Herbie Hancock, Michael Brecker, Roy Hargrove - Directions in Music: Live at Massey Hall
Facts
| Artist(s) | Herbie Hancock, Michael Brecker and Roy Hargrove |
| Studio | Umvd Labels |
| Release Date | June 11, 2002 |
| UPC Code | 731458965428 |
| Buy this item | $18.98 at Amazon.com As of Dec 4 18:47 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Live |
About Herbie Hancock, Michael Brecker, Roy Hargrove - Directions in Music: Live at Massey Hall
Directions in Music marks Herbie Hancock's all-star tribute to Miles Davis and John Coltrane. It's clearly a chance for Hancock to return once again to his creative roots, when he was in Davis's great quintet of the mid-'60s, and he has excellent companions for the journey in Michael Brecker and Roy Hargrove, the tenor saxophonist and trumpeter who clearly demonstrate their inspiration in Coltrane and Miles. The CD begins with a reprise of Hancock's "Sorcerer" from his Miles period, with bassist John Patitucci and drummer Brian Blade, who were so crucial a part of Wayne Shorter's Footprints Live, and prove themselves just as important here. Blade is especially driving, pressing Hancock and the horns to complex creative dialogue. The synthesis of "So What/Impressions," already closely linked tunes, benefits from the input of some fresh creative thinking, while Brecker's long cadenza on "Naima" is an effective invocation of Coltrane's intrepid virtuosity. Over 78 minutes in length, this is energetic, sometimes brilliant music, in many ways resembling Hancock's own classic, Maiden Voyage. --Stuart Broomer Amazon.com
Tracks
- The Sorcerer
- The Poet
- So What/Impressions
- Misstery
- Naima
- Transition
- My Ship
- D Trane
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User Reviews
Average user review:| More Than Great Herbie Hancock, Oh So Much More! |
Big mistake.
As a huge Michael Brecker fan I... was quite embarrassed by my mental laziness.
Now, when I rediscovered my copy of DIRECTIONS IN MUSIC as a Herbie Hancock AND Michael Brecker AND Roy Hargrove AND John Patitucci AND Brian Blade CD the joy was off the scale.
A remarkable CD which brings together some of the finest jazz musucians of our time playing their best.
Just wish I cudda been there...
Kirtland Peterson September 25, 2007
| Noisy and Pretentious |
Now we get some superb jazz performers doing their thing, with more meandering, squawking, off key sounding horns (as if they were sucking lemons) and we're supposed to cheer about it. So great, they've made their names, they can screw around with these bizarre arrangements, but I'm not obligated to pretend I like it. August 26, 2005
| A challenging and rewarding trip |
This CD is very advanced jazz. There is a level of abstraction here that demands that this music be listened to actively, if at all. That isn't to say that this is free jazz; there is a predetermined structure behind what you're hearing, but it feels loose and impressionistic. It is worth the trouble of warming up to. The rhythym section is delightfully responsive to the solos of Brecker and Hargrove, and that goes double for Herbie Hancock, who comes off as a complementary counter-soloist more often than not. Brecker and Hargrove use this support to their advantage. Their solos typically will develop slowly and deliberately, starting out ponderous and using spaces effectively as they build tension to a climactic point at which they get to use the full strength of their dexterity.
At this point, I must make the obligatory "______ alone is worth the price of admission" statement about Impressions. My previous experiences with this song have been Coltrane-styled modal romps. The Directions in Music approach to it was a stunning reinvention (a slow-developing Impressions!).
Naima is just an extended solo by Brecker. It should be treated as an intermission. It tended to get a little too showy as it wore on, but you can take it or leave it; other reviewers have chosen to take it.
I have heard nothing about plans for another Directions in Music CD, but if there is one, here's an idea of what to expect. The most obvious change is the addition of electronic effects in a few of the songs. Hancock has his keyboard, Brecker picks up an EWI (electronic wind instrument), and Hargrove even has a second microphone which he uses to get sound effects out of his trumpet. The concert was also in surround sound. The song selection was entirely different, except for a revisting of The Poet. They also played John Coltrane's Cresent, a tune which is designed to be played dramatically, patiently, and deliberately, so it fits Directions in Music like a glove. Brecker's intermission solo is on the EWI this time. He layers over himself until he's a regular one-man band, playing a funky version of Wayne Shorter's Pinocchio. Again, expendable, but perhaps you would be amused.
Pick this up, figure out what it's about, and keep an eye out for a sequel. March 6, 2005
| NO GREENHORNS |
What Hancock and company have produced are high quality acoustic performances that are more reminiscent of Davis and Coltrane than note for note reproductions of the originals. Roughly half of the cuts are pieces the dynamics duo recorded themselves at one time; the remainder are musical impressions written in their wake. ("The Sorcerer" falls into both categories.)
With the chances to hear these musicians play live declining, this may be the only opportunity we may get to hear jazz of this caliber outside the confines of the studio. This recording comes highly recommended.
November 28, 2004
| Directions in Music:Live at Massey Hall |
WOW! I should have flown to Atlanta to see the show. January 2, 2004
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