The Song Lives On Explained

The Song Lives On
Type:Studio
Artist:Lalah Hathaway & Joe Sample
Cover:JoeSampleLalahHathaway.jpg
Released:April 20, 1999
Length:56:35
Label:GRP
Producer:

The Song Lives On is a collaborative studio album by former Jazz Crusaders member Joe Sample and R&B singer Lalah Hathaway. It was released by GRP Records on April 20, 1999 in the United States.

Background

In 1998, Lalah Hathaway and Joe Sample began working on their collaborative album. Hathaway sang most of the lead vocals on such songs as lead single "When Your Life Was Low" and a cover of The Crusaders' hit "Street Life," while Sample supplied the instruments like piano. The second single was the covered song "Fever".

Critical response

The album received a favorable review from AllMusic editor Jonathan Widran. He stated that "the daughter of the popular late R&B singer Donny, husky voiced Lalah Hathaway is the perfect foil for Joe Sample's compelling notion that The Song Lives On. Finding a happy medium between the graceful straight-ahead jazz trio vibe of his Invitation album and the plucky pop energy of Spellbound, Sample provides Hathaway on seven of the 11 tunes with a showcase for her sultry approach."

Commercial performance

The Song Lives On peaked at number two on the US Billboard Top Jazz Albums. In response to the album's commercial success, Hathaway and Sample were honored with Billboard/BET On Jazz Award for "Mainstream Jazz Album."[1]

Track listing

All tracks produced by Joe Sample and Bill Schnee.

Personnel

Production

Notes and References

  1. http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/esearch/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=875376 Billboard/BET On Jazz Honor Kenny G, Krall