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  Of All the Things CD by Jazzanova
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Jazzanova - Of All the Things

Of All the Things

Music Artist :Jazzanova
Music Style :General
Record Label :Verve
Release Date :2008-10-21
Store Price :$13.98

Artistopia's Price: $13.98

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CD Tracks/Songs


Disc 1

1. Look What You're Doin' to Me - Jazzanova, Phonte
2. Let Me Show Ya - Jazzanova, Paul Randolph
3. I Can See - Jazzanova, Ben Westbeech
4. Lie - Jazzanova, , Thief
5. Little Bird - José James, , Jazzanova
6. Rockin' You Eternally - Dwele, Jazzanova, Leon Ware
7. So Far from Home - Jazzanova, Phonte
8. What Do You Want? - Joe Dukie, Jazzanova
9. Lucky Girl - Jazzanova, Paul Randolph
10. Gafiera - Azymuth, Jazzanova, Pedro Martins
11. Morning Scapes - Jazzanova, Bembe Segue
12. Dial a Cliché - Jazzanova, Paul Randolph

Other Artist Albums


Music AlbumOf All the Things
Music AlbumIn Between
Music AlbumThe Remixes 2002-2005
Music AlbumMixing
Music AlbumBroad Casting
Music AlbumRemixed
Music AlbumComputer Incarnations for World Peace
Music AlbumThe Remixes 1997-2000
Music AlbumBelle et Fou

Customer Reviews of This Album/CD

A huge shock
Submitted on: 2009-09-14
I've loved Jazzanova for awhile. 'In Between' is a record I must have played a thousand times and still find rewarding. When I put 'Of All The Things' on for the first time it was hard to believe what I was hearing. Essentially gone are the electronics, the break beat-ish drumming is dialed way down. What's left? An amazing soul record, half of the tracks sound like they could have come from a motown or philadelphia production decades ago: big horns, lush strings, the works, rhythms that plaster a huge smile on your face in an instant. 'Let Me Show Ya' and 'I Can See' are standout tracks for me. Thanks jazzanova!
Jazzy, catchy, fun, & with great beats
Submitted on: 2009-04-13
This is Jazzanova's latest & greatest Album. It has well done beats that are nicely interlaced with interesting, quality, and fun jazzy melodies, riffs, and voices.
Sounds like 1960's Soul/R&B than 2000 Electronic Trip-Hop
Submitted on: 2009-02-11
Before you buy it, listen to it; really.

This is not the Jazzanova you know. If you enjoyed Jazzanova's earlier work, you'll find this CD does not sound like Jazzanova at all. This CD is 1960's Soul/R&B but cut in 2008. I'm not going to say it's bad, there is allot of talent in the cuts. But it is devoid of what you would expect. I just posted mine for sale used; I didn't expect this music & will have to be more careful in the future.

If your new to Jazzanova, don't judge them by this CD. Audition some of their earlier work to get a feel for what this very talented group was once about.

Of All the Things
Submitted on: 2008-12-05
Of all the things Jazzanova could have done for a sophomore effort in the seven interminable years since their electro-jazz landmark In Between, they've recorded a soul record. How about that. Granted, these six German producers have been cutting their teeth on soul music and its offshoots with a baker's dozen of tasteful mixes, so the direction they've taken on their newest batch of own-productions isn't completely surprising. And yet, Of All the Things doesn't seem at first blush like the whiz-bang showstopper that people were prepared for. That's because In Between was borderline-perfect, a cosmic trip through some of the classiest electronic jazz ever committed to disc, and likeminded musicians followed in Jazzanova's footsteps as if they were the pied piper. But it's also because--and this is the key distinction between the two records--In Between pointed the way to the future of electronic listening music, while Of All the Things concerns itself almost solely with the past. Jazzanova are, in fact, in love with the past, and as we well know, love can shoot people's attention and commitment up to stratospheric levels. And it's this commitment to both their craft and doing right by their forebears that sneakily makes this record their second resounding success in a row....

Of all the eras in the history of soul music they could have catapulted us into--`60s Motown, early-'80s garage, `70s quiet storm R&B--they've chosen all of them. Jazzanova play kickball with decade-divided genres as though the lines between them simply didn't exist, seamlessly moving from hip-hop to funk to quiet storm to MOR urban jazz, all going back in a direct line to Sam Cooke and the Isley Brothers. If Of All the Things is the `60s, `70s, `80s and `90s rolled into one, the production positively effulges with the vitality of the 21st century. What could have been a dusty old time capsule is instead a celebration of the music that has guided us to where we find ourselves now.

Of all the elements they could have squelched this time around, they've decided to downplay the beatwork. It's a risky move, considering that complex rhythms were their debut's featured attraction, and one listen to the drums on "L.O.V.E. and You & I", "Soon" and "Another New Day" from In Between is enough to cause temporary paralysis. But if Jazzanova had to 86 the maddening beatwork in order to give the more melodic components the floor, so be it. Of All the Things is a rich, bafflingly mellifluous listen, the lines of instrumentation mixed so perfectly that you'll wonder if there's an electronic producer's hall of fame that Jazzanova could be inducted into somewhere. To use "What Do You Want?" as an exemplar, pay attention to how a slippery, Ndegeocello-esque bass underpins the song and tilts it onto a slant, and how the least cheesy violins in the history of nu-jazz provide beautifully conceived accents and counterpoints to singer Joe Dukie's primary melody. There are about 15 different things going on in "What Do You Want?", and every single one of them complements something else and contributes to the success of the final product. So, sorry; there just isn't any room for In Between`s beat bonanza around these parts.

Of all the singers and collaborators they could have chosen to work with, they've selected those who align with the songs based on feel alone, regardless of star power or even artistic merit. No will.i.ams, Kanye Wests or Beyoncés; instead, Jazzanova have mined a wealth of diverse, largely underground musicians to bring their concept to fruition. Phonte of the Foreign Exhange lends his pipes to both "Look What You're Doin' to Me" (as a singer) and "So Far from Home" (as a rapper); he's not the most acrobatic of vocalists, but he understands what the songs require of him and fits inside the music like a hand into a glove. Thief's Sascha Gottschalk, with his earthy tenor, couldn't have been a better choice for the jaunty violin piece "Lie" that plays--at least instrumentally--like an alternate version of "Eleanor Rigby". Newcomer Paul Randolph takes the prize with the two best cuts here, lending his dexterous, rangy croon to the feel-good funk party "Let Me Show Ya" and the exploded elevator bossa of "Lucky Girl". And while "Rockin' You Eternally", featuring Dwele and vintage Motown singer Leon Ware, isn't the most stunning moment on the disc, it's possibly the sweetest: Ware and Dwele perform a call-and-response duet over the music that one pioneered and the other salvaged--old and new, past and present, walking side-by-side.

Of all the ideals Jazzanova could have striven for on their first album since the Paleozoic era (2001), they aimed and shot at...economy. Hardly the hour-plus opus that In Between was, Of All the Things packs a mind-boggling array of ideas into its 12 brief, wholly digestible songs. Not since Stereolab's Emperor Tomato Ketchup in 1996 has a pop record thrown so much at the wall while sounding so divinely simple. How strange that Jazzanova's latest appears so underwhelming on paper: a retro soul album of modest length, without complicated rhythms, big stars, or signposts that point to where electronica is ultimately headed. But the highlights (and there are many) don't lie: this is an excellent record, one that's beaten the odds and flipped our expectations, and it sounds--of all things--absolutely triumphant.

(This was published in PopMatters on 12/5/08)
What a "retro" Surprise
Submitted on: 2008-11-27
When I heard the first "single" on My Space I wasn't sure what to think. It just seemd it was another group jumping on to the Amy Winehouse, Duffy, Saddiq etc. bandwagon. But Jazzanova really brought it...at least for the first 8 songs or so. They managed to infuse a 60's/70's soul sound with their own unique spin making it not a rehash but something fresh. You get that deep soul feeling with the production, arrangements, and approach that is Jazzanova (w/ a slight nod to Four Hero). Most of the vocalists are outstanding and Phonte is a huge surprise as a vocalist which prompted me to pick up the new Foreign Exchange where he is doing a lot more singing than rapping. A few favorite Sonar Kollektive artists are on the CD like Thief and Joe Dukie along with incredible folks who are new to me like Paul Randolph & Ben Westbeech. Even Jose James sounds great on this CD and despite the critical acclaim I wasn't very impressed by his initial offering. I was a bit disappointed by the Leon Ware track (more of the same) and the latin inspired tracks. They just aren't weren't working for me. But overall an impressive work!

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