Don't Know Why." Years passed, smooth jazz radio kept playing his oldies, yet his new stuff kept getting better and better.