Legit Downloads
Categories
All MP3 Albums
All MP3 Singles
Alternative
Blues
Classic Rock
Country
Dance
Folk
Metal
Jazz
Latin
New Age
Pop
R&B
Rap
Rock
Featured Artists
Ads by Steve
Gluten Free Bread Mix make your own GF breat at home

God Hates Brats Blows that wound cleanse away evil; strokes make clean the innermost parts

Buddy Christ Meets Jaheezus Buddy Christ and Jaheezus meet on the street

Smooth Jazz MP3s Legit Downloads: MP3 files with no DRM, 100% legal and honest

Ads by Steve

Night And Day

Night And Day
Manufacturer: A&M
Category: Digital Music Album

Buy New: $7.97

Buy

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 40 reviews
Sales Rank: 15285

Genre: pop-music
Media: MP3 Download
Running Time: 0 Minutes

ASIN: B000W15BCY

Publication Date: October 24, 1989

Customer Reviews:   Read 35 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars Joe Jackson - Schizophrenic Album Wsa Joe's Highest Charting Disc   October 8, 2008
Steven Sly (Kalamazoo, MI United States)
After the "Beat Crazy" album in 1980 Joe broke up his original band and recorded an album of swing music called "Jumping Jive" which was completely different from anything he had done up to this time. Jackson then did another 360 with "Night And Day" in 1980 when the one time punk turned himself into a songwriter not unlike his older heroes like Cole Porter or George Gershwin. Most of the punk, new wave is gone on this one in favor of a jazzy sometimes salsa lounge act feel. The album does still rock in places, but this is a very different Joe Jackson album from anything that came before it. Ironically "Night And Day" would prove to be a huge success with the album climbing to #4 in the U.S. charts and the single "Stepping Out" becoming Joe's biggest hit. "Breaking Us In Two" and "Real Men" would also get significant airplay and all three songs continue to be staples of Joe's live shows to this day. The album is represents a portrait of life in 1980's New York City with the disc broken up into "day" and "night" making it somewhat of a concept piece. I find this album to be rather schizophrenic in nature. It has several of Joe's all time best songs on it, but the rest of the album has never done a lot for me. First the good, "Breaking Us In Two", "Real Men", and "A Slow Song" rank up with the very best material Jackson has ever written. The rest of the album is rather pedestrian by Jackson standards with songs like "Cancer", "T.V. Age", and "Target" taking on rather mundane issues of the day in a rather average manner. The rest of the songs on the disc have never done a lot for me. "Night And Day" was Joe's biggest seller and there are some very very high points on it, but overall I like some of his other discs a lot better.


5 out of 5 stars A True Classic   September 18, 2008
DonMac (Lynn, MA United States)
This album was such a refreshingly beautiful when it appeared in 1982. Jazzy, Latin-y pop filled with a beautiful old sound reinvented for the era. The songs all speak for themselves - there's not a bad one in the bunch. A Slow Slong just came on my IPOD and I had to write this. One of my all time favorites.


5 out of 5 stars Night andDay   June 13, 2008
Castyman (Los Gatos Ca.)
Realy ahead of it's time! Latin riffs and diferent musical instruments combined. Most people didn't start doing that till the 1990's
More like Sting mets Pete Eschvedo!
I would reccomend it! Still very upbeat.



3 out of 5 stars Songs are excellent but over-produced sound!!!   April 23, 2008
B. Gordon (San Francisco, CA United States)
This album has some of Joe's best songs. Another World, Cancer, Breaking Us in Two and the immortal classic, Real Men. That alone would make this album a worthy buy. BUT, the over produced synthesized sound of this album is AWFUL! At least on the first opening tracks. Another World is a great song but the rendition here is terrible. Just overproduced and synth-like which makes it painful to hear.

I highly recommend getting Joe's 1980-86 live album which has much better renditions of all of this albums best material and it's not over-produced and "synth-like" in production.

I don't know what Joe was thinking when he produced this album but the synth-like sound has not aged well at all and it takes away from what otherwise is gorgeous song writing.

I think Joe Jackson is one of the most talented pop artists of the past 25 years, without question! His output is prodigious and prolific. He's experimented with many different styles and alas, his fan base has only shrunk as crappier pop material got more airplay and Joe somehow got forgotten. His latest Rain album is a superb comeback piece but it really misses the sound of a guitar to it.

But as for Night and Day, while it has many of Joe's greatest songs, it truly was an overproduced piece of work that, frankly, if Joe were to spend time reviewing, he might well have rejected if he hadn't been caught up in the craze of synth-80's like sound which dominated pop radio in the 1980s.

Slow Song is a beautiful piece of music but you can find many other renditions of this done ever better than the studio version.

Night and Day should have been produced without the synth sound. It would have made for an album with much longer staying power.



5 out of 5 stars Joe Jackson's breakthrough album.   February 3, 2008
G. Merritt (Boulder, CO)
"We--
Are young but getting old before our time
We'll leave the T.V. and the radio behind
Don't you wonder what we'll find
Steppin out tonight.
You--
Can dress in pink and blue just like a child
And in a yellow taxi turn to me and smile
We'll be there in just a while
If you follow me."

This is one of my favorite Eighties albums. After releasing his 1981 album of jump jive covers, Jumpin' Jive, Joe Jackson released the 1982 album Night and Day finally bringing him the recognition he long deserved. Up until Night and Day, Jackson was mostly known for his 1979 "New Wave" single, "Is She Really Going Out with Him?" (from the Look Sharp! album). The album title is taken from a Cole Porter song, and in a sense the album pays tribute to Cole Porter (and to New York City, where Jackson was lived for 20 years until smoking was banned in clubs). The album evokes a New York City-inspired urbanity, the "aural equivalent of a movie classic from half-a-century ago, filmed in shimmering black and white." The album's Latino-rhythm-driven sound was more sophisticated than Jackson's previous releases, and resulted in two hit singles: "Steppin' Out" and "Breaking Us In Two." If there was ever any doubt before, the tracks "Real Men" and "A Slow Song" confirmed Jackson's familiarity with the 1980's gay culture. ("So don't call me a faggot/Not unless you are a friend/Then if you're tall and handsome and strong/You can wear the uniform and I could play along.") The album features Jackson on organ, synthesizer, harmonica, piano, alto sax, vocals, vibraphone, and fender rhodes; Sue Hadjopoulos on flute, percussion, bongos, conga, timbales, vocals, xylophone, and bells; and longtime bandmember Graham Maby on bass, percussion and vocals. Tracks include:

1. Another World (4:00)
2. Chinatown (4:06)
3. T.V. Age (3:42)
4. Target (3:46)
5. Steppin' Out (4:28)
6. Breaking Us In Two (4:52)
7. Cancer (6:04)
8. Real Men (4:04)
9. A Slow Song (7:03)

G. Merritt


Bookmark this page:
ADD TO DEL.ICIO.USADD TO DIGGADD TO FURL ADD TO STUMBLEUPONADD TO YAHOO MYWEBADD TO GOOGLE



BETA RELEASE
Gay Art House DVDs    Men's Bikini Underwear    Leather Goods    Jeebus Says "Eat Me" Jeebus Says Eat Me Ringer-T for Men    

ads by Steve