Starting in 1991 with
The Jazzmasters,
Paul Hardcastle has maintained two alternating series of albums for his smooth jazz music, releasing five volumes each of
Jazzmasters and discs titled
Hardcastle. That the two series are interchangeable in terms of musical style is a point reinforced by this compilation, which pulls one track each from those ten CDs, adding a couple of new tunes ("The Circle" and "Dancing Lights") up front, as well as one from the 1997 covers disc
Cover to Cover (a version of the
Barry White-penned instrumental "Love's Theme" that was a number one hit for
Love Unlimited Orchestra in 1974) and a sampler from the
Hardcastle 5 remix album
Journey to a Different State of Mind. This is not a hits selection; that job has been handled previously for
Hardcastle's music by albums with the words "greatest hits" and "very best of" in the titles. Rather, this album attempts to offer a representative précis of
Hardcastle's music, 1991-2008. Most of the tracks are instrumentals, the tempos taken at loping paces (with occasional pauses), as synthesizer-based instrumental beds support a lead line usually played by a saxophone. There are slight variations. "You May Be Gone" from
Hardcastle 1 is the first vocal number, in which a high-tenor male voice sings a lament about a deceased loved one. "You may be gone," he notes, "but you'll never be forgotten," later adding, "I hope somehow this song will get through/To let you know we're still thinking of you." That plural pronoun is justified when children's voices come in reciting testimonials to their departed mother.
Hardcastle reveals another of his ‘70s influences by covering
America's 1972 hit "Ventura Highway" from
Jazzmasters III. "Valley of the Harps" from
The Jazzmasters 4 finds the music inching toward more of a laid-back chill style, while "Return of the Rainman" from
Hardcastle 5 leans to world music, even including nature sounds of thunder and birds. It seems appropriate to close with the edited medley from
Journey to a Different State of Mind, since the track does in miniature what the album does for
Hardcastle's ‘90s and 2000s catalog in total, sum it up.