Herbie Hancock: Possibilities revie
Herbie Hancock: Possibilities
By Oggy Bleacher
Whether it involves blue notes or first inversion chords or atomic war, limitation is our only enemy. So sayeth the sage of synthesizers, the father of funk-fusion, the musical monk Herbie Hancock in his ’05 peace tour of
Doug Biro and Jon Fine direct this musical exploration with an accommodating and comfortable touch on the camera. The slow pans and extreme close ups are a nice change from the head and shoulder interviews often found in documentaries. The sessions unfold naturally. The subjects offer honest reflections rather than clipped answers to ignorant questions. Biro and Fine justly treat the music as the master. This is Herbie Hancock walking a creative path that is Zen-like in its approach to the MOMENT. Practiced music, according to Hancock, is like stale bread. You can eat it, but you know it isn’t fresh. Credit famed trumpeter Miles Davis for imparting that philosophy to Hancock during the five years they worked together in the mid-Sixties. In today’s American Idol climate where an Idol will sing an over-rehearsed cover rendition of an over-produced cover version of an original song, it is hard to trust anything that isn’t pre-packaged and pre-judged by some arrogant panel of celebrities. Fuck that weak jive, implies Hancock. Give me blood on the piano keys before you give me recycled muzak. There are a million inspired moments here.
Some collaborations produce better results than others, but the focus here isn’t the end product - you can buy the CD to get that – this is an investigation into the roots of improvisation. Musicians like Paul Simon, Trey Anastasio, John Mayer, Angelique Kidjo and Carlos Santa have one thing in common: they prepare themselves for success. It isn’t like Brian Eno shows up in the studio one day with Herbie and they hit “Record.” No, the first step these musicians take is to put limits on the unlimited possibilities. Paul Simon arranges his song “I Do It For Your Love” with only one chord: A minor. Johnny Lang has base drum requests for his traditional take on “When Love Comes To Town.” “Stitched Up” is the only song that didn’t exist before the sessions. John Mayer and Hancock co-write the majority of it in front of the microphone. Still, some sessions, like Raul Midon’s haunting rendition of Stevie Wonder’s “I Just Called To Say I Love You,” rise about the others. The sight-challenged Midon makes trumpet sounds with just his lips, plays his guitar like a percussion instrument and sings like a funky Judy Garland.
“Herbie Hancock: Possibilities” is about a group of musicians who have learned how to limit themselves to one approach: The right one. Fans of all types of music are in for a treat.
Grade A
Herbie Hancock: Possibilities
Directed by: Doug Biro and Jon Fine
Herbie Hancock, Annie Lenox, Carlos Santana, Paul Simon
MPAA Rating: PG
Runtime: 90 Minutes
Release Company: Magnolia Pictures
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