Life in the Tropics
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Average customer review:Product Description
No Description Available
No Track Information Available
Media Type: CD
Artist: RIPPINGTONS
Title: LIFE IN THE TROPICS
Street Release Date: 10/10/2000
Genre: JAZZ
Track Listing
- Club Paradiso - Russ Freeman, Dave Hooper, Eric Marienthal, The Rippingtons
- Caribbean Breeze - Russ Freeman, Dave Hooper, The Rippingtons, Kim Stone, Peter White, Ramon Yslas
- Cruisin' Down Ocean Drive - Russ Freeman, Bill Heller, Dave Hooper, Eric Marienthal, The Rippingtons, Kim Stone, Ramon Yslas
- Be Cool - Russ Freeman, Dave Hooper, Dave Koz, The Rippingtons, Ramon Yslas
- Rhythm of Your Life - Michael Angelo, Russ Freeman, , Bill Heller, Jerry Hey, Dave Hooper, Andi Howard, The Rippingtons, , Ramon Yslas
- Love Child - Russ Freeman, Bill Heller, Eric Marienthal, The Rippingtons, Kim Stone, Paul Taylor
- Avenida del Mar - Russ Freeman, Gary Grant, Bill Heller, Jerry Hey, Dave Hooper, Bill Reichenbach Jr., The Rippingtons, Kim Stone, Ramon Yslas
- I Found Heaven - Gary Brown, Russ Freeman, Howard Hewett, The Rippingtons
- South Beach Mambo - Ramon Flores, Russ Freeman, Gary Grant, Jerry Hey, Dave Hooper, , Bill Reichenbach Jr., The Rippingtons, Kim Stone, Ramon Yslas
- Life in the Tropics - Mark Binder, Russ Freeman, Dave Hooper, Bob James, Eric Marienthal, The Rippingtons, Kim Stone, Ramon Yslas
- Island Aphrodisiac - Ramon Flores, Russ Freeman, Dave Hooper, The Rippingtons, Ramon Yslas
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #32628 in Music
- Brand: RIPPINGTONS
- Released on: 2000-10-10
- Number of discs: 1
- Dimensions: .22 pounds
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
When Russ Freeman and the Rippingtons exploded on the contemporary jazz scene in 1986 with Moonlighting, the leader's compositional and production style was a breath of fresh air. Over the next decade, however, his much-copied style became a parody of itself and the epitome of the tepid music associated with smooth-jazz radio. After a couple of record label changes, Freeman seems to have regrouped somewhat with Life in the Tropics. Although the first two tracks offer the same Rips formula of a guitar and/or sax line playing a line with computer-generated rhythms behind synthesizer flourishes adding up to nothing special, cuts 3 through 11 show Freeman searching for a new aural core to his style, a lot of which has to do with the Latin and Caribbean themes of the disc. In fact, "South Beach Mambo" sounds straight out of Santana's Supernatural sessions with a horn section adding spice. Saxman Eric Marienthal and pianist Bill Heller stand out, as does trumpeter Ramon Flores. The latter's horn stands particularly since it isn't the smooth-jazz clichéd alto horn sound that the Rippingtons made infamous. Keyboardist Bob James also does a guest shot on what is easily the Rippingtons' best album since 1994's Sahara. --Mark A. Ruffin
Customer Reviews
Always a pleasure, but missing some of the edge
I have been an outspoken fan of Russ Freeman and the Rippingtons for five years now, and when I heard "Brave New World" (1996) for the first time, I was blown away. There was a hard edge to most of the songs, and, upon further investigation, many of the earlier albums did as well. In the year between the release of "Brave New World" and "Black Diamond", I listened to all the previous Ripps albums, and was equally impressed. Definitely some smokin' jazz players. However, with the introduction of the electronica loops on "Black Diamond", it seemed like some of the edge had been watered down by milkier changes and the safety net of technology. Fans: compare a track like "Love Child" on the new one, with its smooth-jazz bedroom feel, to a track like "Avenida Del Mar" or "Cicada" from "Brave New World". A world of difference. The latter two possess that edge and complexity that many have come to identify the Rippingtons by, and, as a fan and musician, that's what I look for. "Life In The Tropics" is every bit a Ripps album, and I was pleased with what I heard. As has been stated in other reviews, possibly a bit too "smooth-jazz"y at times, but nonetheless, a quality effort. Russ, if you're reading this, keep that hard drivin', edgy, chordally-complex stuff coming, and you've got a fan for life.
The Rippingtons Throw A Tropical Party
Let the partying begin! The Rippingtons return on yet another new record label but this time it's on Russ Freeman's Peak Records. Russ has written a "hot" bunch of songs that fuse the confidence of his band The Rippingtons and many of my favorite contemporary jazz stars. "Club Paradiso" starts things off with Eric Marienthal giving the chorus a buoyant little swing. "Caribbean Breeze" has a flamenco feel to it and is punctuated by Peter White on classical guitar. Elsewhere "Be Cool" has a happy vibe with a killer hook by saxophonist Dave Koz. From there, the tempo heats up on the Latin spiced "Rhythm of Your Life" featuring lead vocals by Daisy Lourdes Villa, the burning "Avenida Del Mar" and the festive "South Beach Mambo". And for more of a cool groove, there's the title track featuring Bob James on keyboards and "I Found Heaven" with vocals by R&B emissary Howard Hewitt. Something for everyone...the album will please old Ripps fans and is sure to attract new ones. I'm ready for a Life in the Tropics, are you?
Good to hear, but not their best
Let's just say that The Rippingtons of 1995 and earlier were a spectacular band, and then they began to succomb to the "smooth jazz" sound - you know, that syncopated hip-hoppy lite jazz with no guts. 8 or so of the 11 songs on this album fall into that mode. Granted, it's nice to hear, but it isn't a "wow, is that great!" The one or two songs with electric guitar do stand out with their energy. Now for the album itself, and not the overall sound. Like the title track says, the songs invoke tropical rhythms and sounds - lots of background percussion including nice conga parts, timbales, and rain sticks. Some of the songs, including those that rock the most, are Latin-flavored (the Gloria Estefan-styled vocals of Daisy Lourdes Villa on "Rhythm of Your Life" and the great guitar-driven "Avenida Del Mar"). Howard Hewitt does a great vocal on "I Found Heaven", and "South Beach Mambo" is fun. But the rest is that acoustic-guitar lite jazz. Russ Freeman writes great melodies and I love his songs, but LET LOOSE and JAM!!!



