* En anglais uniquement
A gifted saxophonist,
Vincent Ingala makes warm, soulful contemporary jazz and R&B. He debuted in 2010 at the age of 17 and has released a number of Top 30 Billboard Jazz Albums, including 2012's
Can't Stop Now, 2015's
Coast to Coast, and 2018's
Personal Touch, the latter of which included the number one smooth jazz hit "Snap, Crackle, Pop." 2020's
Echoes of the Heart and 2021's
Fire & Desire found
Ingala cover hits by
Amy Grant and sax legend
Houston Person.
Growing up in a large Italian family in Prospect, Connecticut,
Ingala was exposed to his family's love of soul, jazz, and R&B. A musical prodigy, he started out on drums at age four and was teaching himself
Elvis Presley songs on the guitar by the third grade. However, it was the tenor saxophone, an instrument
Ingala gravitated toward while also studying piano in the fifth grade, that became his passion. He started performing locally and eventually attracted the attention of professional players, including smooth jazz star
Dave Koz, who invited the then-16-year-old
Ingala to join him on-stage. A year later, he recorded his first album, 2010's
North End Soul.
Ingala toured extensively behind the album and quickly built a loyal fan base.
Two years later, he returned with his sophomore release,
Can't Stop Now, which begat two Billboard Top Five singles and became a Top 30 jazz album. In 2015,
Ingala issued his third studio effort,
Coast to Coast, inspired by his move to California. It reached number 12 on the same chart. The seasonal album
Christmas followed in 2016. In 2018,
Ingala made his Shanachie Records debut with
Personal Touch, his first Top Five jazz LP. Included on the record was the track "Snap, Crackle, Pop," which peaked at number one the Billboard Smooth Jazz Songs chart. The saxophonist's second album for Shanachie,
Echoes of the Heart, arrived in 2020 and featured a cover of
Amy Grant's '90s hit "Baby Baby." He returned in September 2021 with
Fire & Desire, which featured a cover of "Disco Sax," a tribute to saxophonist
Houston Person, who originally recorded the
Jimmy Roach song in 1975. ~ Matt Collar