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Jazzmasters VI

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Download links and information about Jazzmasters VI by Paul Hardcastle. This album was released in 2010 and it belongs to Electronica, Jazz, Contemporary Jazz, Crossover Jazz, Rock, New Wave, Dancefloor, Dance Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 55:11 minutes.

Artist: Paul Hardcastle
Release date: 2010
Genre: Electronica, Jazz, Contemporary Jazz, Crossover Jazz, Rock, New Wave, Dancefloor, Dance Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 13
Duration: 55:11
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Awakening Thoughts 1:36
2. Touch and Go 4:33
3. One Chance 3:33
4. Cloud Watching 5:29
5. I Really Like 3:56
6. Solar Sky 4:17
7. I Can't Get By 4:19
8. In the Key of Time 4:50
9. The Vision 4:09
10. Dimensions of Light 4:29
11. So Into You 3:48
12. Return of the Rainman (Reprise) 4:16
13. One Chance (Full Version) 5:56

Details

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Paul Hardcastle's Jazzmasters series reaches its sixth installment with this cool, rhythmic, jazzy collection, which is similar to its five predecessors. The album cover shows a sun setting over water, and that's a good indication that the music is intended to serve as the background to a tropic vacation, or perhaps to a depiction of a tropic vacation on a TV channel devoted to travel programs. Beki Biggins occasionally contributes romantic or philosophical lyrics and sings them in a calm, emotionally disconnected voice reminiscent of Sade. Sometimes a flute or saxophone, courtesy of Chris "Snake" Davis or Rock Hendrix, plays a flowing lead line. But always, the steady percussion track rolls along through each selection for three to five minutes before the music fades out (it has to, since there is no development), to be replaced by another, equally undemanding one. Hardcastle makes a vocal appearance at the end in the form of an interview with a smooth jazz DJ during a replay of "One Chance," and he repeats Biggins' carpe diem notion from her lyrics. Here today, gone tomorrow, is the conclusion, and the Jazzmasters albums seem intended to embody that idea. While they play, they work as ear candy; when they're over, they're quickly forgotten.