info.txt

(2 KB) Pobierz
Artist: Herbie Hancock 
Album: Inventions & Dimensions
Recorded: 1969
Remastered: 2000
Genre: Jazz
Length: 37:05 (original album)
Label: Blue Note
Producer: Alfred Lion

***
Track listing:
All compositions by Herbie Hancock, except as indicated.

1. "I Have a Dream" – 10:58
2. "The Prisoner" – 7:57
3. "Firewater" (Buster Williams) – 7:33
4. "He Who Lives in Fear" – 6:52
5. "Promise of the Sun" – 7:53
6. "The Prisoner" (alternate take) – 5:48 (not on original album)
7. "Firewater" (Buster Williams) (alternate take) – 8:39 (not on original album)

***
Personnel:

Herbie Hancock — piano, electric piano
Johnny Coles — flugelhorn
Garnett Brown — trombone
Joe Henderson — tenor saxophone, alto flute
Tony Studd — bass trombone (1,2,4)
Jack Jeffers — bass trombone (3,5)
Hubert Laws — flute (1,2,4)
Jerome Richardson — bass clarinet (1,2,4), flute (3,5)
Romeo Penque — bass clarinet (3,5)
Buster Williams — bass
Tootie Heath — drums

***
Review	by Stephen Thomas Erlewine (AMG)

As one of the first albums Herbie Hancock recorded after departing Miles Davis' quintet in 1968, 
as well as his final album for Blue Note, The Prisoner is one of Hancock's most ambitious efforts. 
Assembling a nonet that features Joe Henderson (tenor sax, alto flute), Johnny Coles (flugelhorn), Garnett Brown (trombone), 
Buster Williams (bass), and Albert "Tootie" Heath (drums), he has created his grandest work since My Point of View. 
Unlike that effort, The Prisoner has a specific concept -- it's a tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King, 
evoking his spirit and dreams through spacious, exploratory post-bop. 
Often, the music doesn't follow conventional patterns, but that doesn't mean that it's alienating or inaccessible. 
It is certainly challenging, but Hancock's compositions (and his arrangement of Charles Williams' "Firewater") 
have enough melody and space to allow listeners into the album. 
Throughout the record, Hancock, Coles, and Henderson exchange provocative, unpredictable solos that build upon the stark 
melodies and sober mood of the music. The tone is not of sorrow or celebration, but of reflection and contemplation, 
and on that level, The Prisoner succeeds handsomely, even if the music meanders a little too often to be 
judged a complete success. 

upped by -roei-.

enjoy.
Zgłoś jeśli naruszono regulamin