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Track Listing 1. Too Late, Too Soon 2. Heaven Is You 3. Believe 4. Get Me Over You 5. It's Enough 6. Ready For Love 7. I Live For You 8. Who Will Take Care of Me 9. After All Is Said and Done 10. Forever (Is as Long as It Lasts) 11. Too Late, Too Soon - (Dance Version)
Album Notes Personnel includes: Jon Secada (vocals, percussion); Jimmy Jam, Terry Lewis (various instruments); Rene Toledo, John DeFaria, Tony Battaglia, Paul Jackson, Jr., Mike Scott, Andy Goldman, Kike Santander (guitar); Ed Calle (saxophone); Arturo Sandoval, Tony Concepcion, Jim Hacker (trumpet); Dana Teboe (trombone); Lawrence Dermer (Fender Rhodes piano, Hammond B-3 organ, keyboards); Tony Coluccio (keyboards, programming); Randy Barlow, "Big Jim" Wright, Albert Menendez, Doug Emery (keyboards); Ricardo Suarez, Jorge Casas (bass); Rafael Padilla, Edwin Bonilla (percussion); Emilio Estefan, Jr. (percussion, programming); Carlos Guzman (programming); Sounds Of Blackness (background vocals). Producers include: Jimmy Jam, Terry Lewis, Emilio Estefan, Jr., Jon Secada, Miguel A. Morejon. Engineers include: Steve Hodge, Patrice Levinsohn, Eric Schilling. Recorded at Flyte Tyme Studios, Edina, Minnesota and Crescent Moon Studios, Miami, Florida. Latin heartthrob Jon Secada's silky voice and smooth pop ballad style have been melting hearts all over the world for several years, and judging by this self-titled album, that's not about to change. Secada brought out the big guns for this one, enlisting the production and performing talents of Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis (of Janet Jackson fame) on several cuts and the surefire hit songwriting of popmeister Diane Warren on the waltz-time tearjerker "Get Me Over You." Secada handles the bulk of the compositional chores himself, and the songs on SECADA will provide fans with the kind of seamless romantic pop that has become the singer's trademark.
Industry Reviews Secada may have hired producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis to update his sound, but this is still packed with his ridiculously catchy ballads--the ones with the sweeping choruses worthy of a church choir... - Rating: B Entertainment Weekly (03/28/1997)
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