Herbie Hancock - The Imagine Project (2010) {Sony Music}
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© 2010 Hancock Records / Sony Music | 88697718992
Jazz / Contemporary Jazz / Soul / Alternative / Folk / Fusion
Herbie
Hancock's star-studded The Imagine Project was several years in the
making, recorded in seven countries with musicians from all over the
globe. Hancock's band with producer/bassist Larry Klein, drummer Vinnie
Colaiuta, percussionist Alex Acuña, and guitarist Lionel Loueke is a
common denominator. Much of what's here is interpretations of well-known
pop, folk, and soul songs. That said, The Imagine Project (named for
the John Lennon song) feels more like an overreach than a seamless or
successful series of collaborations.
The best things are indeed fine. There's a gorgeous reading of Baden
Powell's “Tempo de Amore,” thanks to Lucas Martins’ bassline and CéU's
singing. “Space Captain” by the Derek Trucks-Susan Tedeschi Band -- with
Hancock and Colaiuta -- brings out a much-needed soulful grit to
Tedeschi’s vocals, gospelized four-party harmony, and Trucks' tough
slide playing. Bob Dylan's “The Times They Are a Changin'," with Lisa
Hannigan's raw, emotive vocals, is underscored by interplay between the
Chieftains, Toumani Diabaté's kora, and Hancock's piano. The tune moves
past its American folk revival beginnings to reflect a global sentiment.
“Tamatant Tilay”/”Exodus” pairs the nomad Malian guitar band
Tinariwen’s song with Bob Marley's classic. K’NAAN, Tinariwen, and three
members of Los Lobos are all featured on vocals. Tinariwen dominates
with Hancock’s funky clavinet pushing against their snaky wall of
guitars and ululating singing; it's the hippest track here. Klein’s “The
Song Goes On,” features Anoushka Shankar, Wayne Shorter, Chaka Khan,
and K.S. Chithra with some lyrics translated into Hindi.
A full-on Indian session band interacts with Shorter’s knotty soprano
sax, and the only truly engaged Hancock piano playing on the set is
here. Then there's the rest: “Imagine"'s intro features overwrought
singing by Pink and Seal, but turns itself into a Caribbean-flavored
tune with India.Arie and her tasteful understatement. Konono No. 1's
driving likembe break has Oumou Sangare's vocal accompaniment adding
depth to save it. Peter Gabriel's “Don’t Give Up,” a duet between Pink
and John Legend, reeks of overproduction; Legend's singing mimics
Gabriel’s; Pink's dry acrobatics are hollow. Dave Matthews is a poor
choice as a lead vocalist on the Beatles' “Tomorrow Never Knows.” His
voice is unexpressive and doesn’t match the musical drama created by
drummer Matt Chamberlain, and Danny Barnes and Michael Claves on
psychedelicized banjos and guitars. This mixed bag of a record feels
like a deliberate grab at Record of the Year Grammy, but it's too
uneven. Hancock has taken many risks in his career, but this doesn’t
feel like one of them.
tracklist:
01 - Imagine
02 - Don't Give Up
03 - Tempo De Amor
04 - Space Captain
05 - The Times, They Are A' Changin'
06 - La Tierra
07 - Tamantant Tilay - Exodus
08 - Tomorrow Never Knows
09 - A Change Is Gonna Come
10 - The Song Goes On
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