Al Jarreau [1976] Glow

[01] Rainbow In Your Eyes
[02] Your Song
[03] Agua De Beber
[04] Have You Seen The Child
[05] Hold On Me
[06] Fire And Rain
[07] Somebody's Watching You
[08] Milwaukee
[09] Glow



musicstack: With his second album, Al Jarreau makes an unexpected and somewhat disappointing transition. We Got By served notice that he is a unique vocal stylist, able to draw on jazz, gospel and straight pop influences and improvise like an instrumentalist while retaining an identifying sound and personality. On Glow, he is no longer an impressive newcomer. Now he is a master vocalist in search of a distinctive musical environment. The problem is production. Al Schmitt and Tommy LiPuma are capable organizers for dates like George Benson's Breezin, but Jarreau disdains orchestral backup and his voice is too grainy and bracing for the sleek, undistinguished small-group tracks he is working with here. And just because Benson scored with Leon Russell's "Masquerade" doesn't mean that Jarreau has to sing Russell too. In fact, the nonoriginal tune choices here are atrocious. Even though Jarreau turns James Taylor's "Fire and Rain" into a storefront sermon and strives mightily to obliterate the bland homily of John/Taupin's "Your Song," his own compositions are so much more suitable that Glow borders on musical schizophrenia. Jarreau needs an adventurous producer who can balance his drive for pop acceptance with a selection of songs and settings which will enhance his individuality rather than trying to bury it. If Warner Bros. wises up and puts him together with a musician/producer on the order of Herbie Hancock or Joe Zawinul, the result is sure to be a fusion milestone and, very probably, a sales success as well.
(amg 6/10)