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Category:    Home > Reviews > Jazz > Pop > Vocal > The Essential Kenny G (CD Set)

The Essential Kenny G (CD Set)

 

Sound: B-     Music: C+

 

 

Safe.  So much music today lives up to that word and this includes most of the junk radio stations consider good music.  This was not always this way, but wow, has music become bad.  Kenny G’s commercial success was considered unusual in that he was not a vocalist and had all these hits just because he could play saxophone.  Incredibly, hardly any of the tracks on the 2 CD Essential Kenny G collection shows him off to best advantage, playing restrictive works instead that are just too safe.

 

Fine, we do not expect Rock, Punk, Rap or Speed Metal here, but he manages to render even standards dull and it is fair to say his hits are the kind that paved the way for the decline of American Music in profound ways by the safeness he stands for as a sort of brand name.  The tracks chosen for this set are as follows -

 

 

Disc 1:

 

  1. Songbird
  2. Sade
  3. Slip Of The Tongue
  4. Don't Make Me Wait For Love (with Lenny Williams)
  5. Silhouette
  6. Against Doctor's Orders
  7. What Does It Take (To Win Your Love; with Ellis Hall)
  8. Brazil
  9. Theme From Dying Young
  10.   We've Saved The Best For Last (with Smokie Robinson)
  11.   Forever In Love
  12.   Midnight Motion (live)
  13.   By The Time This Night Is Over (with Peabo Bryson)
  14.   Loving You
  15.   Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas
  16.   Sentimental

 

 

Disc 2:

 

  1. What A Wonderful World (played to the original Louis Armstrong classic)
  2. Morning
  3. Sister Rose
  4. Even If My Heart Would Break (with Aaron Neville)
  5. The Moment
  6. Summertime (with intro by George Benson)
  7. Missing You Now (with Michael Bolton)
  8. Pick Up The Pieces (with David Sanborn)
  9. My Heart Will Go On (Love Theme From "Titanic")
  10.  Beautiful (with Chaka Khan)
  11.  Havana
  12.  Going Home
  13.  The Way You Move (with Earth, Wind & Fire)
  14.  Medley: Deck The Halls/The Twelve Days Of Christmas
  15.  Auld Lang Syne (The Millennium Mix)

 

 

The Robinson and Khan tracks are the best by default, while the Bolton work is a disaster and playing over the Armstrong classic not wonderful by any means.  Louis Armstrong does NOT need Kenny G or anyone else to play over his classics and there is something morbid about that particular cut, though it reflects the “living dead” feel of many of these tracks.  And what is with having Christmas music all year ‘round?  It is like some sickening illness that is like the end result of the commercialization of the holiday.  Charlie Brown should let them have it! 

 

Obviously, this is meant for fans and like all hits sets, meant to get new fans to buy the entire catalog.  I like David Sanborn, but the cover of the Average White Band classic Pick Up The Pieces is too lite for its own good, while The Way You Move plays like an over-decorated Christmas tree.  Needless to say, some would find this somehow “hip” and clever and Kenny G is seemingly sincere about this material, but most of it is overrated, as is this set.  I expected some revelation, giving it a fair chance.  Too bad it met the worst expectations.  Get it at your own risk.

 

The PCM 2.0 16bit/44.1kHz Stereo is strange in the way it has clarity, yet fine detail and soundstage are flat, something his music and talents are always criticized for.  Songbird almost sounds on the verge of warping.  Despite the different years and producers, plus changes in audio recording technology, the homogenous sound is disappointing.  This is, as expected, a set for fans only.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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