Tom Scott and The L.A. Express
Tom Scott and The L.A. Express | |
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Studio album by Tom Scott and The L.A. Express | |
Released | August 1973 |
Genre | Jazz fusion |
Length | 41:50 |
Label | Ode Records |
Producer | Tom Scott |
Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Tom Scott and The L.A. Express is a Jazz/Fusion album released in 1973 by Tom Scott.
Track listing
- "Bless My Soul" (Sample, Guerin, Carlton, Bennett, Scott) - 4:09
- "Sneakin' in the Back" (Sample, Guerin, Carlton, Bennett, Scott) - 4:33
- "King Cobra" (Scott) - 4:23
- "Dahomey Dance" (John Coltrane) - 3:43
- "Nunya" (Bennett) - 3:40
- "Easy Life" (Scott) - 3:01
- "Spindrift" (Scott) - 5:44
- "Strut Your Stuff" (Scott) - 3:37
- "L.A. Expression" (Bennett) - 6:23
- "Vertigo" (Bennett) - 2:30
Personnel
- Tom Scott - Horns & Woodwinds, Producer
- Larry Carlton - Guitar
- Max Bennett - Bass
- Joe Sample - Guitar, Keyboards
- John Guerin - Percussion, Drums
- Hank Cicalo - Recording & Mixing
Later samples
- "Sneakin' in the Back"
- "Blue Lines" by Massive Attack from the album Blue Lines (1991)[2]
- "Souljah's Story" by 2Pac from the album 2Pacalypse Now (1991)
- "Soul By The Pound" by Common Sense from the album Can I Borrow A Dollar? (1992)
- "Justify My Love (Hip Hop Mix)" by Madonna (1990)
- "Dieu Reconnaîtra Les Siens" by DJ Cam from the album Underground Vibes (1994)
- "Something Wicked This Way Comes" by Barry Adamson from the album Oedipus Schmoedipus (1996)
- "Bells of War" by Wu-Tang Clan from the album Wu-Tang Forever (1997)
- "Love No Hoe (demo)" by The Notorious B.I.G. from the album Notorious: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (2009)
- "Life Is Just A Ride" by Jenova 7 from the album Dusted Jazz Volume One (2011)
- "Young, Wild & Free" by Snoop Dogg and Wiz Khalifa from the album Mac & Devin Go to High School (2012)[2]