Description
Remastered and Reissued As Part of the Blue Note 75th Anniversary Vinyl Reissue Campaign.
Throughout his brilliant career, Herbie Hancock has always pushed musical boundaries, exploring a wide variety of jazz idioms while bringing his flair and innovation to every single setting. His Blue Note albums of the 1960s ranged all the way from post bop to Latin jazz, to straight ahead and free form.
1969s The Prisoner served as his final recording for the label and one of his first after exiting Miles Davis quintet. The ambitious post-bop date finds the music legend in a nonet with the likes of Joe Henderson (tenor sax, alto flute), Johnny Coles (flugelhorn), Garnett Brown (trombone), Buster Williams (bass) and Albert Tootie Heath (drums). A tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King and the oppression of his fellow African Americans, Hancock explained that he was, able to get closer to the real me on this album than on any other previous one.
The real Herbie Hancock is neither a pipedream nor a prisoner. He is here for you to listen, to dig. And youll be hearing from him many times on a motion picture score, a TV theme, or another recording in the future as Hancock fills in more pieces to the Hancock mosaic. original liner notes, Herb Wong
Musicians:
Herbie Hancock (piano, electric piano)
Johnny Coles (fluegelhorn)
Joe Henderson (tenor saxophone, alto flute)
Garnett Brown (trombone)
Buster Williams (bass)
Albert Tootie Heath (drums)
Hubert Laws (flute)
Jerome Richardson (bass clarinet, flute)
Romeo Penque (bass clarinet)
Tony Studd / Jack Jeffers (bass trombone)






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