A Grammy First For Herbie Hancock
Piano Legend's Joni Mitchell Tribute A Rare Jazz Nominee For Album Of The Year
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Play CBS Video Video Herbie Hancock's Grammy Dream Paget Brewster chats with Jazz legend Herbie Hancock about his surprising Grammy win for Album Of The Year, beating out pop favorites Amy Winehouse and Kanye West.
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Herbie Hancock's "River - The Joni Letters" has received Grammy nominations for album of the year and contemporary jazz album of the year. The veteran pianist, who already has 10 Grammy awards, is also nominated for best jazz instrumental solo for the track "Both Sides Now." (Kwaku Alston)
Jazz piano pioneer Herbie Hancock has 10 Grammy awards, all won in instrumental categories.
This year, however, it's an album with vocals that's earned him a nod in the Grammy's most important category, album of the year.
"River: The Joni Letters" includes instrumental arrangements of Joni Mitchell's songs as well as tracks with vocal performances by Corrine Bailey Ray, Norah Jones, Tina Turner and Mitchell.
It's the "letters" that were Hancock's biggest inspiration.
I would read two words and have to stop because it would be so brilliant and so full of genius, that I was like 'how old was she when she wrote that?'
Herbie Hancock on the music of Joni Mitchell.Hancock turned to Mitchell's record producer (and former husband) Larry Klein for advice on what to select from the singer-songwriter's vast catalog of songs.
"He would make suggestions, [based on] a certain kind of harmonic structure that he thought would be compatible with me and then we'd examine the words," Hancock said. "I would ask him questions about the meaning of the words. I would read two words and have to stop because it would be so brilliant and so full of genius, that I was like 'how old was she when she wrote that?' and he'd say '21' and I would say 'what?'"
Of course, Hancock himself was a child prodigy. He started playing piano when he was 7, and at 11 he performed a Mozart piano concerto with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. He switched to jazz in high school, was discovered by trumpeter Donald Byrd at 20, and two years later signed to Blue Note records. A year later, he was out with his first album for the label, "Takin' Off," which spawned the hit instrumental track "Watermelon Man."
He took another big step in his career a few years later when he joined Miles Davis' band, playing an important role in the trumpeter's foray into jazz fusion on albums such as "Bitches Brew."
It was Davis who pushed him towards the new sound.
"We showed up at the recording studio, and normally there's an acoustic piano sitting there and the drums and so forth. And I didn't see an acoustic piano," said Hancock. "So I asked Miles, I said, 'what do you want me to play?' and he points over to the Fender Rhodes in the corner of the room and says [imitating Davis' trademark growl], 'play that.' I'm thinking 'what, that toy?'"
Hancock said he had never played electric piano before, but he had adopted the opinion of his fellow musicians: "that's a piece of crap."
"But, I said okay, so they set it up. I turned it on and I played a chord on it. And I said 'oh that sounds nice' that's cool! Then I thought, 'oh yeah, but I can turn it up and be as loud as the drummer,'" Hancock laughed. "I said 'cool!'"
On "River: The Joni Letters," Hancock reunites with his former Miles Davis bandmate, saxophonist Wayne Shorter. Hancock explains that Shorter's work on the album was also inspired by the lyrics.
"I had a copy of the lyrics given to each of the members of the band when we did the tracks," he said. "We'd go into the engineer's booth and we'd talk about the lyrics. Also who the characters are that she wrote about. The interesting thing was Wayne Shorter who said, 'well what about the characters that she didn't write about that would be in that scene anyway? I wanna play those.'"
The song "Edith and the Kingpin" takes place in a club in a small town, not unlike the ones Shorter and Hancock played when they were starting out.
"Wayne said, 'I wanna be one of the guys in the club at the bar that are milling about talking about the prostitutes,'" Hancock continued. "Which she didn't have in the lyric, but I thought that was brilliant that he came up with the idea of visually what would be happening. We know club scenes so we know what that's like."Listen: Tina Turner sings "Edith And The Kingpin" from Herbie Hancock's "River: The Joni Letters"
By Judy Faber
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Listen: Tina Turner sings "Edith And The Kingpin" from Herbie Hancock's "River: The Joni Letters"
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