music.wikisort.org - CompositionA Time for Love is a studio album by Cuban performer Arturo Sandoval. It was released by Concord Records on May 11, 2010. The album was produced by Jorge Calandrelli and Gregg Field and features collaborations by Chris Botti, Kenny Barron and Monica Mancini.
2010 studio album by Arturo Sandoval
A Time for Love |
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Released | May 11, 2010 |
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Genre | Latin Jazz |
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Length | 68:04 |
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Label | Concord |
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Producer | Jorge Calandrelli, Gregg Field |
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Composition
The album includes a collection of classical pieces, standards, and ballads written by several writers such as Gabriel Fauré, Johnny Mandel, Johnny Mercer, Ogden Nash, Kurt Weill, Bruno Brighetti, Bruno Martino, Maurice Ravel, George Gershwin, Ira Gershwin, DuBose Heyward, Marty Panzer, Ástor Piazzolla, Charlie Chaplin, Geoffrey Parsons, James Phillips, Sammy Cahn, Jimmy Van Heusen, Otto Harbach, Jerome Kern, Alan Bergman, Marilyn Bergman, Michel Legrand and Cole Porter.[1] Sandoval originally wanted to record and release the album by himself, until pianist Shelly Berg brought him to Gregg Field, of Concord Records, who brought in Grammy Award-winning arranger Jorge Calandrelli. They co-produced while Calandrelli arranged eight of the nine string charts, Berg arranged the rest and brought in his trio to back up Sandoval. Sandoval mentioned that his two greatest inspirations for this album were trumpeter Bobby Hackett's playing with the Jackie Gleason Orchestra, and the album Clifford Brown with Strings.[2]
Reception
Professional ratingsReview scores |
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Source | Rating |
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Allmusic |     [2] |
Billboard | positive[3] |
The critical reception for the album has been extremely positive. Dan Oullette of Billboard magazine named the album "a gem" and the zenith of Sandoval's 20-plus-year recording career. He also praised the performer's expanded repertoire, especially for the selection of the songs "Oblivion", with the collaboration from Monica Mancini, and "Pavane Pour une Infante Défunte", with Chris Botti.[3] While reviewing the album, Thom Jurek of Allmusic said: "It's tempting to call A Time for Love Sandoval's masterpiece, but that is based on the sharp contrast with virtually everything else in his catalog; only time will reveal whether or not it is." Jurek also pointed out the emotional depth of the performer, and also named "stellar" the collaborations with Kenny Barron and Shelly Berg.[2] At the 11th Latin Grammy Awards, the album earned the accolade for Best Instrumental Album and won Jorge Calandrelli and Gregg Field the award for Producer of the Year.[4][5] A Time for Love also received a nomination for Best Engineered Album, for Gregg Field and Don Murray (engineers), and Michael Bishop (mastering engineer).[5]
Track listing
Title | Writer(s) |
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1. | "Après un Rêve (After a Dream)" | Gabriel Fauré | 5:09 |
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2. | "Emily" | Johnny Mandel, Johnny Mercer | 4:25 |
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3. | "Speak Low" | Ogden Nash, Kurt Weill | 4:37 |
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4. | "Estate" | Bruno Brighetti, Bruno Martino | 4:00 |
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5. | "A Time for Love" | Mandel | 5:06 |
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6. | "Pavane Pour une Infante Défunte (Pavane for a Dead Princess)" (featuring Chris Botti) | Maurice Ravel | 5:14 |
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7. | "I Loves You Porgy" | George Gershwin, Ira Gershwin, DuBose Heyward | 5:15 |
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8. | "Oblivion (How to Say Goodbye)" (featuring Monica Mancini) | Gregg Field, Marty Panzer, Ástor Piazzolla | 5:26 |
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9. | "Pavane" | Fauré | 4:52 |
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10. | "Smile" | Charlie Chaplin, Geoffrey Parsons, James Phillips | 4:02 |
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11. | "All the Way" | Sammy Cahn, Jimmy Van Heusen | 4:05 |
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12. | "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" | Otto Harbach, Jerome Kern | 4:24 |
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13. | "Windmills of Your Mind" (featuring Shelly Berg) | Alan Bergman, Marilyn Bergman, Michel Legrand | 4:24 |
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14. | "Every Time We Say Goodbye" (featuring Kenny Barron) | Cole Porter | 5:54 |
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Personnel
- Kenny Barron – piano
- Shelly Berg – arranger, piano, rhythm arrangements
- Chuck Berghofer – bass
- Charlie Bisharat, Darius Campo, Kevin Connolly, David Ewart, Tamara Hatwan, Tiffany Yi Hu, Razdan Kuyumijian, Songa Lee, Natalie Leggett, Phillip Levy, Liane Mautner, Robin Olson, Searmi Park – violin
- Michael Bishop – mastering, mixing
- Chris Botti – trumpet
- John Burk – executive producer
- Jorge Calandrelli – arranger, conductor, producer, string arrangements
- Larissa Collins – art direction
- Waldy Dominguez, Gerrit Kinkel, Don Murray – engineer
- Bruce Dukov – concert master
- Christine Ermacoff, Keith Greene, Darren McCann – cello
- Alma Fernandez, Harry Shirinian – viola
- Gregg Field – drums, engineer, mixing, percussion, pro-tools, producer
- Vanessa Freebairn-Smith, Trevor Handy, Dennis Karmazin – cello
- Steve Genewick – assistant engineer, mixing
- Milton Gutierrez – assistant engineer
- Mary Hogan – A&R
- Manny Iriarte – photography
- Mark Joggerst – arranger
- Ralf Kemper – producer
- Monica Mancini – vocals
- Jorge Pinos – management
- Seth Presant – mixing
- Phil Ramone – mixing
- David Ritz – liner notes
- Albert J. Roman – package design
- Arturo Sandoval – arranger, flugelhorn, trumpet, vocals
References
- "A Time for Love – Arturo Sandoval". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved January 7, 2011.
- Jurek, Thom. "A Time for Love – Arturo Sandoval". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved January 3, 2011.
- Oullette, Dan (April 30, 2010). "Arturo Sandoval, "A Time for Love"". Billboard. Archived from the original on 7 January 2011. Retrieved January 7, 2011.
- "The Latin Recording Academy – Nominees". The Latin Recording Academy. Archived from the original on 26 November 2010. Retrieved January 7, 2011.
- "The Latin Recording Academy – Nominees". The Latin Recording Academy. Archived from the original on 2010-11-26. Retrieved January 7, 2011.
- "Arturo Sandoval Chart History (Top Jazz Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved February 7, 2014.
Kenny Barron |
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Years given are for the recording(s), not first release, unless stated otherwise. |
Albums as leader or co-leader |
- You Had Better Listen (with Jimmy Owens, 1967)
- Sunset to Dawn (1973)
- Peruvian Blue (1974)
- In Tandem (and Ted Dunbar, 1975)
- Lucifer (1975)
- Innocence (1978)
- Together (and Tommy Flanagan, 1978)
- Golden Lotus (1980)
- Kenny Barron at the Piano (1981)
- Imo Live (1982)
- Spiral (1982)
- Green Chimneys (1983–87)
- 1+1+1 (1984)
- Autumn in New York (1984)
- Landscape (1984)
- Scratch (1985)
- The Red Barron Duo (and Red Mitchell, 1986)
- Two as One (and Buster Williams, 1986)
- What If? (1986)
- Live at Fat Tuesdays (1988)
- Rhythm-a-Ning (and John Hicks, 1989)
- Invitation (1990)
- Live at Maybeck Recital Hall, Volume Ten (1990)
- The Only One (1990)
- Confirmation (and Barry Harris, 1991)
- Lemuria-Seascape (1991)
- The Moment (1991)
- Quickstep (1991)
- Sambao (1992)
- Other Places (1993)
- Wanton Spirit (1994)
- Swamp Sally (and Mino Cinelu, 1995)
- Things Unseen (1995)
- Live at Bradley's (1996)
- Live at Bradley's II (1996)
- Night and the City (and Charlie Haden, 1996)
- Spirit Song (1999)
- Canta Brasil (2000)
- Freefall (and Regina Carter, 2000)
- Images (2003)
- Super Standard (2004)
- The Traveler (2007)
- Minor Blues (2009)
- Kenny Barron & the Brazilian Knights (2012)
- The Art of Conversation (and Dave Holland, 2014)
- Book of Intuition (2015)
- Concentric Circles (2018)
- Without Deception (and Dave Holland, 2020)
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Member of Sphere | |
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With Bill Barron | |
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With Ron Carter | |
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With Stan Getz | |
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With Dizzy Gillespie | |
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With Freddie Hubbard | |
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With Yusef Lateef | |
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With James Moody | |
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With Buddy Rich | |
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With others |
- Many a New Day: Karrin Allyson Sings Rodgers & Hammerstein (Karrin Allyson, 2015)
- Live at the Blue Note (Franco Ambrosetti, 1992)
- Mustang (Curtis Amy, 1967)
- Old Bottles - New Wine (Ray Anderson, 1985)
- The Best Thing for You (Chet Baker, 1977)
- You Can't Go Home Again (Chet Baker, 1977)
- Studio Trieste (Chet Baker and Hubert Laws, 1982)
- Bad Benson (George Benson, 1974)
- Code Red (Cindy Blackman, 1990)
- The Oracle (Cindy Blackman, 1995)
- Shining Hour (Larry Coryell, 1989)
- Quicksand (Ted Curson, 1974)
- Continuum (Ray Drummond, 1994)
- Booker 'n' Brass (Booker Ervin, 1967)
- Tex Book Tenor (Booker Ervin, 1968)
- All That Jazz (Ella Fitzgerald, 1989)
- Awakening (Sonny Fortune, 1975)
- Two for the Blues (Frank Foster and Frank Wess, 1983)
- Frankly Speaking (Frank Foster and Frank Wess, 1984)
- Tiger in the Rain (Michael Franks, 1978)
- Man & Woman (George Freeman, 1974)
- Panorama: Live at the Village Vanguard (Jim Hall, 1996)
- Light and Lively (Louis Hayes, 1989)
- Una Max (Louis Hayes, 1989)
- The Gap Sealer (Albert Heath, 1972)
- Kwanza (The First) (Jimmy Heath, 1973)
- Now! (Bobby Hutcherson, 1969)
- In the Vanguard (Bobby Hutcherson, 1986)
- New Agenda (Elvin Jones, 1975)
- Time Capsule (Elvin Jones, 1977)
- The Bassist! (Sam Jones, 1979)
- We're Goin' Up (Eric Kloss, 1967)
- Jazz Nocturne (Lee Konitz, 1992)
- Number Two Express (Christian McBride, 1995)
- Brownie: Homage to Clifford Brown (Helen Merrill, 1995)
- Never Never Land (Jane Monheit, 2000)
- Peace and Rhythm (Idris Muhammad, 1971)
- A Time for Love (Arturo Sandoval, 2010)
- This Bud's for You... (Bud Shank, 1984)
- Solid (Woody Shaw, 1986)
- Kamau (Charles Sullivan, 1995)
- Pure Dynamite (Buddy Terry, 1972)
- A Bluish Bag (Stanley Turrentine, 1967)
- Jazz French Horn (Tom Varner, 1985)
- Listen Here (Roseanna Vitro, 1982)
- Natural Essence (Tyrone Washington, 1967)
- Two at the Top (Frank Wess and Johnny Coles, 1983)
- New York, New Sound (Gerald Wilson, 2003)
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Discography |
Authority control  | |
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