Product Details
Fingerprints

Fingerprints
Larry Carlton

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Track Listing

  1. Fingerprints
  2. Silky Smooth
  3. Storyteller
  4. 'Til I Hurt You
  5. Slave Song
  6. All Thru the Night
  7. Lazy Susan
  8. Cicks With Kickstands
  9. Gracias - Larry Carlton, Vince Gill
  10. Crying Hands

Product Details

  • Released on: 2000-03-08
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Import
  • Dimensions: .21 pounds

Editorial Reviews

From Amazon.com
Everyone is grateful to have Larry Carlton among us, a gifted and imaginative guitarist who survived a gunman's bullet in 1988. Sometimes, though, we wish the old Larry Carlton were still with us, the spark-spraying fusionist whose nimble flights of fancy electrified recordings by the Crusaders and Steely Dan ("Kid Charlemagne" from Royal Scam) as well his own solo works throughout the 1970s and into the mid-1980s. The appeal of the smooth-jazz gravy train has defused much of Carlton's incendiary inventiveness, a conviction reinforced by the unruffled textures etched into Fingerprints, Carlton's 20th career recording. Those textures, though, are faithful to the album's apparent intent--to create a velvety-smooth soundtrack for late-night romance. No jarring oddities here, just sweetness and seduction throughout. Guests include smooth-jazz vets Abraham Laboriel, Kirk Whalum on sax, Jerry Hay on horns, Michael McDonald for a lone vocal track ("'Til I Hurt You"), and Vince Gill, who duets transparently on "Gracias." The pick of the litter: the closing track, "Crying Hands," an expressive bit of slow-dance finesse that merits repeated listenings. --Terry Wood


Customer Reviews

Carlton is a Must in ANY GUITARIST Collection!!!5
This is one of my Favs'Larry Carlton Albums.
Just BUY IT !!! U won't regret it !!!
Relaxing,Excellent Composition,well...what a dream...!!!
I don't Understand there's not one single album of Anthony Papa Michael at Amazon???...I really don't get it :(
U will Love his Music too !!!

An exceptional contemporary jazz LP5
"Fingerprints" is one of Carlton's best studio releases. There is an extraordinary attention to melody and phrasing. The majority of the tracks are mellow, but not slight, and are warmly bathed in an enriching atmosphere. While Carlton is certainly at the forefront, the chemistry between all band members provides for an exceptional platform from which the guitarist is able to leap foreward and network his solos with saxophonist Kirk Whallom on tracks like "The Storyteller" and guitarist Vince Gill on "Gracias." The former is a poignant, if slightly tragic, piece that reveals a story deeper than poetry would suffice to express, while the latter stands out from the rest as a solely acoustic-guitar based number that rises with one of those melodies a musician only discovers once a career. Of course, Carlton's been writing memorable melodies his entire life, but certainly in terms of contemporary "smooth jazz," the songs here are built upon firm, and complex, musical foundations that will move listeners beyond simply wanting to spend latenight hours going to sleep to it. Those who dismiss "Fingerprints" as a sellout to the industry clearly haven't been listening to the music itself. Along with Fourplay's "Heartfelt," this LP is one of the strongest accomplishments of contemporary jazz.

Soulful playing survives format restrictions4
I'm a guitarplayer myself, and I too have the ability to tell stories even with a single note. Like many of the reviewers I find smooth jazz a bit limited. But that doesn't mean that the guitar playing on this album is limited. I could live without some of the sax phrases and chimey keyboard sounds, but a good guitar rewards me for that. And I would not judge any musician for being commercial. Remember George Benson in the late 70ies? The purists went mad. Who pays the players who work their[rears]of? Definately not the purists. The music scene has changed since we have format radio. So if it comes to smooth jazz, listening to Larry Carlton still makes me smile.