Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Blue Pacific (album)

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Released
  
31 May 1990

Language
  
English

Release date
  
31 May 1990

Genres
  
Smooth jazz, Vocal jazz

Length
  
52:24

Artist
  
Michael Franks

Label
  
Reprise Records

Blue Pacific (album) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen44cMic

Blue Pacific (1990)
  
Dragonfly Summer (1993)

Producers
  
Walter Becker, Tommy LiPuma, Jeff Lorber

Similar
  
Michael Franks albums, Vocal jazz albums

Michael franks blue pacific full album 1990


Blue Pacific is a smooth vocal jazz album by American singer-songwriter and musician Michael Franks, released in 1990 with Reprise. It was Franks' eleventh studio album after The Camera Never Lies in 1987 and prior to Dragonfly Summer in 1993.

Contents

Background

The album marked three notable returns for Franks. The first was a return to the Reprise Label he'd released The Art of Tea with in 1976, fourteen years prior. Tommy LiPuma also returned as producer after a ten-year absence, the last album they worked on being One Bad Habit in 1980.

Commentators noted the stylistic return to the more laid back, Brazilian jazz inspired music of his earlier works, as opposed to the more electronic pop sound Franks had experimented with throughout the 1980s.

Musicians

  • Arrangements, Keyboards and Programming – Jeff Lorber
  • Background vocals – Brenda Russell, Bunny Hull, Kareem, Livingston Taylor
  • Bass – John Patitucci, Neil Stubenhaus, 'Readdie' Freddie Washington
  • Cymbals – Sean Franks
  • Drums – Vinnie Colaiuta, Peter Erskine, John Guerin
  • Electric Guitar – Dean Parks
  • Guitar – Larry Carlton, Buzz Feiten, Paul Jackson, Jr., Michael Thompson
  • Keyboards – John Beasley
  • Percussion – Alex Acuña, Luis Conte, Michael Fisher
  • Piano – Joe Sample
  • Alto Saxophone – Marc Russo
  • Tenor Saxophone – Bob Shepard, Kirk Whalum
  • Synthesizer Arrangement and Programming – Larry Williams
  • Reception

    Reception to Blue Pacific was generally positive.

    Writing for AllMusic, Stephen J. Matteo praised Franks' "return to form and his best album since 1979's Tiger in the Rain", commenting that "[t]he album marked a total rebirth for Franks." He described the album as "[m]editative, lush and clearly the work of an artist intent on making personal music regardless of trends or airplay, Blue Pacific is as open and beautiful as the ocean for which it is named."

    Writing in the Orlando Sentinel in the year of the album's release, Susan M. Barbieri commented that "[w]hereas Franks' last effort, The Camera Never Lies, didn't quite click as an album, Blue Pacific does.". She described the work as an "easy vocal [stroll] that [lulls] the listener into joining him in a state of calm" and praised the lyrics as "clever pop poetics for which this former English teacher is known."

    Songs

    1The Art Of Love4:11
    2Woman in the Waves5:59
    3All I Need4:48

    References

    Blue Pacific (album) Wikipedia


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