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Come On In

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Download links and information about Come On In by Steve Smith. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to Electronica, Jazz, Crossover Jazz, Rock genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 01:02:25 minutes.

Artist: Steve Smith
Release date: 2004
Genre: Electronica, Jazz, Crossover Jazz, Rock
Tracks: 11
Duration: 01:02:25
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $14.99
Buy on Songswave €1.75

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Time Tunnel (featuring Tom Coster, Frank Gambale, Baron Browne) 5:38
2. Come On In (featuring Tom Coster, Frank Gambale, Baron Browne) 5:40
3. Beneath the Surface (featuring Tom Coster, Frank Gambale, Baron Browne) 2:06
4. Cat Walk (featuring Tom Coster, Frank Gambale, Baron Browne) 6:05
5. Around the World (featuring Tom Coster, Frank Gambale, Baron Browne) 9:35
6. Soho (featuring Tom Coster, Frank Gambale, Baron Browne) 6:25
7. A Little Something (featuring Tom Coster, Frank Gambale, Baron Browne) 8:22
8. From Naples to Heaven (featuring Tom Coster, Frank Gambale, Baron Browne) 4:07
9. Baton Rouge (featuring Tom Coster, Frank Gambale, Baron Browne) 6:17
10. Fine Line (featuring Tom Coster, Frank Gambale, Baron Browne) 2:18
11. High Wire (featuring Tom Coster, Frank Gambale, Baron Browne) 5:52

Details

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Steve Smith's Vital Information has evolved from being a fusion band into one that is closer to soul-jazz. He had led units under the Vital Information name for 21 years when he recorded Come On In, a tight quartet album featuring guitarist Frank Gambale (of Chick Corea's Elektric Band), keyboardist Tom Coster (who also plays accordion), and bassist Baron Browne. The music includes some grooves worthy of Joe Zawinul, straight-ahead sections, catchy themes, and plenty of funky rhythms that avoid being predictable, plus a heated up-tempo blues "A Little Something." Smith is mostly in the background, content to propel and inspire his sidemen into playing some of their finest music. This set, which crosses many musical boundaries, reveals Steve Smith's Vital Information to be one of the most underrated bands in modern jazz and serves as an excellent introduction to the group's music.