| | Herbie Hancock Piano CD Herbie Hancock Discography of CDs
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Previously available only as a limited edition, Japanese import. Personnel: Herbie Hancock (piano); Herbie Hancock. Audio Mixers: Fred Catero; David Rubinson; Tamoo Suzuki ; Brian Bell. Liner Note Authors: Herbie Hancock; David Rubinson; Bob Belden. Recording information: CBS Studios, Tokyo, Japan (10/25/1978-10/26/1978). Author: Herbie Hancock. Photographers: Max Hellweg; Akira Aimi; Jan Persson; Jon Sievert. Recorded after the funky fusion of Head Hunters, Thrust, Sextant, and other electric albums, and before the dawn of "Rockit" and more commercially viable and hip-hop-oriented material, Herbie Hancock took time out in 1978 to touch base again with his piano. Recorded completely solo, this set was issued only in Japan as the truly awful Feets, Don't Fail Me Now was issued stateside. A curious set, the first half of the album features Hancock playing jazz standards in truly elegant and restrained fashion. His treatments of "My Funny Valentine," "Green Dolphin Street," and "Someday My Prince Will Come" -- all tracks he performed as part of the Miles Davis Quintet -- are elongated, morphed, and beautifully woven together as a suite. The latter half of the recording is comprised of four tracks, "Harvest Time," "Sonrisa," "Manhattan Island," and "Blue Otani," all of which are originals. These pieces are concerned with Hancock's preoccupation with the piano as a solo instrument. They are composed as formalist treatments that are extrapolated upon at several different junctures, or "turning points," within them. They embody notions of classical music à la Anton Webern, blues, Erroll Garner's lyrical phrasing, and Bill Evans' harmonic sensibilities. They are, in sum, inseparable from one another and are usually performed as a suite. This is a stunning triumph for Hancock, and it's too bad that the album has never been issued in the U.S., as it would undoubtedly be a popular addition to his vast catalog. About the closest one can come are the tracks from here included in The Herbie Hancock Box. Maybe someday. ~ Thom Jurek Herbie Hancock never really focused on solo piano. However, this 1978 release, which was previously only available in Japan, is a rare gem in the Hancock discography. Thanks to this overdue 2004 reissue, the listener is invited to explore the musical mind of this pianist in an up-close and intimate setting. All 11 tracks on THE PIANO are quite reflective, with Hancock employing many rich chordal textures and winding melodic gestures throughout. On "My Funny Valentine," Hancock combines the harmonic palette of Bill Evans with his own distinctive phrasing and unexpected modal shifts. His own composition "Blue Otani" is the only bluesy piece on this disc, and here Hancock slyly suggests the stride piano tradition without ever really playing in this style. "Harvest Time" is the most atmospheric piece on the album. As Hancock's fingers glide over the keys, one can almost envision the first blush of daybreak on a farm. For anybody seeking to better understand the conceptual and technical wizardry of Hancock, THE PIANO is a priceless find. Recorded after the funky fusion of Head Hunters, Thrust, Sextant, and other electric albums, and before the dawn of "Rockit" and more commercially viable and hip-hop-oriented material, Herbie Hancock took time out in 1978 to touch base again with his piano. Recorded completely solo, and live, direct to disc, where the tape is rolling and the performance is recorded directly to a master acetate without edits or overdubs of any kind (further constraints of the technology permitted performances of only 16 minutes in length per side), this set was issued only in Japan at the time, just as the truly awful Feets, Don't Fail Me Now was issued stateside. This is the very first time this set has been available in the United States, and Legacy has done a fantastic job, lengthening the original album by over 20 minutes with the inclusion of four alternate takes of isJazzTimes (p.101) - "THE PIANO is a rich, vivid sonic documentation of an individual piano at a specific moment in a particular acoustic space in the hands of a special artist." Mojo (Publisher) (p.124) - 3 stars out of 5 - "[F]ull of riches..." Herbie Hancock Piano Songs Purchase Piano CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Lee Morgan Sonic Boom CD (1967) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Piano
$10.29 Personnel: Lee Morgan (trumpet); David "Fathead" Newman, George Coleman (tenor saxophone); Julian Prester (trombone); Cedar Walton, Harold Mabern (piano); Ron Carter, Walter Booker (bass); Billy Higgins, Mickey Roker (drums). Recorded at The Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey on April 14 & 28, 1967 and on September 12 and October 10, 1969. Originally released on Blue Note (987) and BNLA (582-2). Includes liner notes by Michael Cuscuna, Bob Blumenthal. Personnel: David "Fathead" Newman (tenor saxophone); Lee Morgan Quintet (trumpet); Julian Priester (trombone); Harold Mabern, Cedar Walton (piano); Mickey Roker, Billy Higgins (drums). Liner Note Authors: Michael Cuscuna; Bob Blumenthal. Recording information: Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, NY (01/14/1967-10/10/1969). Photographer: Francis Wolff. Sonic Boom was not released until 1979 and then remained in print only for a brief time before eventually being reissued years later. In addition to the great trumpeter Lee Morgan and a fine rhythm section (pianist Cedar Walton, bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Billy Higgins), the well-rounded set is a bit special for it allows the often R&B-associated tenor David "Fathead" Newman an opportunity to stretch out ...
| | Herbie Hancock V.S.O.P. - Live Under The Sky CDs (1979) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Piano
$16.09 2cds.Rec.In Tokyo 7/26/79. Incl.10 Prev.Unrel.Tracks
Personnel: Herbie Hancock (piano); Herbie Hancock; Ron Carter (double bass); Tony Ruption Williams , Tony Williams (drums); Wayne Shorter (tenor saxophone); Freddie Hubbard (trumpet). Liner Note Authors: Herbie Hancock; Bob Belden. Recording information: Denon Colosseum, Tokyo, Japan (07/26/1979-07/27/1979). Photographers: Max Hellweg; Veryl Oakland; Herbert Greene; Jan Persson; Jon Sievert. Herbie Hancock's V.S.O.P. project with his former bandmates from the Miles Davis Quintet -- Ron Carter, Wayne Shorter, Tony Williams -- and trumpeter Freddie Hubbard was a band that almost single-handedly tried to re-establish acoustic jazz in the United States. And though they made three recordings, all of which were favorably reviewed and heralded by true jazz fans, none of them sold very well, and the band could find few gigs in the United States. The 1978 tour of major cities was thought to be a triumph at the time, but the unit could find few gigs afterward, and so its various members all went back to their other projects. In 1979, they got the opportunity to tour Japan and jumped at the chance. Sony, Hancock's Japanese label, recorded the two evenings, and the first, which took place during a furious rainstorm, was broadcast live on national television! Live Under the Sky marks the first ...
| | Seven Steps: The Complete Columbia Recordings Of Miles Davis: 1963-1964 CDs (2004) Limited Edition
Piano
$88.59 Initial pressings of SEVEN STEPS are packaged with a deluxe metal spine. Also includes a 92-page booklet with rare photos, complete discography and essays by Michael Cuscuna and Bob Blumenthal. Personnel: Miles Davis (trumpet); Miles Davis; Ron Carter (double bass); Tony Ruption Williams , Tony Williams (drums); George Coleman, Sam Rivers, Wayne Shorter (tenor saxophone); Victor Feldman, Herbie Hancock (piano); Frank Butler (drums). Audio Remixer: Mark Wilder. Liner Note Authors: Michael Cuscuna; Bob Blumenthal. Recording information: Berlin Philharmonic Hall, Berlin, Germany (04/16/1963-09/19/1964); Columbia 30th Street Studio, New York, NY (04/16/1963-09/19/1964); Columbia Studios, LA (04/16/1963-09/19/1964); Kohseinenkin Hall, Tokyo, Japan (04/16/1963-09/19/1964); Philharmonic Hall, New York, NY (04/16/1963-09/19/1964); The Festival Mondial Du Jazz Antibes, Juan-Les-Pins, Fr (04/16/1963-09/19/1964). All tracks have been digitally mastered using 24-bit technology. Introduction bys: Billy Taylor ; Andre Francis; Terry Isono; Mort Fega. Photographers: Vernon Smith; John Wilkes; Ted Williams; Joe Alper; Jan Persson; Roger Marshutz; Lee Tanner; Chuck Stewart. Seven Steps: The Complete ...
| | Herbie Hancock Inventions & Dimensions CD (1963) Bonus Track; Remastered
Piano
$8.99 Additional Tracks
Personnel: Herbie Hancock (piano); Paul Chambers (bass); Willie Bobo (drums, timbales); Osvaldo "Chihuahua" Martinez (congas, bongos). Recorded at the Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey on August 30, 1963. Includes liner notes by Nat Hentoff. Personnel: Herbie Hancock (piano); Herbie Hancock; Paul Chambers (bass instrument); Osvaldo "Chihuahua" Martinez, Osvaldo Martinez (congas, bongos, finger cymbals, guiro); Willie Bobo (drums, timbales). Audio Remasterer: Rudy Van Gelder. Liner Note Authors: Nat Hentoff; Bob Blumenthal. Recording information: Van Gelder Studios, Englewood Cliffs, NJ (08/30/1963). Photographer: Francis Wolff. For his third album, Inventions and Dimensions, Herbie Hancock changed course dramatically. Instead of recording another multifaceted album like My Point of View, he explored a Latin-inflected variation of post-bop with a small quartet. Hancock is the main harmonic focus of the music -- his three colleagues are bassist Paul Chambers, ...
| | Miles Davis Cellar Door Sessions 1970 CDs (2005) Remastered; Box Set; Special Edition
Piano
$87.89 Contains previously unreleased material. Some of the recordings on the CELLAR DOOR SESSIONS were originally released in edited form on the 1971 double-LP LIVE EVIL. Personnel: Miles Davis (trumpet); Miles Davis; John McLaughlin (guitar, electric guitar); Keith Jarrett (Fender Rhodes piano, electric organ); Michael J. Henderson (electric bass); Michael Henderson (bass guitar); Gary Bartz (soprano saxophone, alto saxophone); Jack DeJohnette (drums); Airto Moreira (percussion). Liner Note Authors: John McLaughlin ; Keith Jarrett; Airto Moreira; Gary Bartz; Jack DeJohnette; Michael J. Henderson; Adam Holzman. Recording information: The Cellar Door, Washington DC (12/16/1970-12/19/1970). Introduction by: Bob Belden. Photographers: Art Maillet; David Gahr; Urve Kuusik; Sandy Speiser; David Redfern; Jim Marshall . There is an entire universe contained in this box. Sumptuously packaged and scrupulously annotated, CELLAR DOOR SESSIONS 1970 is a six-disc set that documents Miles Davis's extended residency at the Washington, D.C., club. Davis is backed by ...
| | Thelonious Monk At Carnegie Hall CD (2005)
Piano
$12.89 Personnel: Thelonious Monk (piano); John Coltrane (tenor saxophone); Ahmed Abdul-Malik (bass instrument); Shadow Wilson (drums). Liner Note Authors: Larry Appelbaum; Robin D.G. Kelley; Ira Gitler; Lewis Porter; Amiri Baraka; Stanley Crouch; Ashley Kahn. Recording information: Carnegie Hall, New York, NY (11/29/1957). Larry Appelbaum, the recording lab supervisor at the Library of Congress, came across this tape by accident while transferring the library's tape archive to digital. What a find. Forget the Five Spot recording that sounds like it was recorded inside of a tunnel from the far end. The sound here is wonderfully present and contemporary. More importantly, this band -- which also included drummer Shadow Wilson and bassist Ahmed Abdul-Malik -- had it right on November 29, 1957, at Carnegie Hall. The John Coltrane on this date is far more assured than he had been four months earlier on the Five Spot date and on the initial Prestige side Thelonious Monk with John Coltrane. He'd been with Monk for four months and had absorbed his complex, multivalent musical system completely. It's clear from the opening track, "Monk's Mood," where the pair play in duet, that Coltrane is confident and moving into his own. Monk feels that confidence with his nearly Baroque entrance ...
| | Mike Vax Live On The Road CD (2003)
Piano
$15.19 Big Band Featuring Alumni Of The Stan Kenton Orchestra. Mike Vax Big Band: Mike Vax (trumpet); Kim Richmond, Bruce Johnstone, Bob Keller, Pete Gallo, Joel Kaye (saxophone); Dennis Noday, John Harner, Steve Campos, Steve Huffsteter (trumpet); Roy Wiegand, Dale DeVoe, Curtis Fox, Kenny Shroyer, Mike Suter (trombone); Liz Sesler-Beckman (piano); Jim Widner (bass); Gary Hobbs (drums); John Akal (Latin percussion). Recorded live in Cambridge, Massachussets, and Windber, Harrisburg, Pittsburgh and Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Personnel: Mike Vax (trumpet); Kim Richmond (soprano saxophone, ...
| | Dingoes Five Times The Sun & Other Delicacies CD (1995) Import
Piano
$16.65
| | Pete McGuiness Jazz Orchestra First Flight CD (2007)
Piano
$13.05 Pete McGuinness: Pete McGuiness (vocals, trombone); Paul Meyers (guitar); Jason Rigby (flute, clarinet, saxophone, tenor saxophone); Dave Pietro, Charles Pillow (flute, saxophone, alto saxophone); Tony Kadleck, Bill Mobley, Jon Owens (trumpet, flugelhorn); Steve Armour, Bruce Eidem (trombone); Mike Holober (piano); Andy Eulau (bass instrument); Scott Neumann (drums). Personnel: Pete McGuinness (vocals, trombone); Tom Christensen (flute, clarinet, tenor saxophone); Dave Riekenberg (baritone saxophone); ...
| | Disney Music Block Party CD (2008)
Piano
$10.09
| | Jeffrey Showell CD (2009)
Piano
$13.15
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