Saturday, October 25, 2014

Hancock honored at jazz benefit concert at Apollo

Angelique Kidjo, Vernice White, Herbie Hancock, Chaka Khan, and Ray Parker Jr. take a bow at the 13th annual "A Great Night in Harlem" gala concert, presented by The Jazz Foundation of America to benefit The Jazz Musicians Emergency Fund, at The Apollo Theater on Friday,
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS STATEMENT OF NEWS VALUES AND PRINCIPLES By CHARLES J. GANS
Oct. 25, 2014 12:48 PM ET
Photo by Mark Von Holden/Invision/AP)
NEW YORK (AP) — Herbie Hancock enjoyed "A Great Night in Harlem" with a look to the past and the future as the legendary jazz pianist received a lifetime achievement award from the Jazz Foundation of America at a benefit concert at the historic Apollo Theater.
Actor Bruce Willis, introducing Hancock at Friday night's concert, offered a glance at "the future of jazz" as he brought out 11-year-old Indonesian piano prodigy Joey Alexander to play a solo rendition of Thelonious Monk's "'Round Midnight."

"When I was eight years old you heard me playing. You told me that you believed in me and that was the day I decided to dedicate my childhood to jazz," Alexander told Hancock who was standing alongside him.

After Alexander got a standing ovation, Hancock enthused, "Wasn't it amazing. ... He's taken my job away from me." Alexander will be releasing his debut recording for the Harlem-based indie Motema label next year.

The tribute also featured a historic reunion for the first time in decades of Hancock's groundbreaking jazz-fusion Mwandishi band from the early '7Os — with the pianist joining multi-reed player Benny Maupin, trombonist Julian Priester, trumpeter Eddie Henderson, drummer Billy Hart, and bassist Buster Williams to play his composition "Toys."

"This band was so aggressively in pursuit of discovering the unknown and working in territory many were afraid to explore — a really forward-looking, untethered kind of band that depended so much on the empathy between the musicians," Hancock said in a pre-concert interview.


Hancock took the stage earlier to join an all-star combo that paid tribute to 93-year-old trumpeter Clark Terry, with a performance of his tune "Gingerbread Boy."
read more: http://news360.com/digestarticle/lmLw6L5QS0-JNcyf9Eghtg

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