The Columbus Dispatch

Jazz legend goes deep to lure talent for album

- By Jon Bream

Herbie Hancock likes to surprise us.

Remember when the postbop stalwart went funk/soul/ jazz on “Head Hunters” in 1973?

Remember when he went hip-hop/jazz with the 1983 dance-club instrument­al smash “Rockit,” with its freaky futuristic video?

Remember when he got Tina Turner, Norah Jones, Wayne Shorter and others to interpret Joni Mitchell songs in 2007 and won an albumof-the-year Grammy for it?

Well, the jazz keyboard giant has another surprise in the works: a new album that’s hard to describe.

“There are a lot of different people from different cultures, different genres, different generation­s,” said the 77-year-old. “I like the idea of expressing music that is designed to show what can happen creatively when we’re working together and the beauty of bringing humanity together.”

The lineup of collaborat­ors is diverse and deep: enduring rapper Snoop Dogg; “Happy” hitmaker Pharrell Williams; hip, versatile bassist Thundercat; tabla master Zakir Hussain; and younger jazz stars Robert Glasper, Jamire Williams and Kamasi Washington.

“We’re playing some of the pieces we’re working on in our live show,” Hancock said.

The turns and twists in Hancock’s long career — he started at age 11 as a child prodigy playing a Mozart piano concerto with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra — have produced some surprises that weren’t musical. One involved the revelation of his crack addiction in his 2014 memoir, “Possibilit­ies.”

“Both my wife and daughter encouraged me to write about it in the book,” he said. “I’d been trying to shove that out of my mind like a dark period I wanted to bury. I realized that never works. It’s like being in denial.

“Some people have told me they were helped by the book. So I feel good about revealing the truth about what happened in my life as an addict. And I won — I beat it.”

Hancock can become philosophi­cal, which he did during a series of six lectures at Harvard University in 2014. He was appointed to the Norton professors­hip of poetry, an award that had previously gone to the likes

of Leonard Bernstein, Igor Stravinsky and John Cage.

“I was talking about the ethics of jazz that are in harmony with being a human being,” Hancock explained.

“In jazz, we don’t judge what each of us plays. We try to make everything work. No matter what anyone plays, we try to make it be part of the music. That’s being nonjudgmen­tal. We share ideas; we’re not competing with each other. It’s really healthy, and it’s giving and extremely rewarding.

Although he started classical piano lessons at age 7 in his hometown of Chicago, Hancock began his jazz career in earnest only after studying engineerin­g and music at Grinnell College in Iowa.

His 1962 debut album for

Blue Note, “Takin’ Off,” featured the Hancock piece “Watermelon Man,” which Cuban percussion­ist Mongo Santamaria turned into an instrument­al pop hit a year later. ( Hancock rerecorded it as a funk piece on “Head Hunters,” and it is now a jazz standard.)

More important, the album caught the attention of trumpet star Miles Davis, who invited Hancock to join his new band — known as Miles’ second great quintet, featuring saxophonis­t Shorter and the young rhythm section of bassist Ron Carter and teen drummer Tony Williams.

“The cool thing about Miles is that he didn’t want to tell you what to do specifical­ly,” Hancock recalled. “He wanted to stimulate you to use your own devices and

figure out what to do.”

Hancock spent five years with Davis while also making albums under his own name and playing in sessions with other bandleader­s. In addition, he recorded TV commercial­s and movie soundtrack­s, beginning with “Blow Up” in 1966. Hancock has released 41 studio albums under his own name. He has collected 14 Grammys, one Oscar (for 1986’s “Round Midnight”), a Kennedy Center Honors (2013) and a Grammy for Lifetime Achievemen­t ( 2016).

Although Hancock has worked with everyone from pop star Pink to classical piano star Lang Lang, he never recorded with Prince. But the two did jam together and become friends when Prince lived in Los Angeles

in the early 2000s.

Prince often hosted parties, and Hancock would be on the guest list with the likes of Samuel L. Jackson, Leonardo DiCaprio and Penelope Cruz.

“Sometimes I’d bring Joni Mitchell with me — he worshipped her,” Hancock said of Prince. “It was a lot of fun to go to Prince’s house and play. The place would be rocking out. He loved improvisin­g.”

There also were “deep conversati­ons” about religion, philosophy, music or books that people had read. Sometimes the proceeding­s would carry on until early morning when the sun was up. And — surprise — they’d have breakfast at Prince’s.

“Then,” Hancock said, “we’d go home completely tired.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States