Search
Kim Waters featuring Jazz of Dru Hill, Love Don’t Love Nobody
Picture of Derrick Dunn

Derrick Dunn

Slow Jam Saturday: Kim Waters featuring Jazz of Dru Hill, Love Don’t Love Nobody

Over a decade-long career, crossover jazz artist Kim Waters had built a comfortable, quiet storm and R&B covers niche when his thirteenth album From the Heart hit stores on April 10, 2011.

Waters’s saxophone skills had paid tribute to Boyz II Men, Maxwell, and Anita Baker on his previous albums. However, for From the Heart, Waters took it back to the seventies with an elegant cover of The Spinners’ hit “Love Don’t Love Nobody.” While Waters’s musicianship alone could have done the song justice, the sax man brought in Jazz from Dru Hill for the vocals.

Arguably, the best singer in the Baltimore-based group, Jazz never tries to imitate Phillipe Wynn, the song’s original singer. Instead, Jazz makes the song his own and allows the listener to feel his emotions as he croons:

“Sometimes a girl will come and go

You reach for love, but life won’t let ya know

That in the end, you’ll still be lovin’ her

But then she’s gone, you’re all alone”.

Waters and Jazz’s chemistry comes across so natural if Jazz ever had the chance to have his solo career, I would have loved to see Waters as his musical director on tour. My only complaint about the song is that we do not get a chance to hear the song’s spoken word.

 

Final Grade: A

 

“Love Don’t Love Nobody” from From the Heart is available on all streaming platforms.

Movie Clappers

More reviews to explorer

Single Review: Ne-Yo , “Up Out & Gone”

As fans prepare for his upcoming co-headlining tour, Ne-Yo isn’t just revisiting his past; he’s expanding his horizons. “Up Out & Gone” continues his recent shift towards country-influenced sounds, but it’s important to note that this isn’t a genre switch—it’s a blend.

Album Review : Jack Harlow, Monica

If you had told me ten years ago that I would fall behind on music, I would have laughed it off. But as they say, we are all adulting now. Thankfully, friends like Edward Bowser from SoulInStereo.com and Brandon Sullivan from Shatter The Standards keep my musical interests alive.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn