By Ric Bang
Buy CD: A Tribute to Herbie + 1
First
came the artist, and his music: Herbie Hancock, born in 1940, was a child
prodigy. At age 11, he performed a Mozart piano concerto with the Chicago
Symphony Orchestra. At 20, he was playing jazz with Donald Byrd and Coleman
Hawkins, and he joined Miles Davis’ great quintet in 1963. But Hancock wasn’t merely
a player, he’s also a composer and innovator. He earned degrees in music,
electrical engineering and fine arts, and was one of the first to introduce electronic
instruments into jazz.
This
album is a tribute to Hancock: All but one of the tunes are his compositions.
Mats
Holmquist is one of the jazz world’s finest composers and arrangers. He
arranged all the charts on this album, and wrote the one equally fine original
(“Stevie R.”). Holmquist has long been a huge fan of Hancock’s work, and this
album is by way of a tribute.
Saxophone
artist Dick Oatts, an icon on that instrument, also is a Hancock fan. Holmquist
chose Oatts to co-create this CD, and they assembled the New York Jazz
Orchestra: all first-call artists from New York City and Scandinavia. The
result is one of the swinging-est releases to arrive in years.
Everybody
is familiar with Hancock’s “Cantaloupe Island” and “Watermelon Man” but — as
this album demonstrates — “Dolphin Dance,” “Chameleon” and “Maiden Voyage” are
equally grooving. “Eye of the Hurricane,” “Jessica” and “Toys” are lesser
known, but Hancock’s footprints are all over them.
The
arrangements are sensational, and the orchestra’s execution
by is outstanding. (The liner notes reveal that the group gathered for only one
rehearsal, and that only one of the recording sessions required a second take.)
The solo performances are fantastic; every section contributes one or more
artists who add to the excitement delivered by the full ensemble.
Thanks
to Herbie, Mats, Dick and Summit Records, for this sensational release!