Sextant

Sextant

by Herbie Hancock
Sextant

Sextant

by Herbie Hancock

CD

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Overview

When Herbie Hancock left Warner Bros. in 1971 after releasing three musically sound but critically and commercially underappreciated albums -- Crossings, Mwandishi, and Fat Albert Rotunda -- he was struggling. At odds with a jazz establishment that longed for a return to his Blue Note sound, and possessing a fierce consciousness struggle with free music and the full-on embrace of electricity after his tenure with Miles Davis, Hancock was clearly looking for a sound. Before diving into the funky waters of Headhunters in 1973, Hancock and his tough group (including drummer Billy Hart, trombonist Julian Priester, trumpeter Eddie Henderson, saxophonist Bennie Maupin, and bassist Buster Williams) cut this gem as Hancock's debut for Columbia. Like its Warner predecessors, the album features a kind of post-modal, free impressionism that traces the edges of funk. Its three long tracks are exploratory investigations into the nature of how mode and interval can be boiled down into a minimal stew, then extrapolated upon for soloing and "riffing." In fact, in many cases, the interval is the riff, evidenced by "Rain Dance." The piece that revealed the true funk direction, however, was with its choppy basslines and heavy percussion -- aided by the inclusion of Dr. Patrick Gleeson and Buck Clarke. Dave Rubinson's production brought Hancock's piano more into line with the rhythm section, allowing for a unified front in the more abstract sections of these tunes. The true masterpiece on the album, though, is "Hornets," an eclectic, electric ride through both the dark modal ambience of Miles' In a Silent Way and post-Coltrane harmonic aesthetics. The groove is in place, but it gets turned inside out by Priester and Maupin on more than one occasion and Hancock just bleats with the synth in sections. Over 19 minutes in length, it can be brutally intense, but is more often than not stunningly beautiful. It provides a glimpse into the music that became Headhunters, but doesn't fully explain it, making this disc, like its Warner predecessors, true and welcome mysteries in Hancock's long career. ~ Thom Jurek

Product Details

Release Date: 02/01/2008
Label: Columbia
UPC: 0886972398525
Rank: 538

Tracks

  1. Rain Dance
  2. Hidden Shadows
  3. Hornets

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Herbie Hancock   Primary Artist,Piano,Vocals,Clapping,Clavinet,Echoplex,Fuzz-wah,Keyboards,Mellotron,Synthesizer,Arp Echoplex,Handclapping,Fender Rhodes,Piano (Electric)
Bennie Maupin   Kazoo,Afuche,Piccolo,Nose Flute,Sax (Soprano),Clarinet (Bass),Percussion,Wind
Julian Priester   Cowbell,Trombone,Trombone (Alto),Trombone (Bass),Trombone (Tenor)
Buster Williams   Bass,Fuzz Bass,Percussion,Wah Wah Bass,Wah Wah Guitar,Bass (Acoustic),Bass (Electric)
Victor Domagalski   Vocals
Delta Horne   Vocals
Billy Bonner   Resonator
Sandra Stevens   Vocals
Candy Love   Vocals
Billy Hart   Drums,Percussion
Patrick Gleeson   Synthesizer
Eddie Henderson   Trumpet,Flugelhorn,Percussion
Scott Beach   Vocals
Victor Pantoja   Conductor
Buck Clarke   Bongos,Congas

Technical Credits

Herbie Hancock   Composer
Seth Rothstein   Project Director
Patti Matheny   Artist Coordination
Howard Fritzson   Art Direction,Reissue Art Director
Rob Springett   Paintings,Cover Painting
John Vieira   Mixing,Engineer
Tom "Curly" Ruff   Digital Remastering
Randall Martin   Reissue Design
Don Hunstein   Photography
Steven Berkowitz   A&R
Bob Belden   Producer,Liner Notes,Reissue Producer
Fred Catero   Engineer
David Rubinson   Producer,Remixing
Jeremy Zatkin   Engineer
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