Obsession (Bob James album)

Last updated
Obsession
BobJames Obsession.jpg
Studio album by
Released1986 (1986)
Genre Jazz
Label Warner Bros.
Producer Bob James, Michael Colina, Ray Bardani
Bob James chronology
The Swan
(1984)
Obsession
(1986)
The Scarlatti Dialogues
(1988)

Obsession is an album by the American musician Bob James, released in 1986. [1] It was James's first solo album for Warner Bros. Records after around a decade with CBS. [2]

Contents

Critical reception

The Sun-Sentinel stated that "Bob James' effort to shed his image as the king of Muzak jazz partially succeeds on his latest offering." [3] The Washington Post deemed the album a "made-for-background batch of West Coast fake funk and fusion." [4]

On AllMusic, Jason Elias wrote: "Obsession displays the often chilly sounds of period synthesizers. The only vocal track, 'Gone Hollywood', co-written by Lenny White, has good keyboard textures and plaintive vocals from Lisa Fischer and blistering guitar solos from Steve Khan. [...] While many might be put off by the pure 1980s production values of '3AM' and 'Rousseau', luckily, they have compelling arrangements to ward off boredom. The album's best song, 'Rain', is a methodical and pretty track that is an essential for devotees of the often-maligned late-1980s jazz-pop era. Obsession certainly works better than 12 and is a suitable continuation of the style of early-'80s albums The Genie and Sign of the Times. [2]

Track listing

  1. "Obsession" (Micheal Colina, Bob James) - 6:04
  2. "Gone Hollywood" (Alan Palanker, Vaneese Thomas, Lenny White) - 6:11
  3. "3 A.M." (Lenny White, Bernard Wright) - 5:24
  4. "Rousseau" (Micheal Colina) - 6:01
  5. "Rain" (Bob James) - 6:53
  6. "Steady" (Bob James) - 5:41
  7. "Feel the Fire" (Gary King) - 4:32

Personnel

Production

Studios

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References

  1. White, Frank (December 1, 1986). "Record Reviews". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. p. B2.
  2. 1 2 Elias, Jason. "Bob James: Obsession". AllMusic . Retrieved June 12, 2019.
  3. Wissink, Stephen (8 Feb 1987). "James Fights Muzak Image". Sun-Sentinel. p. 3G.
  4. Brown, Joe (20 Feb 1987). "Forty-Wink Funk from Bob James". The Washington Post. p. N17.