Back to the Basics: VSOP and the Future Shock
During late 1970s and early 1980s, Hancock toured with his "V.S.O.P." quintet, which featured all the members of the 1960s Miles Davis quintet except Davis, who was replaced by trumpet giant
Freddie Hubbard. There was constant speculation that one day Davis would reunite with his classic band, but never did. VSOP recorded several live albums in the late 1970s, including
VSOP (1976), and
VSOP: The Quintet (1977).
In
1978, Hancock recorded a duet with
Chick Corea, who had replaced him in the Miles Davis band a decade earlier. He also released a solo acoustic piano album titled
The Piano (
1978), which, like so many Hancock albums at the time, was initially released only in
Japan. (It was finally released in the US in
2004.) Several other Japan-only releases have yet to surface in the US, such as
Dedication (1974),
VSOP: Tempest at the Colosseum (1977), and
Direct Step (1978).
Live Under the Sky was a VSOP album remastered for the US in 2004, and included an entire second concert from the July 1979 tour.
From 1978-1982, Hancock recorded many albums consisting of jazz-inflected
disco and
pop music, beginning with
Sunlight (featuring guest musicians like
Tony Williams and
Jaco Pastorius on the last track) (1978). Singing through a
vocoder, he earned a
British hit, "I Thought It Was You", although critics were unimpressed.
http://www.warr.org/hancock.html. This led to more vocoder on the 1979 follow-up,
Feets, Don't Fail Me Now, which gave him another UK hit in "You Bet Your Love." Albums such as
Monster (1980),
Magic Windows (1981), and
Lite Me Up (1982) were some of Hancock's most criticized and unwelcomed albums, the market at the time being somewhat saturated with similar pop-jazz hybrids from the likes of former bandmate Freddie Hubbard. Hancock himself had quite a limited role in some of those albums, leaving singing, composing and even producing to others.
Mr. Hands (1980) is perhaps the one album during this period that was critically acclaimed. To the delight of many fans, there were no vocals on the album, and one track featured
Jaco Pastorius on bass. The album contains a wide variety of different styles, including a disco instrumental song, a Latin-jazz number and an electronic piece in which Hancock plays alone with the help of computers.
Hancock also found time to record more traditional jazz whilst creating more commercially-oriented music. He toured with
Tony Williams and
Ron Carter in 1981, recording
Herbie Hancock Trio, a five-track live album released only in Japan. A month later, he recorded
Quartet with
Wynton Marsalis, released in the US the following year.
In
1983, Hancock had a
mainstream hit with the
Grammy-award winning instrumental single "
Rockit" from the album
Future Shock. It was perhaps the first mainstream single to feature
scratching, and also featured an innovative animated
music video which was directed by
Godley and Creme and showed several robot-like artworks by
Jim Whiting. The video was a hit on
MTV. Regardless of any controversy, the video won 5 different categories at the inaugural
MTV Video Music Awards, including the category for
Video Of The Year. This single ushered in a collaboration with noted bassist and producer
Bill Laswell. Hancock experimented with electronic music on a string of three LPs produced by Laswell:
Future Shock (1983),
Sound-System (1984) and
Perfect Machine (1988). Despite the success of "Rockit," Hancock's trio of Laswell-produced albums (particularly the latter two) are among the most critically derided of his entire career, perhaps even more so than his erstwhile pop-jazz experiments. Hancock's level of actual contribution to these albums was also questioned, with some critics contending that the Laswell albums should have been labelled "Bill Laswell featuring Herbie Hancock."
During this period, he appeared onstage at the
Grammy awards with
Stevie Wonder,
Howard Jones, and
Thomas Dolby, in a famous synthesizer
jam. Lesser known works from the 80s are the live album
Jazz Africa and the studio album
Village Life (1984) which were recorded with
Gambian
kora player
Foday Musa Suso.
http://www.pandora.com/music/artist/3feb50074a703d1a Also, in 1985 he performed as a guest on the album
So Red The Rose by the
Duran Duran shoot off group
Arcadia. He also provided introductory and closing comments for the
PBS rebroadcast in the
United States of the
BBC educational series from the mid-
1980s,
Rock School (not to be confused with the most recent
Gene Simmons' Rock School series).
In
1986, Hancock performed and acted in the film
'Round Midnight. He also wrote the score/soundtrack, for which he won an
Academy Award for Original Music Score. Often he would write music for TV commercials. "Maiden Voyage", in fact, started out as a cologne advertisement. At the end of the
Perfect Machine tour, Hancock decided to leave Columbia Records after a 15-plus-year relationship.
As of June
2005, almost half of his Columbia recordings have been remastered. The first three US releases,
Sextant,
Head Hunters and
Thrust as well as the last four releases
Future Shock,
Sound-System, the soundtrack to
Round Midnight and
Perfect Machine. Everything released in America from
Man-Child to
Quartet has yet to be remastered. Some albums, made and initially released in the US, were remastered between
1999 and
2001 in other countries such as
Magic Windows and
Monster. Hancock also re-released some of his
Japan-only releases in the West, such as
The Piano.