Herbie Hancock
Herbie Hancock can be booked through this site. Herbie Hancock entertainment booking site. Herbie Hancock
is available for public concerts and events. Herbie Hancock can be booked for
private events and Herbie Hancock can be booked for corporate events and
meetings through this Herbie Hancock booking page.
Unlike most middle agents that would mark
up the performance or appearance fee for Herbie Hancock, we act as YOUR agent in
securing Herbie Hancock at the best possible price. We go over the rider for
Herbie Hancock and work directly with Herbie Hancock or the responsible agent for
Herbie Hancock to secure the talent for your event. We become YOUR agent,
representing YOU, the buyer.
In fact, in most cases we can negotiate for
the acquisition of Herbie Hancock for international dates and newer promoters
providing you meet professional requirements.
Herbie Hancock Biography
Herbie Hancock will always be one of the most revered and
controversial figures in jazz -- just as his employer/mentor Miles
Davis was when he was alive. Unlike Miles, who pressed ahead
relentlessly and never looked back until near the very end, Hancock has
cut a zigzagging forward path, shuttling between almost every
development in electronic and acoustic jazz and R&B over the last
third of the 20th century. Though grounded in Bill Evans and able to
absorb blues, funk, gospel, and even modern classical influences,
Hancock's piano and keyboard voices are entirely his own, with their
own urbane harmonic and complex, earthy rhythmic signatures -- and
young pianists cop his licks constantly. Having studied engineering and
professing to love gadgets and buttons, Hancock was perfectly suited
for the electronic age; he was one of the earliest champions of the
Rhodes electric piano and Hohner clavinet and would field an
ever-growing collection of synthesizers and computers on his electric
dates. Yet his love for the grand piano never waned, and despite his
peripatetic activities all around the musical map, his piano style
continues to evolve into tougher, ever-more-complex forms. He is as
much at home trading riffs with a smoking funk band as he is communing
with a world-class post-bop rhythm section -- and that drives purists
on both sides of the fence up the wall.
Having taken up the piano at age seven, Hancock quickly became known as
a prodigy, soloing in the first movement of a Mozart piano concerto
with the Chicago Symphony at the age of 11. After studies at Grinnell
College, Hancock was invited by Donald Byrd in 1961 to join his group
in New York City, and before long, Blue Note offered him a solo
contract. His debut album, Takin' Off, took off indeed after Mongo
Santamaria covered one of the album's songs, Watermelon Man. In May
1963, Miles Davis asked him to join his band in time for the Seven
Steps to Heaven sessions, and he remained there for five years, greatly
influencing Miles' evolving direction, loosening up his own style, and
upon Miles' suggestion, converting to the Rhodes electric piano. In
that time span, Hancock's solo career also blossomed on Blue Note,
pouring forth increasingly sophisticated compositions like Maiden
Voyage, Cantaloupe Island, Goodbye to Childhood, and the exquisite
Speak Like a Child. He also played on many East Coast recording
sessions for producer Creed Taylor and provided a groundbreaking score
to Michelangelo Antonioni's film Blow Up, which gradually led to
further movie assignments.
Having left the Davis band in 1968, Hancock recorded an elegant funk
album, Fat Albert Rotunda, and in 1969 formed a sextet that evolved
into one of the most exciting, forward-looking jazz-rock groups of the
era. Now deeply immersed in electronics, Hancock added the synthesizer
of Patrick Gleeson to his Echoplexed, fuzz-wah-pedaled electric piano
and clavinet, and the recordings became spacier and more complex
rhythmically and structurally, creating its own corner of the
avant-garde. By 1970, all of the musicians used both English and
African names (Herbie's was Mwandishi). Alas, Hancock had to break up
the band in 1973 when it ran out of money, and having studied Buddhism,
he concluded that his ultimate goal should be to make his audiences
happy.
The next step, then, was a terrific funk group whose first album, Head
Hunters, with its Sly Stone-influenced hit single, Chameleon, became
the biggest-selling jazz LP up to that time. Now handling all of the
synthesizers himself, Hancock's heavily rhythmic comping often became
part of the rhythm section, leavened by interludes of the old urbane
harmonies. Hancock recorded several electric albums of mostly superior
quality in the '70s, followed by a wrong turn into disco around the
decade's end. In the meantime, Hancock refused to abandon acoustic
jazz. After a one-shot reunion of the 1965 Miles Davis Quintet
(Hancock, Ron Carter, Tony Williams, Wayne Shorter, with Freddie
Hubbard sitting in for Miles) at New York's 1976 Newport Jazz Festival,
they went on tour the following year as V.S.O.P. The near-universal
acclaim of the reunions proved: that Hancock was still a whale of a
pianist; that Miles' loose mid-'60s post-bop direction was far from
spent; and that the time for a neo-traditional revival was near,
finally bearing fruit in the '80s with Wynton Marsalis and his ilk.
V.S.O.P. continued to hold sporadic reunions through 1992, though the
death of the indispensable Williams in 1997 cast much doubt as to
whether these gatherings would continue.
Hancock continued his chameleonic ways in the '80s: scoring an MTV hit
in 1983 with the scratch-driven, proto-industrial single Rockit
(accompanied by a striking video); launching an exciting partnership
with Gambian kora virtuoso Foday Musa Suso that culminated in the
swinging 1986 live album Jazz Africa; doing film scores; and playing
festivals and tours with the Marsalis brothers, George Benson, Michael
Brecker, and many others. After his 1988 techno-pop album, Perfect
Machine, Hancock left Columbia (his label since 1973), signed a
contract with Qwest that came to virtually nothing (save for A Tribute
to Miles in 1992), and finally made a deal with PolyGram in 1994 to
record jazz for Verve and release pop albums on Mercury. Well into a
youthful middle age, Hancock's curiosity, versatility, and capacity for
growth showed no signs of fading, and in 1998 he issued Gershwin's
World. His curiosity with the fusion of electronic music and jazz
continued with 2001's Future 2 Future, but he also continued to explore
the future of straight-ahead contemporary jazz with 2005's
Possibilities. ~ Richard S. Ginell, All Music Guide
Written by Richard S. Ginell