Track Listing 1. I Am I Am 2. Baby Come Close 3. Quiet Storm 4. Baby That's Backatcha 5. Agony and the Ecstasy, The 6. Open 7. Daylight and Darkness 8. There Will Come a Day (I'm Gonna Happen to You) 9. Cruisin' 10. Let Me Be the Clock 11. Tell Me Tomorrow, Pt. 1 12. Being With You 13. Ebony Eyes - (Rick James, featuring Smokey Robinson) 14. I've Made Love to You a Thousand Times 15. One Heartbeat 16. Just to See Her 17. Everything You Touch
| Details | | Contributing Artists: | Kenny G, Rick James | | Distributor: | Universal Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Personnel includes: Smokey Robinson, Rick James (vocals); Kenny G (saxophone). Producers include: William "Smokey" Robinson, Willie Hutch, Michael Sutton, George Tobin, Rick James. Compilation producer: Dana G. Smart. Includes liner notes by David Ritz. This is part of Motown Records' "The Ultimate Collection" series. Liner Note Author: David Ritz. Smokey Robinson's compositions blended pop and R&B conventions, infusing the combination with a highly literate lyrical sensibility that set his songs apart from the pack. With his group the Miracles, Detroit native Robinson got in on the ground floor of the Motown explosion, as his songs and his voice--a smooth, liquid marvel of soul--resonated not only with label head Berry Gordy, but with legions of '60s teens. Throughout the '60s, Robinson and the Miracles produced countless pop-soul hits, both effervescent ("Going to a Go-Go") and mournful ("The Tracks of my Tears"). Robinson's flexible, almost Cole Porter-ish way with a lyric made him an in-demand songwriter for many of his contemporaries, like Mary Wells, Marvin Gaye and the Marvelettes. After splitting from the Miracles in 1972, Robinson began a solo career, exploring the more introspective, balladic side of his music. His 1975 album QUIET STORM set the bar for virtually every smooth, romantic R&B singer of the next two decades, virtually defining the style. After a fallow period, he made a comeback in the early '80s, with commercial-but-irresistible hits like "Cruisin'" and "Being With You."
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