With the formation of his great electric sextet,
Herbie Hancock's music took off into outer and inner space, starting with the landmark
Mwandishi album recorded in a single session on New Year's Eve. Ever the gadgeteer,
Herbie plays with electronic effects devices -- reverb units, stereo tremelo, and Echoplex -- which all lead his music into spacier, open-ended directions very much influenced by
Miles Davis' electric experiments, rendering it from
post-bop conventions. There are just three tracks: the insistent 15/4-meter Afro-electric-
funk workout
"Ostinato (Suite for Angela)," the inquisitive
"You'll Know When You Get There" with its ethereal
Hancock voicings, and trombonist
Julian Priester's
"Silent Way"-influenced
"Wandering Spirit Song," which eventually dips into tumultuous free form.
Eddie Henderson emerges as a major trumpet soloist here, probing, jabbing, soliloquizing;
Bennie Maupin comes over from
Lee Morgan's group to add his ominous bass clarinet and thoughtful alto flute; and
Buster Williams' bass and
Billy Hart's flexible drums propel the rhythm section.
Santana's
Jose Chepito Areas and
Leon "Ndugu" Chancler also add funky percussive reinforcement to
"Ostinato," along with guitarist
Ron Montrose. The group's collective empathy is remarkable, and
Hancock had only begun to probe the outer limits with this extraordinary music. ~ Richard S. Ginell