Mwandishi: The Complete Warner Bros Recordings (Remaster) Herbie Hancock
Album Info
Album Veröffentlichung:
1994
HRA-Veröffentlichung:
19.10.2016
Label: Rhino/Warner Bros.
Genre: Jazz
Subgenre: Fusion
Interpret: Herbie Hancock
Komponist: Herbie Hancock, Julian Priester
Das Album enthält Albumcover
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- 1 Wiggle Waggle 05:51
- 2 Fat Mama 03:49
- 3 Tell Me A Bedtime Story 05:03
- 4 Oh! Oh! Here He Comes 04:08
- 5 Jessica 04:12
- 6 Fat Albert Rotunda 06:28
- 7 Lil' Brother 04:25
- 8 Ostinato 13:12
- 9 You'll Know When You Get There 10:24
- 10 Wandering Spirit Song 21:29
- 11 Sleeping Giant 24:45
- 12 Quasar 07:23
- 13 Water Torture 13:55
Info zu Mwandishi: The Complete Warner Bros Recordings (Remaster)
„None can argue that Herbie Hancock's Blue Note recordings are mostly jazz milestones, the somewhat overlooked Warner Bros. period remains one of his most creatively adventurous, and enduring. The three albums presented here all offer different sides of Hancock after he left Miles Davis. All are presented here in their entirety, with copious notes by Bob Blumenthal, who interviewed Hancock for the package. The set begins with the wildly joyous, deep, funky groove of Fat Albert's Groove, the music Hancock recorded for Bill Cosby's Saturday morning cartoon show. These seven tracks, with their three-horn front line (originated for Hancock on his final Blue Note album, Speak Like a Child) of Joe Henderson on flute and tenor, Johnny Coles' trumpet, and Garnett Brown's trombone, are singing, lyrical funk grooves that predated Headhunters by a few years and swung way harder by sticking back and lying in the groove as much as possible. Hancock's electric piano teamed with Tootie Heath and Buster Williams to form an unbeatable, gutsy, and stomping rhythm section. The band was fleshed out on a couple of tracks by additional horns, additional drums and percussion, and electric guitars. After such a melodic entry, Warners' executives must have been shocked when Hancock brought them the abstract funkified impressionism of his emerging Mwandishi band on its selftitled offering. Comprised of three long tracks, the album showcased Hancock's use of free jazz and long intervallic inventions on modal frames. Only Buster Williams remained from the previous set. The rest of the sextet includes Billy Hart, Eddie Henderson, Julian Priester, and Bennie Maupin. also This same band with the addition of a few sidemen recorded the Crossings with the addition of synthesizer player Patrick Gleeson. This final record sank from the market like a stone; it found some success a year later, after Hancock had moved to Columbia, to issue Sextant and then Headhunters. Crossings melds street music, modal jazz and the expansive sonic approach of Sun Ra fom this same period; it's approach keeps jazz close to the street while fully exploring the varying tonal and rhythmic changes that were going on post-Coltrane. Again, only three tracks appear, though the first is a long, brazen expressionistic suite ('Sleeping Giant'). The musical evolution present in this double set reveals the composer, arranger, and pianist as a large scale visionary.“ (Thom Jurek, AMG)
Herbie Hancock, Fender Rhodes piano
Buster Williams, bass
Billy Hart, drums
Eddie Henderson, trumpet, flugelhorn
Bennie Maupin, bass clarinet, alto flute, piccolo
Julian Priester, tenor trombone, bass trombone
Additional musicians:
Ronnie Montrose, guitar on 'Ostinato (Suite For Angela)'
Leon 'Ndugu' Chancler, drums, percussion
José 'Chepito' Areas, congas, timbales on 'Ostinato (Suite For Angela)'
Recorded December 1970 at Wally Heider Recording Studio C, San Francisco
Produced by David Rubinson
Digitally remastered
Herbie Hancock
Herbie Hancock’s 40-year career as a recording artist is graced by a series of astonishing musical landmarks. Few other musicians of the 20th century have exhibited the wide range of interests and mastery of various genres that this jazz legend has brought to his remarkable body of work. Nonetheless, at the age of 58, Hancock still expresses the kinds of irrepressible curiosity and restless creativity that keep him pushing at the boundaries of modern music.
"At this point in my career," Hancock says, "I’m much more interested in projects that have the potential to be events, not just records. I want to do something broad-based that has the potential to reach into the life of people in more ways than just their ears." The wedding of that ambitious artistic vision to his extraordinary musical versatility put Hancock in the perfect position to approach his new Verve recording, Gershwin's World, a far-reaching tribute to the life and times of the great composer who did so much to popularize the jazz and blues idioms.
"I have always loved Gershwin’s music," Hancock says. "I want to give respect and tribute to all of George Gershwin’s musical origins. The particular genres that Gershwin chose — classical music, jazz, and pop — are ones that I’ve explored, too." Featuring performances by vocal superstars Stevie Wonder, Joni Mitchell, and Kathleen Battle, and the instrumental contributions of the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, pianist Chick Corea, saxophonists Wayne Shorter, James Carter, and Kenny Garrett, trumpeter Eddie Henderson, and bassist Ira Coleman, Gershwin’s World finds Hancock applying his unique piano genius not only to classic songs by Gershwin, but to pieces by contemporaries closely associated with Gershwin — stride piano master James P. Johnson, blues popularizer W. C. Handy, classical composer Maurice Ravel, and jazz giant Duke Ellington.
Hancock probes the essence of Gershwin’s muse in exciting new contexts, from the opening "Overture", with its African drum extrapolation of "Fascinating Rhythm", through the final, heartfelt solo treatment of "Embraceable You". But he doesn’t stop with Gershwin. The piano duet performance with Corea on Johnson’s "Blueberry Rhyme", the powerful Hancock and Stevie Wonder interpretation of Handy’s "St. Louis Blues", the sumptuous, orchestra-accompanied improvisation on Ravel’s Concerto for Piano in G, and the rousing version of Ellington’s "Cotton Tail", with Shorter soloing on tenor, open new windows on the world from which Gershwin emerged and the world he himself influenced. The African-American blues tradition, the musical ferment in Harlem, and French impressionism all inspired Gershwin. In turn, his "I Got Rhythm" became the basis for countless later jazz compositions, including "Cotton Tail".
The concept for Gershwin’s World was presented to Hancock by Robert Sadin, who produced album. "Herbie Hancock and I discussed this project for more than a year before we started recording," Sadin explains. "We both felt that to celebrate Gershwin, we wanted to honor his largeness of spirit, the musical and personal generosity which was so characteristic of the man. Also, in searching to penetrate the spirit of his music we wanted to create an album which had elements of jazz, classical music, African music, and some flavors which we couldn’t necessarily categorize at all. . . . We wanted to bring out the melodic beauty and rhythmic vitality of Gershwin, but even more, we wanted our work to reflect his searching, adventurous spirit."
That Hancock should devote such energy and commitment to such Gershwin material as "It Ain’t Necessarily So", "The Man I Love", "Summertime", and "Prelude in C# minor", as well as the complementary pieces from other composers, is another example of his lifelong quest for new ways to express his own profound creativity and adventurous spirit. Gershwin’s World comes from the same man who gave us his stunning 1963 debut as a leader, Takin’ Off, the 1973 platinum-selling jazz-rock milestone Headhunters, the unprecedented Grammy®-winning MTV dance hit "Rockit", the 1986 Academy Award-winning score to the film Round Midnight, and the Grammy®-winning 1996 Verve debut The New Standard.
Born in Chicago in 1940, Hancock was classically trained as a youth, and performed Mozart with symphony orchestras as a teen. His apprenticeship in jazz took full swing playing with trumpeter Donald Byrd, saxophone giants Coleman Hawkins, Phil Woods, and Oliver Nelson. After signing with Blue Note Records and scoring his first Top Ten hit with "Watermelon Man", Hancock was invited by Miles Davis to join his quintet, with Wayne Shorter, Ron Carter, and Tony Williams, that would become one of the most influential jazz ensembles of the modern era.
Before and after his tenure with Miles in the mid-1960s, Hancock recorded his own timeless albums, including Maiden Voyage and Speak Like a Child. He also ventured into scoring for films (Michelangelo Antonioni’s 1966 Blow Up) and television (Bill Cosby’s Hey, Hey, Hey, It’s Fat Albert). After leaving the Davis Quintet in 1968, the pianist’s rhythmic innovations exploded into the jazz and funk inventions of his Headhunters band (with Benny Maupin, Harvey Mason, Paul Jackson, and Bill Summers), and such albums as Thrust, Sextant, and Feets Don’t Fail Me Now.
Although much of Hancock’s notoriety and popularity since the 1970s has been based on his electronic dance-beat experiments, such as the 1983 platinum Future Shock album and the hip-hop-inspired Dis Is da Drum CD for Mercury Records in 1994, he has never been far removed from his acoustic roots. In 1976, he reunited with Shorter, Carter, and Williams in V.S.O.P. quintet, featuring Freddie Hubbard on trumpet. (The 1983 edition of V.S.O.P. included an up-and-coming Wynton Marsalis.) After his success with his original score to Bertrand Tavernier’s Round Midnight, Hancock continued to compose for films, including Colors, Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life is Calling, and Harlem Nights.
In the 1990s, Hancock has remained active in both the electronic pop and acoustic jazz worlds. In 1997, he followed up The New Standard with 1+1, a stunning duet recording of improvisations with Hancock on acoustic piano and Wayne Shorter on soprano sax; and in 1998, he participated in the Headhunters reunion recording, Return of the Headhunters, which became the first release on the newly formed Hancock Records.
Even while achieving unparalleled artistic and commercial triumphs, garnering six Grammys®, an Oscar, and countless music magazine poll awards, Hancock has devoted himself to numerous educational and philanthropic endeavors. In the early 1980s, he hosted the innovative PBS music series Rock School, and from 1989 to 1991, he hosted the Showtime cable network series Coast to Coast. He also founded the Rhythm of Life Foundation, dedicated to narrowing the gap between those with and those without access to technology, and to directing technological know-how toward the humanitarian goals of building tolerant, multi-cultural communities, and instilling a sense of courage and creativity in our children. Other responsibilities assumed by Hancock include his seven-year position (since 1991) as Distinguished Artist in Residence at Jazz Aspen Snowmass in Aspen, Colorado, and his role (since 1997) as Artistic Director of the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz at the Music Center of Los Angeles County.
It is fitting that at this juncture in his illustrious career, Hancock, an icon of late 20th century modern music, should turn his attention to George Gershwin, who put his indelible stamp on American music before his death in 1937. Just as Gershwin etched an unmistakable identity while shaping the sound of the Broadway show tune, the Hollywood movie score, and the American opera, Hancock has sustained a unique musical voice while influencing the course of mainstream jazz, film soundtracks, and pop-funk fusions in his own time. In this year of Gershwin’s centennial, Gershwin’s World becomes another historic landmark in the rich and uncommonly diverse catalog of another American master, Herbie Hancock.
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