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Herbie Hancock Trio: Hurricane!

Herbie Hancock Trio: Hurricane!

List Price: $24.98
Your Price: $24.98
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: a must have
Review: having Herbie,RON&COBHAM on one stage is a must have no matter what the style or arrangements.and this one cooks.i saw it along time ago.now remember Herbie was big on the pop charts with ROCKIT so he was doing what he usually does Music for a whole SPectrum.this is a must.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: a must have
Review: having Herbie,RON&COBHAM on one stage is a must have no matter what the style or arrangements.and this one cooks.i saw it along time ago.now remember Herbie was big on the pop charts with ROCKIT so he was doing what he usually does Music for a whole SPectrum.this is a must.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good ol Herbie
Review: His rhythym section get's plenty of solo time and they ain't too, shabby either! This is a great opportunity to see upclose the remarkable talents of drummer Billy Cobham and the equally magnificent ("THE MAN of the string bass") Ron Carter. It's so good to watch Billy playing straight ahead jazz here with two of the truly greatest exponents of the art. Billy has switched his style to playing the ride cymbal with his left hand and if you think he has any problem swinging, think again!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Rent before you buy.
Review: This title is worth renting. The playing is excellent, and is easily worth 5 stars. However, I've given this DVD less than 5 stars for two reasons.

First, the sound quality is mediocre. It's certainly good enough to enjoy the great playing. But it sounds like a copy of an analog copy of an analog master tape. There's a lot of background hiss, and when herbie plays a note or chord and holds it, the pitch is not perfectly steady - as if the analog tape player's motor is not passing the tape across the head at a perfectly constant rate.

Perhaps more importantly, we've heard a lot of this before. In the 1980s and 1990s, most (perhaps all) of Herbie's straight ahead jazz features selections from the same fairly narrow repetoire, with similar arrangements.

Now, don't get me wrong - the tunes are great, the arrangements are great, the solos are great. I certainly don't mean to offend any Herbie fans (and I'm a huge fan myself). But I have most of Herbie's CDs and DVDs, and I can tell you, the tunes and arrangements on this DVD are taken mostly from the same repetoire that has also yielded most of Herbie's other live straight ahead jazz recordings since the days of VSOP in the 1970s.

So, this title is definitely not "essential", and is probably better rented than purchased.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Rent before you buy.
Review: This title is worth renting. The playing is excellent, and is easily worth 5 stars. However, I've given this DVD less than 5 stars for two reasons.

First, the sound quality is mediocre. It's certainly good enough to enjoy the great playing. But it sounds like a copy of an analog copy of an analog master tape. There's a lot of background hiss, and when herbie plays a note or chord and holds it, the pitch is not perfectly steady - as if the analog tape player's motor is not passing the tape across the head at a perfectly constant rate.

Perhaps more importantly, we've heard a lot of this before. In the 1980s and 1990s, most (perhaps all) of Herbie's straight ahead jazz features selections from the same fairly narrow repetoire, with similar arrangements.

Now, don't get me wrong - the tunes are great, the arrangements are great, the solos are great. I certainly don't mean to offend any Herbie fans (and I'm a huge fan myself). But I have most of Herbie's CDs and DVDs, and I can tell you, the tunes and arrangements on this DVD are taken mostly from the same repetoire that has also yielded most of Herbie's other live straight ahead jazz recordings since the days of VSOP in the 1970s.

So, this title is definitely not "essential", and is probably better rented than purchased.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Classic songs from a Classic Concert!
Review: Three of the best musicians in jazz, pianist Herbie Hancock, bassist Ron Carter and drummer Billy Cobham join forces in this unique Swiss reunion concert, recorded in 1984, that features Hancock's "Dolphin Dance" and "Eye of the Hurricane." JazzTimes described the video as "nothing short of breathtaking... In all, a classic!"

# 1329 (60 min, Hi-Fi Stereo)


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