My Point of View and Inventions and Dimensions found Herbie Hancock exploring the fringes of hard bop, working with a big band and a Latin-flavored percussion section, respectively. On Empyrean Isles, he returns to hard bop, but the results are anything but conventional. Working with cornetist Freddie Hubbard, bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Tony Williams -- a trio just as young and adventurous as he was -- Hancock pushes at the borders of hard bop, finding a brilliantly evocative balance between traditional bop, soul-injected grooves, and experimental, post-modal jazz. Hancock's four original concepts are loosely based on the myths of the Empyrean Isles, and they are designed to push the limits of the band and of hard bop. Even "Cantaloupe Island," well-known for its funky piano riff, takes chances and doesn't just ride the groove. "The Egg," with its minimal melody and extended solo improvisations, is the riskiest number on the record, but it works because each musician spins inventive, challenging solos that defy convention. In comparison, "One Finger Snap" and "Oliloqui Valley" (alternate takes of both tracks are included as bonuses on the CD reissue) adhere to hard bop conventions, but each song finds the quartet vigorously searching for new sonic territory with convincing fire. That passion informs all of Empyrean Isles, a record that officially established Hancock as a major artist in his own right. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Herbie Hancock has had quite a productive career. In fact he has so many accomplishments in different areas of music that he has had three or four careers.
Hancock was born in 1940 and considered a classical music prodigy on piano at 11. By 1961, when he joined the Donald Byrd-Peppers Adams Quintet, he already had his own voice in jazz. His very first record as a leader resulted in the hit "Watermelon Man." His series of Blue Note albums in the 1960s would have been highpoints in any artist's career, but they are only part of the Herbie Hancock Story. He was a member of the Miles Davis Quintet during 1963-68, became a masterful electric keyboardist and during 1969-73 he led a sextet that moved effortlessly between avant-garde jazz, funky grooves and electronic explorations. Hancock hit it big with the funk-oriented Headhunters, making "Chameleon" into a standard. Since then he has explored acoustic jazz, fusion, pop, industrial music (including "Rockit"), African music, techno-pop, a set of George Gershwin songs and an award-winning treatment of Joni Mitchell songs (River: The Joni Letters).
1964's Empyrean Isles has Hancock exploring modern hard bop in a quartet with trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, bassist Ron Carter and drummer Tony Williams. This album is best known for introducing the pianist's always-catchy "Cantaloupe Island," but it also includes "One Finger Snap" and "Oliloqui Valley" which are heard in two versions apiece. The young musical giants are in inspired form, making Empyrean Isles a classic and memorable Blue Note album.
—Scott Yanow
Remastered!
One Finger Snap*; Oliloqui Valley*; Cantaloupe Island; The Egg.
Herbie Hancock, Piano; Freddie Hubbard, Cornet; Ron Carter, Bass; Tony Williams, Drums.
(*Bonus track, not part of original LP.)
| Album Credits | |
Performance Credits |
|
| Anthony Williams | Drums |
| Freddie Hubbard | Cornet |
| Herbie Hancock | Piano |
| Ron Carter | Bass |
| Rudy Van Gelder | Recorder |
| Tony Williams | Drums |
Technical Credits |
|
| Alfred Lion | Producer |
| Bob Blumenthal | Liner Notes |
| Eric Bernhardi | Design |
| Francis Wolff | Photography |
| Gordon Jee | Creative Director |
| Micaela Boland | Design |
| Michael Cuscuna | Producer |
| Reid Miles | Cover Design |