Herbie Hancock – Sunlight (1978/2013)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 39:31 minutes | 818 MB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Columbia
Sunlight originated as a UK import album in 1978. The album is viewed as more funk than jazz and encounters the beginnings of Herbie’s electro-funk stage heard in some of his later albums. Sunlight features the UK single “I Thought It Was You.”
After Man-Child, alas, Herbie Hancock’s American jazz-funk records in the 1970s grew gradually more commercial, less stimulating, and crucially, less truly funky with each release, even as his equipment rack grew larger. Just take a look at the staggering collection of keyboards on the back cover of the Sunlight LP — all sought-after collectors’ items now — yet Hancock makes so little use of their possibilities here. For much of the album, he seems most interested in establishing a new career as an electronic vocalist. “I Thought It Was You,” “Come Running to Me,” and the title track introduce the ghostly, gauzy sound of Herbie’s singing voice as heard through a vocoder; there’s even an electronic Herbie scat choir. Stevie Wonder, he’s not. There are still occasional splashes of Hancock harmonic color on the keyboards, but he also relies upon superfluous, self-arranged brass riffs and string backgrounds. The backup bands shift from track to track, from combinations of Headhunters alumni that offer soft-focused facsimiles of the old funk drive to a surprisingly strait-jacketed pairing of Tony Williams and Jaco Pastorius on the eccentric “Good Question.” –Richard S. Ginell
Tracklist:
01. Herbie Hancock – I Thought It Was You (08:58)
02. Herbie Hancock – Come Running to Me (08:27)
03. Herbie Hancock – Sunlight (07:12)
04. Herbie Hancock – No Means Yes (06:20)
05. Herbie Hancock – Good Question (08:32)