Herbie Hancock

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0AE-EabHu0U

This track is hot af

calstars, Friday, 22 March 2024 12:38 (one month ago) link

otm

c u (crüt), Friday, 22 March 2024 13:14 (one month ago) link

As is this one:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ttlYJeva7w

Naive Teen Idol, Friday, 22 March 2024 16:50 (one month ago) link

Came across this brutal takedown by Peter Margasak.

Gary Giddins's criticism is no surprise - he's always been very open about how much he hates fusion, whether it involves rock, R&B and/or funk elements. I didn't realize how much Margasak hated Hancock's post-Blue Note work. He doesn't mention Head Hunters by name, but I was stunned that he lumped that album into "the drop-off" after Sextant that is "so dramatic, so absolute" - personally, it's easily the '70s Hancock album that I hold in highest regard. (In fairness, outside of Head Hunters, I'm much more partial towards Hancock's '60s work as well. Between everything he did for Blue Note and Miles Davis, it would've been extremely difficult to surpass.)

One minor point - he doesn't go too much into detail about Hancock's work on Round Midnight for which Hancock won an Oscar (not a Grammy as Margasak writes), but nobody should mistake that as dilettantism, especially one driven by calculated marketability. For starters, it's an art film directed by a French arthouse auteur (Bertrand Tavernier) rather than anyone known for commercial work. The budget was $3 million which even in 1986 wasn't a lot for an international period piece. More importantly, there were NO film stars - Tavernier had to push hard to cast real-life jazz great Dexter Gordon in the lead role, and regardless of his accomplishments and talents, that didn't mean he was a box office draw, especially when he had very little experience acting in films. And Hancock knew Gordon - he even played on Hancock's debut album (by which point Gordon was already an established jazz great). In addition to Hancock's background in film scoring - going back to the '60s! - it was natural and more than logical for Tavernier to consider Hancock as the film composer. The fact that both Gordon and Hancock would be up for Oscars was kind of a fluke - nobody predicted that when they signed on for the movie.

birdistheword, Friday, 29 March 2024 06:31 (one month ago) link

I love Mwandishi and Crossings, like Sextant a lot, but something about the sound of Head Hunters repels me. Everything is now flanged and phased and the synth tones are nearly as bad as Zawinul's. I mean to listen to his next couple of records but my hopes aren't high, but not because "Herbie abandoned jazz" or whatever these sorts of critics say.

Halfway there but for you, Friday, 29 March 2024 12:48 (one month ago) link

very offtm, you should go get that checked out

ivy., Friday, 29 March 2024 12:55 (one month ago) link

Like I said upthread I think the Bennie Maupin solo albums are better explorations of a more commercial sort of electric jazz.

Halfway there but for you, Friday, 29 March 2024 13:03 (one month ago) link

Head Hunters’ version of “Watermelon Man” was on the jazz station when my clock radio went off yesterday. What a weird, funky way to wake up.

Requiem for a Dream: The Musical! (Dan Peterson), Friday, 29 March 2024 13:05 (one month ago) link

lol Margasak. When he was the Reader's music critic, and Rosenbaum the film critic, that was some peak '90s snobbery (bless em both).

Josh in Chicago, Friday, 29 March 2024 13:09 (one month ago) link

I don't love Head Hunters either. That band improved on Thrust and Man-Child and especially Flood.

Tahuti Watches L&O:SVU Reruns Without His Ape (unperson), Friday, 29 March 2024 13:33 (one month ago) link

Head Hunters is incredible and I love how it sounds (so spacious even with everything that's going on, probably because everything is so dry), but it's a bit hard to hear after countless jam session versions of Chameleon and Watermelon Man. Still, Thrust >>>>>

Has anyone caught the current tour? I know I should go, I mean it's probably our last chance to see him.

Jordan s/t (Jordan), Friday, 29 March 2024 14:17 (one month ago) link

Btw I just happened to read this about Round Midnight recently, a blog from Kirk Lightsey, who played piano for Dexter Gordon for a number of years:

Back in New York when Dexter was working on the movie “Round Midnight,” he didn’t call me for the gig. There was a pecking order and a placement in NY at the time. There were people in line for that gig before me. Herbie Hancock and Cedar Walton . . .. So many fingers. For the movie, of course, I had been playing for five years with Dexter, so I was on the list. But I wasn’t high enough up in the pecking order. For the movie or the pecking order.
https://www.coming-and-going.com/post/how-it-all-ended-with-dexter

Jordan s/t (Jordan), Friday, 29 March 2024 14:18 (one month ago) link

His performance at Big Ears was full of energy and the band killed it (esp Lionel Loueke on guitar). The set was on the 70s fusion-y side. He even played "Come Running to Me"!

c u (crüt), Friday, 29 March 2024 14:23 (one month ago) link

I can definitely see why some might find the Headhunters era sound offputting. There's something a bit shrill or nasal bout it btw the soprano sax and wah guitar and clavinet type tones. I'm only in the right mood for it sometimes.

longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Friday, 29 March 2024 16:18 (one month ago) link

In my experience Headhunters is one of those recs that ppl with no jazz experience REALLY enjoy (as opposed to say Kind of Blue where the response is much more dutiful). It’s got some bangin’ tunes and is v funky, I can understand why it’s a hit, I love it too.

Ward Fowler, Friday, 29 March 2024 18:35 (one month ago) link

it's news to me that anybody doesn't like the Head Hunters LP

budo jeru, Friday, 29 March 2024 19:01 (one month ago) link

seriously

I painted my teeth (sleeve), Friday, 29 March 2024 19:02 (one month ago) link

It's definitely news to me that anyone doesn't like that record but likes Thrust and Man-Child. A take I haven't heard.

longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Friday, 29 March 2024 19:05 (one month ago) link

Hip-hop songs that sample tracks from Head Hunters > Head Hunters

Tahuti Watches L&O:SVU Reruns Without His Ape (unperson), Friday, 29 March 2024 19:08 (one month ago) link

smdh

c u (crüt), Friday, 29 March 2024 19:16 (one month ago) link

some of you do not own any corduroy sportscoats and it shows

brimstead, Friday, 29 March 2024 19:24 (one month ago) link

xps My partner's in grad school and sometimes gets student discount offers for various events around NYC. Hancock's Lincoln Center/David Geffen Hall show popped up as one last fall. I almost forgot about it until this past week when it showed up on our calendar and I forgot we maximized the deal by getting front row seats. I've never seen Hancock this close and it was REALLY close - the guy next to me joked it was like sitting in coach on an airplane because the stage was inches from our feet. So good - the only downside was they were allotted just 90 minutes and they've been playing a full two hours everywhere else, so the set did feel a bit truncated. (Hancock actually wrapped up the penultimate number after checking his watch and telling us through his vocoder that "I'm sorry but we only have five minutes left!") Regardless, if you've never seen them before (and my partner hadn't) definitely go, but FWIW, the setlist covers a lot of the same ground as their recent tours. At this point, I'd love to see an all-acoustic show partly to change things up.

birdistheword, Friday, 29 March 2024 19:47 (one month ago) link

synth tones are nearly as bad as Zawinul's

You should ask yourself if this is the genre for you tbh

Rich E. (Eric H.), Friday, 29 March 2024 20:40 (one month ago) link

Came across this brutal takedown by Peter Margasak🕸.


They were all brutal takedowns around then.

I’ve said this before, I just don’t think Herbie’s career was especially well understood for a long time, particularly by jazz critics who basically thought he just completely sold out and ditched jazz. I actually wrote a letter to The Wire that got published after 1+1 came out – not because I thought it was particularly brilliant but rather because I thought it drew conclusions about his career while ignoring the records that were only released in Japan. For instance, on Spotify you can now hear how Dedication and Directstep show him continuing to explore electronics, trio records with Carter and Williams show he hadn’t really abandoned jazz and with Flood how Herbie clearly viewed it all part of some continuum.

While I wouldn’t say any of those records are on par with his best work for Blue Note, they’re way more interesting than he was given usually credit for at that point in his career. It’s less that there was some “dramatic drop-off” than he was just pursuing a number of paths and threads simultaneously – some commercial, some experimental and some straight ahead. Which I completely respect.

Naive Teen Idol, Saturday, 30 March 2024 20:18 (four weeks ago) link

synth tones are nearly as bad as Zawinul's

You should ask yourself if this is the genre for you tbh

I'd venture that all the big fusion keyboard players sounded better on organs and electric pianos than synths, at least for a few years, which is one reason why I like the Mwandishi stuff best.
I don't feel the same about the big name prog keyboardists, who tended to be equally tasteful or tasteless whatever instrument they played.

Halfway there but for you, Monday, 1 April 2024 02:53 (four weeks ago) link


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