Create account Log in

Talkin' Verve: Quincy Jones

[Edit]

Download links and information about Talkin' Verve: Quincy Jones by Quincy Jones. This album was released in 2001 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Jazz, Crossover Jazz, Rock, Pop, Bop genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 43:01 minutes.

Artist: Quincy Jones
Release date: 2001
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Jazz, Crossover Jazz, Rock, Pop, Bop
Tracks: 16
Duration: 43:01
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $9.49

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Comin' Home Baby (featuring Quincy Jones And His Orchestra) 2:44
2. Boogie Stop Shuffle 2:40
3. On the Street Where You Live 2:32
4. Soul Bossa Nova (Original Mix) 2:44
5. Funny Farm (From Slender Thread) 1:30
6. The Hucklebuck (featuring Quincy Jones And His Orchestra) 2:23
7. The "In" Crowd (featuring Quincy Jones And His Orchestra) 3:01
8. Baby Elephant Walk 2:53
9. (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction 3:27
10. A Hard Day's Night (featuring Quincy Jones And His Orchestra) 3:24
11. What's New Pussycat? (featuring Quincy Jones And His Orchestra) 2:43
12. Fever 2:35
13. Mohair Sam 2:21
14. Something About You 3:13
15. Hang On Sloopy 2:11
16. Rack 'Em Up (featuring Quincy Jones And His Orchestra, Don Elliott) 2:40

Details

[Edit]

The Talkin' Verve series was a huge set of recordings by individuals who had recorded for the label and were responsible for the funky, jazzy lounge music that was so revered again in the '90s, as well as the pioneers of the soul-jazz movement of the '60s. This volume, with Quincy Jones leading a big band, has all the elements of cool, sophisticated swagger, but liner note author Billy Vera has it all wrong when he claims that these were the blues without the edges. Nonsense. Check the cats who played in these bands: Harry "Sweets" Edison, Roland Kirk, Paul Gonsalves, Budd Johnson, Grady Tate, Ray Barretto, Freddie Hubbard, Ray Charles, Urbie Green, and more, In other words, this is some hard swingin', brass blasting, rhythm driven soul-jazz on a big-band budget and these cats sweat. Whether it's on the "Soul Bossa Nova" that's most known from the Austin Powers soundtrack, or Lamont Dozier's "Somethin' About You," or "Hang on Sloopy," with its Latin retro-fit, or Charles Mingus' "Boogie Stop Shuffle," or Dallas Frazier's "Mohair Sam," it's all gutbucket though ultra-sophisticated in terms of the charts Jones wrote. His career with Verve was a stellar one and these 16 cuts prove it.