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Hubert Laws - Land of Passion

Land of Passion
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5 out of 5.0 stars 2 Ratings (1 Review)

Album Details: Land of Passion

Release Date:01/01/1978
UPC:

Track List: Land of Passion

  1. Music Forever
  2. Land of Passion
  3. We're in Ecstasy
  1. Heartbeats
  2. Key
  3. We Will Be

User Reviews: Land of Passion

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    Hubert Laws

    By Binny  Jul 18, 2006

    Pros: Music, lyrics

    Cons: not enough tunes on the disk

    Awesome... check out Debra Laws on the Title Cut.

Pro Reviews: Land of Passion

  • All Music Guide

    When Columbia released Land of Passion in 1979, the album received scathing reviews from jazz critics. They knew Hubert Laws for his work as a jazz instrumentalist, and for the most part, Land of Passion isn't instrumental jazz -- it isn't hard bop, post-bop, or even fusion. The main focus of this LP is mellow, mildly jazzy RB/pop (with the occasional instrumental). So serious jazz standards shouldn't be applied. Unfortunately, the critics who trashed Land of Passion did apply serious jazz standards, which is sort of like a food critic lambasting an Italian restaurant because it doesn't provide Vietnamese or Cambodian cuisine. Land of Passion needs to be judged by RB/pop and quiet storm standards, and when those standards are applied, one has to say that this record is likable but not mind-blowing. Laws was obviously going after the quiet storm crowd when he recorded gentle tunes like "Music Forever" and "We're in Ecstasy." Arguably, quiet storm music falls into two main categories: RB.../pop vocals (Luther Vandross, Phyllis Hyman, Anita Baker) and RB-minded crossover jazz (Grover Washington Jr., David Sanborn, Lonnie Liston Smith). For the most part, this LP (which had yet to be reissued on CD when the 21st century arrived) falls into the former category, although it does contain two gently funky instrumentals: "We Will Be" and "Heartbeats." Neither are masterpieces, but they have a lot more substance and integrity than the sort of elevator Muzak that Kenny G and Richard Elliot were known for in the 1980s and 1990s. Not one of Laws' essential releases, Land of Passion must be taken for what it is: a pleasant but unremarkable collection of mood music. - Alex Henderson, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Hubert Laws

A talented flutist whose musical interest was never exclusively straight-ahead jazz, Hubert Laws exceeded Herbie Mann in popularity in the 1970s when he recorded for CTI. He was a member of the early Jazz Crusaders while in Texas (1954-1960) and he also played classical music during those years. In the 1960s, Laws made his first recordings as a leader (Atlantic dates fr... Read more