Breezin'

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Breezin' album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 57:40

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Him and a Guitar

MaChoMo

The Man can and does demonstrate how to put the rythmn into what he's givin'-his people aren't behind him-they are around and within the sound of elegance that is Him and that Guitar.

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Take me back to 76

Phl

I was standing in line buying god knows what at Sound Warehouse in 1976, Wichita, Kansas (yes boys & girls there used to be record stores). Suddenly this album came on and I was completely floored! I had heard nothing like it before and the songs wafted over me like a cool breeze. I still feel that today when I listen to this aptly named album.

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With Claus Ogerman as arranger/conductor...

kupitero

...what is there not to like on this LP? George Benson at the top of his game in an era dominated by jazz-fusion. Re-live the good, old days with 'Affirmation' and 'Breezin'!!! Thanks, eMusic! Lovely!

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They Say All Music Guide

All of a sudden, George Benson became a pop superstar with this album, thanks to its least representative track. Most of Breezin’ is a softer-focused variation of Benson’s R&B/jazz-flavored CTI work, his guitar as assured and fluid as ever with Claus Ogerman providing the suave orchestral backdrops and his crack then-working band (including Ronnie Foster on keyboards and sparkplug Phil Upchurch on rhythm guitar) pumping up the funk element. Yet it is the sole vocal track (his first in many years), Leon Russell’s “This Masquerade” — where George unveiled his new trademark, scatting along with a single-string guitar solo — that reached number ten on the pop singles chart and drove the album all the way to number one on the pop (!) LP chart. The attractive title track also became a minor hit single, although Gabor Szabo’s 1971 recording with composer Bobby Womack is even more fetching. In the greater scheme of Benson’s career, Breezin’ is really not so much a breakthrough as it is a transition album; the guitar is still the core of his identity. – Richard S. Ginell

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