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Best of Herbie Hancock: The Hits
Herbie Hancock
Best of Herbie Hancock: The Hits
Genres: Jazz, Pop, R&B
 
  •  Track Listings (9) - Disc #1

When he burst on the jazz scene in 1963 as a member of Miles Davis's famous ensemble, Herbie Hancock had a hit single with "Watermelon Man." Even when he branched off on his own later in the decade, he still kept one foot ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Herbie Hancock
Title: Best of Herbie Hancock: The Hits
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Sony
Original Release Date: 2/8/2000
Release Date: 2/8/2000
Album Type: Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered
Genres: Jazz, Pop, R&B
Styles: Jazz Fusion, Modern Postbebop, Funk
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 074646596326

Synopsis

Amazon.com
When he burst on the jazz scene in 1963 as a member of Miles Davis's famous ensemble, Herbie Hancock had a hit single with "Watermelon Man." Even when he branched off on his own later in the decade, he still kept one foot in the pop world. Hits comprises Hancock's most successful singles, flaunting the jazz-pop conintuity, from 1973 to 1986. Hancock was a master of the synthesizer and also had a distinctive voice on electric piano, which influenced Patrice Rushen, Billy Childs, and many others. He employed his technical wizardry to produce an Afrocentric, James Brown-Sly Stone groove on his smash album Headhunters, which yielded the immortal 15-minute jam "Chameleon" and a slinky new version of "Watermelon Man" delivered by percussionist Bill Summers, bassist Paul Jackson, and reedman Bennie Maupin. When the disco era spelled doom for most jazz artists, Hancock was able to keep afloat and create a few gems. The catchy, cascading Fender Rhodes hook on "I Thought It Was You" contrasted beautifully with Hancock's spectral, electronic vocals filtered through a then-new device called a vocoder. Santana's Greg Walker lends his pleasing pipes to the lilting, midtempo black-radio classic "Stars in Your Eyes," and "Ready or Not" is a hip-shaking shout-out to the ageless funketeer George Clinton. Hancock's turntable-scratching megahit "Rockit"--which caused a buzz on MTV with its futuristic robot choreography--was arguably the most memorable instrumental of the then-new hip-hop age, proving that Hancock was again a vital agent who changed the way we hear and see modern music. --Eugene Holley Jr.

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CD Reviews

Hits? Yes. Best? No.
Alf Kremer | Denver CO | 07/16/2000
(2 out of 5 stars)

"Herbie Hancock has put out some timeless music AND some major missteps and his time, and someone at Columbia decided to toss together a few of the former with a lot of the latter. "Chameleon" remains an amazing cornerstone in jazz/funk (and "Watermelon Man" isn't too far off), and "Rockit" reaches similar heights in combining jazz with hip-hop. In between, there's a lot of mediocre disco and pretty bad rock. Giving the world no fewer than three tracks from the horrendous MONSTER album (which thankfully is out of print in America) isn't the way to go about getting folks to like this collection. There WERE good tracks released during this time period ("Ready or Not" isn't bad, and I'll offer "Honey from the Jar", "Good Question", several LITE ME UP! offerings, and the intriguing pair-up with Adrian Belew, "Twilight Clone") but whoever was picking tracks for this collection wasn't paying much attention. If this music intrigues you, I heartily suggest trying either HEAD HUNTERS or FUTURE SHOCK first."
Effortless
Mr OCMoore | cardiff | 10/13/2003
(4 out of 5 stars)

"A major chill out album. Just sit in your room with some mates and put this on. It will lighten the mood, make you laugh and just get you to relax"