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Sounds...And Stuff Like That!!
Sounds...And Stuff Like That!!
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List Price: $9.98
Buy New: $6.24
You Save: $3.74 (37%)
Buy New/Used from $4.15

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars(based on 16 reviews)
Sales Rank: 44843
Category: Music

Artist: Quincy Jones
Publisher: A&M
Studio: A&M
Manufacturer: A&M
Label: A&M
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 3249
UPC: 075021324923
EAN: 0075021324923
ASIN: B000002GC4

Release Date: October 25, 1990
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • Stuff Like That
  • I'm Gonna Miss You in the Morning
  • Love, I Never Had It So Good
  • Tell Me a Bedtime Story
  • Love Me by Name
  • Superwoman (Where Were You When I Needed You)
  • Takin' It to the Streets

Similar Items:

  • The Dude
  • Body Heat
  • Back on the Block
  • Walking in Space
  • Q's Jook Joint

Customer Reviews:   Read 11 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars brings back good memories   April 25, 2008
  1 out of 1 found this review helpful

it feels really good to have this disc back in my collection again! it's like eating a plate of soul food on a sunny day and washing it down with lemonade spiked with southern comfort!

when i was a teenager, i used to sneak this album out of the house and play it at school during my free periods. i was obsessive like that. i always wanted to figure out how music could sound so so good.

i have gotten past that and just live in the music when i play it. my favorites are 'love me by name', 'tell me a bedtime story', 'superwoman', 'stuff like that' and 'love--i never had it so good'. with songs like this sung by artists like patti austin, luther vandross, ashford and simpson and chaka khan, it's the listener that never had it so good. and the production is a-one. again, the listener is the winner.



5 out of 5 stars Quincy Jones' Masterpiece   March 9, 2008
  2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Sounds... and Stuff Like That, to me is Quincy Jones' most varied album. Yet at the same time it hits you like a square brick. It's extremely well constructed, yet flows freely like the waves.
The year is 78 and Quincy has not yet started working with Michael Jackson, and Rod Temperton is still doing keys with Heatwave (you should get that one too!!). Maybe therefore his music here is less predictable as it would sometimes become in later years.
Just a few names of the great artists working together here: Ashford and Simpson, Patty Austin, Luther Vandross, Chaka Khan, Ralph McDonald, Herbie Hancock, Eric Gale, Michael Brecker, Steve Gadd, Richard Tee, Anthony Jackson, David T. Walker, Wah Wah Watson.
As I said before, this is all about variation.
Stuff Like That, the funky opener, is an instant hit. The fun they had doing this jumps off the disc. Great rythm and vocals (Chaka, Valerie and Nick).
Patti Austin and Luther Vandross do a fabulous duet in I'm Gonna Miss You In The Morning.
Love, I Never Had It So Good flows like the waves coming onto the shore with Tell Me A Bedtime Story softly preparing you for what I think is the best song of the album: Love Me By Name. An incredible ballad sung into the heavens by Patti Austin. Once you've listened to this, I swear, you'll never forget it.
Superwoman is a beautiful version of Stevie Wonder's Song; the stomping Takin' It To The Streets a well done cover of The Doobie Brothers'
'Nuff said: just get it!



5 out of 5 stars This CD placed me back to a time for Love and REAL Music   July 23, 2007
Yes, it did, and I also found Patty Austins Love Me by Name in a single that is not available on any other CD/LP/ Even on her own works, she has not recorded this song, All I could do is lift up my hands with emotions when I heard it/ AND "Tell me a Bedtime Story" is another phenominal cut, yes, I said "Cut" (old school). With Herbie Hancock on the key board... Boy,,, that was a time when music was music, this CD brings you the warmth of your past....


3 out of 5 stars Has it's stand out moments   May 16, 2007
As I'm always on the look out for good music, and after reading my Boys Olukayode excellent review of this CD, I thought I'd take the plunge and order it. This CD passed me by on its initial release, as i was only ten, and was more into football than music, anyway I digress. The first track: 'Stuff Like That' I had heard on Quincy's Jook Joint CD, and If I'm honest I prefer that particular as it seems more lively than the offering, but it may be because i heard that version first. 'I'm gonna miss you in the morning', and 'Love, I never had it so good', leave me feeling a bit cold, but that maybe because, being mid-tempo songs, they don't do much for me, as the more up-tempo joints. The first standout for me is the 'Tell me a bedtime Story' song which is a lovely flute driven ( i think) instrumental, with a sung chorus, that raises and falls, and stays in the memory long after it has finished playing. The other is the last song on the CD 'Takin' It To The Streets' featuring among others a youthful Luther Vandross, which is a Gospel inspired anthem with very thoughtful deep lyrics. 'Love me by name' and 'Superwomen' are OK, but don't really stand out to my mind. This CD has introduced me to Quincy Jones, and the next on the list is "The Dude".


5 out of 5 stars Q Marks The Spot   June 12, 2006
  12 out of 12 found this review helpful

After owning this on vinyl for almost 30 years, I finally got it on CD. The record still played well but it was beginning to show its age. Then there's the fact that they no longer make cars with tape players, apparently, and I need something to play in the new car I'm getting next month.

But most of all, I'm just bored beyond endurance with the majority of music coming out these days and have decided to spend my money going into the archives and revamping my record collection.

I am completely unabashed about my adoration for Quincy Jones. To me he is literally the best producer, conductor and arranger of my generation and I very much doubt I'll see anything to equal him in my lifetime. From the various magazine interviews and TV appearances of him I've seen, he seems like a pretty cool dude too.

This is the album that introduced to Q. I was 15 going on 16 and up until that point, the pinnacle of my musical pleasures had been provided by disco queens and old-school reggae dons. I mention no names. And then one day, my mother sent me out for some milk and I stopped by the house of this older guy I was friends with at the time. He told me he'd just bought a new album and asked me if I wanted to hear something special. I said sure, he put the record on and time just seemd to stand still. I stood there, transfixed, eyes wide open and mouth agape. And this was just to the first strains of the first song on the album, the title track, "Stuff Like That."

I literally didn't move a muscle until my friend had played the entire first side of the album and the first two songs of the second side. I was entranced. I had never heard anything like it. The clarity of the music (My friend had a pretty decent sound system. Sure it was 1978 but still), the lush orchestration that while complex was never overbearing, the solos...

And then there were the voices... boy, what that man can do with voices.

I came to, and left to run my errand. I got a sound clip around the ear for being late with the milk. Happy days. I vowed I was going to get a copy of the album for myself and vowed I was going to get a stereo system like my friend's. It was a year before I succeeded with the former and another nine before I managed the latter but there can be no doubt: It was Quincy Jones who set me on the path to the appreciation of quality music. That same year, Q produced The Brothers Johnson's "Blam!" and the soundtrack to "The Wiz", which is how he got to meet Michael Jackson. The following year he produced Jackson's "Off The Wall". The rest, as the say, is history.

It was on this album that Q introduced us to Bruce Swedien (even his name sounds efficient somehow) and his "Acousonic Recording Process". There's a detailed explanation of how the process works on the album/CD inner sleeve and whatever it is they do, it seems to work. Few producers have been able to match the quality of the sound produced by the collaboration of Jones and Swedien. It's my bet that few ever will.

The album is a veritable array of stars, both established and emerging (at the time):

"Stuff Like That", a funky tune featuring Valerie Simpson and the legendary Chaka Khan on vocals. Sax solo by George Young.

"I'm Gonna Miss You In The Morning", a ballad featuring Patti Austin and the late Luther Vandross on vocals (and this was some years before he went on to become the megastar that he did). Lyricon solo by Tom Scott.

"Love, I Never Had It So Good", a stomping choral piece with Patti Austin and Charles May on lead vocals. Electric sax solo by Michael Brecker, Fender Bass solo by Anthony Jackson.

"Tell Me A Bedtime Story", probably the first ever jazz tune that made me sit up and pay attention. Herbie Hancock lays down electric piano improvisations and Harry Lookofsky records his violin over the track, copying Hancock note for note. He doesn't do it just once though. He does it several times, over and over, and the end result sounds like an entire string section. But it was just one man! Flute solo by Hubert Laws.

"Love Me By Name", intense ballad sung by Patti Austin. Keyboards by Herbie Hancock, Guitar by the late Eric Gale.

"Superwoman (Where Were You When I Needed You)", another, more mid-tempo ballad sung by Patti Austin. Flute solos by Hubert Laws, Electric piano solo by Herbie Hancock, Lyricon solo by Tom Scott.

"Takin' It To The Streets", brings the album to a close with a gospel-influenced stomper. Luther Vandross and Gwen Guthrie, both of who have since passed away, sadly, provide vocals. Tenor sax solo by Michael Brecker.

There are no extras on the CD, no gimmicky remixes or video clips and that suits me just fine. There are just seven pieces of good quality music. Best money I've spent all month.



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