Herbie Hancock & Herbie Hancock
Trio
Photography @ the Royal Festival Hall
14 November 2010 - 1996
Click an image to enlarge.
“Herbie was the step after Bud
Powell and Thelonious Monk, and I haven't heard anybody yet who
has come after him.”
Miles Davis
Herbie Hancock biography
Herbie Hancock is one of the most respected musicians
of our time. His illustrious career spans five decades, he continually
surprises his audience with his explorative musical journey and
never ceases to expand the public's vision of what music, particularly
jazz, is all about today.
Born in Chicago in 1940, Hancock was a child piano
prodigy who performed a Mozart piano concerto with the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra at the tender age of 11. He began playing jazz in high
school, initially influenced by Oscar Peterson and Bill Evans. Also
at this time, an additional passion for electronic science began
to develop. As a result, he took a double major in music and electrical
engineering at Grinnell College.
In 1960, at age 20, trumpeter Donald Byrd asked
Hancock to join his group. Byrd also introduced Hancock to Alfred
Lion of Blue Note Records, and after two years of session work with
the likes of Phil Woods and Oliver Nelson, he signed to the legendary
label as a solo artist. His 1963 debut album, Takin’ Off,
was an immediate success, producing “Watermelon Man,”
a big hit on jazz and R&B radio.
In 1963, Miles Davis invited Hancock to join his
Quintet. During his five years with Davis, Hancock and his colleagues
thrilled audiences and recorded classic after classic, including
the albums ESP, Nefertiti, and Sorcerer. Most jazz critics and fans
regard this group, which also included Wayne Shorter (tenor sax),
Ron Carter (bass) and Tony Williams (drums), as the greatest small
jazz group of the 1960s.
Simultaneous with his work for Davis, Hancock’s
own solo career blossomed on Blue Note, creating such classic albums
as Maiden Voyage, Empyrean Isles, and Speak Like a Child. In 1966,
he composed the score to Michelangelo Antonioni’s film, Blow
Up. This led to a successful career in feature film and television
music, including music for Bill Cosby’s Emmy-winning Hey,
Hey, Hey, It’s Fat Albert and many other film scores in following
years.
After leaving Miles Davis in 1968, Hancock stepped full-time into
the new electronic jazz-funk that was sweeping the world. In 1973,
Hancock’s new band “The Headhunters” recorded
the platinum selling album “Head Hunters”. The album
spawned the widely sampled crossover hit single “Chameleon”.
By mid-decade, Hancock was playing for stadium-sized crowds all
over the world and had no fewer than four albums in the pop charts
at once. In total, Hancock had eleven albums in the pop charts during
the 1970s. Much of which are still sampled today.
In 1980, Hancock introduced trumpeter Wynton Marsalis to the world
as a solo artist and produced his debut album. In 1983, Hancock
worked with the notorious musical architect Bill Laswell. This collaboration
spawned the first “Future Shock” album with the single
"Rockit" rocking the dance and R&B charts, winning
a Grammy for Best R&B Instrumental. The follow-up to Future
Shock, also received a Grammy in the R&B instrumental category.
In addition to his Grammy and MTV Award successes,
Hancock won an Oscar in 1986 for scoring the film Round Midnight
(in which he also appeared as an actor). He would also compose soundtracks
for films such as Colors, Jo Jo Dancer, Action Jackson and Harlem
Nights.
In 1984, Hancock signed to the Polygram Label.
After an adventurous pop-oriented project for Mercury Records, Dis
Is Da Drum, he moved on to Polygram’s Verve label, forming
an all-star band to record the 1996 Grammy-winning “The New
Standard”.
In 1998, the legendary Headhunters reunited, recording
an album for Hancock’s own Verve-distributed imprint, and
touring with the Dave Matthews Band at the arena-rock giant’s
own request. But the crowning achievement of Herbie Hancock’s
Verve years thus far has been Gershwin’s World. Recorded and
released in 1998, this masterwork brought artists from all over
the musical spectrum together in a celebration of George Gershwin
and his entire artistic milieu. Collaborators included Joni Mitchell,
Stevie Wonder, Kathleen Battle, the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, Wayne
Shorter and Chick Corea. Gershwin’s World won three Grammies
in 1999, including Best Traditional Jazz Album and Best R&B
Vocal Performance for Stevie Wonder’s “St. Louis Blues.”
At the end of 1999, Herbie joined two partners
- his manager David Passick and former Verve Records president Chuck
Mitchell. They would form ‘Transparent Music’, a multi-media
music company dedicated to the presentation of barrier-breaking
music of all types, at all tiers of distribution including recordings,
films and TV, concert events and the Internet.
Herbie Hancock also maintains a thriving career outside the performing
stage and recording studio. Since 1991, he has been the Distinguished
Artist in Residence at Jazz Aspen Snowmass in Colorado; a non-profit
organization devoted to the preservation and performance of jazz
and American music. Herbie also serves as Institute Chairman of
the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz, the foremost international
organization devoted to the development of jazz performance and
education worldwide. He has taken on a number of roles on behalf
of the institute, from competition judge to master class teacher,
to guest performer with the Institute's prestigious college program.
Now in the fifth decade of his professional life,
Herbie Hancock remains where he has always been: in the forefront
of world culture, technology, business and music. Though one can't
track exactly where he will go next, he is sure to leave his own
inimitable creative style and imprint wherever he lands.
River the joni
letters - album review
The words innovative genius could never be overused
when describing a man like Herbie Hancock. He has influenced (and
still influences) many generations of musicians, crossed genres
and broken down musical barriers as though they never existed in
the first place. However, Hancock’s recordings have not always
hit the spot for me. I have also attended a few Hancock live performances
over the past decade or so only to walk away scratching my head
feeling somewhat disappointed. Hancock never seems to fail to get
into his zone, but I have occasionally felt that I was completely
excluded from his zone. Perhaps this was due to me just not understanding,
or appreciating his technical prowess. Or perhaps I was (and possibly
still) too immature?
Whatever the reason for my occasional disappointment,
I could never ignore a new Herbie Hancock recording. The title “River”
certainly caught my attention…after all, you do not have to
be an aficionado of the ‘singer songwriter’ genre to
recognise and appreciate the name Joni Mitchell. After carefully
browsing the sleeve notes and personnel – And with eight of
the ten tracks being Mitchell compositions, my passion to explore
grew further.
Hancock’s beguiling interlude on “Court
and Spark” was definitely a reassuring start and a fitting
vehicle for the dulcet tones of Norah Jones who delicately dances
and weaves vocal magic.
Initially it seemed as though the name Corine Bailey
Rae seemed a tad out of place amongst a line up of artists’
who could possibly eat her alive musically, but after just seconds
of listening to her innocent delivery and gentle caress on Mitchell’s
“River”, I became completely absorbed and my heart simply
melted. I realised the decision to feature her at this point was
a master stroke. Joni Mitchell joins Hancock for an articulate session
on “Tea Leaf Prophecy”. It is Mitchell who is obviously
best equipped emotionally to deliver ‘her own words’.
Herbie Hancock is capable of many musical miracles.
To entice Tina Turner out of retirement is just one of them. Ms.
Turner sounds better than ever here - Adding her own unique sophisticated
edge to the velvet lined “Edith and the Kingpin”. Hopefully
this will be one of many projects Turner lends her voice too. Perhaps
Hancock & co could entice the likes of Sade to perform at Glastonbury…you
never know?
With other prized collaborators throughout this
project such as Wayne Shorter, Dave Holland, Lionel Loueke, Luciana
Souza and the authoritative spoken words of Leonard Cohen on “The
Jungle Line”, you expect no less than absolute musical ‘magicianship’.
And that is exactly what you get.
Hancock and fellow musicians have created an exquisitely
crafted canvas for Joni Mitchell’s colourful timeless poetry
to breathe. “River” the joni letters will certainly
divide many established Joni Mitchell fans, but will also bring
new praise for two inspirational geniuses – And let’s
face it, Joni Mitchell and Herbie Hancock can never receive too
much praise!
A final note to those of you who still prefer to
listen to music on that warm, detail filled medium called vinyl.
This album is available on vinyl… but at a whopping £54!
Robin Francis
© Michael Valentine Studio Ltd
April 2008
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