Yin-Yang Victor Wooten

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CD

  • Release Date: 06/22/1999
  • Sales Rank: 47,097
  • Label: COMPASS RECORDS
  • UPC: 766397427423
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
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Yin-Yang

Disc 1
1LISTENImagine This 5:08
2LISTENYinin' & Yangin' Instrumental 4:36
3LISTENHip Bop 4:03
4LISTENJoe's Journey 5:20
5LISTENThe Urban Turban 2:42
6LISTENTali Lama 5:17
7LISTENZenergy 6:46
8LISTENKaila Speaks 3:00
9LISTENSacred Place 3:46
10LISTENResolution 4:57

Disc 2
1LISTENHormones In The Headphones 4:06
2LISTENYinin' & Yangin' Vocal Version 4:12
3LISTENKaila Raps 4:42
4LISTENOne 4:54
5LISTENWhat Crime Is It? 4:55
6LISTENGo Girl Go 3:18
7LISTENPretty Little Lady 3:34
8LISTENHero 4:42
9LISTENSinging My Song 4:43
10LISTENThink About That 4:09

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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

There's little question that Victor Wooten is an ambitious musician. That was evident from his first two records, but Yin-Yang easily reaches farther than any album he has yet made. Spanning two discs, one instrumental and one vocal, Yin-Yang tries a little bit of everything, all underneath a smooth fusion umbrella. There's a bass showcases, worldbeat fusions, bluegrass jazz, smooth soulful jazz with banjos, full-fledged urban soul, songs based around baby gibberish -- a little bit of everything, all given immaculate, glossy production. That clean production not only makes the record sound accessible, but it makes the eclecticism and unpredictable stylistic fusions sound familiar. Depending on your point of view, that's either a good or a bad thing -- it either means Wooten is welcoming more listeners, or it means that it's not challenging. And that's the strange thing about Yin-Yang -- it's not particularly challenging, yet it is complex and difficult to digest in one sitting. That's largely because there's so much music on the record, but it's also because Wooten's ideas sound better when heard a few cuts at a time. He's a very talented musician and has some great ideas, but a little discipline and editing would make his records more convincing and compelling. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 2Reviews: 2

Yin-Yangby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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December 22, 2000: When I first listened this album, I found it so different, with so much styles that I took some time to understand it?s meaning. When it finally got cleared I realize that it?s an amazing album...

Yin-Yangby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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November 01, 2000: The other Victor Wooten albums astound, this one goes beyond any conceptions and definitions. It's ambitious but not aimlessly sprawling, articulate and intelligent messages abound without becoming preachy--everything is truly ''yinin' and yangin'.'' Victor's solos are toned down a bit more on this album, with the first disc covering jazz ground, while the second disc unleashes a lethal barrage of hard funk grooves. Most notable on disc 1--''Hip Bop,'' a fusion beauty. Disc 2--The incredibly funky ''Hormones in the Headphones,'' ''What Crime Is It'' (with P-Funk alum and funk bass guru Bootsy Collins), and the chaotically tight ''Pretty Little Lady.'' ''Yinin' and Yangin','' the beautiful title track(s) is presented on both discs in keeping with each individual disc's style. The funk rendering contains a rap in it. This album is the one to find, the one to look for, and you'll groove and relax to it simultaneously millions of times.