Crossings (Herbie Hancock album) explained

Crossings
Type:studio
Artist:Herbie Hancock
Cover:HerbieHancockCrossings.jpg
Released:May 1972[1]
Recorded:February 15–17, 1972
Genre:Avant-garde jazz, jazz fusion
Length:46:21
Label:Warner Bros.
Producer:David Rubinson
Prev Title:Mwandishi
Prev Year:1971
Next Title:Sextant
Next Year:1973

Crossings is the tenth album by jazz pianist Herbie Hancock, released in 1972.

It is the second album in his Mwandishi period, which saw him experimenting in electronics and funk with a sextet featuring saxophonist Bennie Maupin, trumpeter Eddie Henderson, trombonist Julian Priester, bassist Buster Williams and drummer Billy Hart. The album is the band's first to feature synthesizer player Patrick Gleeson, originally hired as a technician to help set up Hancock's Moog synthesizer; Hancock was so impressed with Gleeson that he "asked Gleeson not only to do the overdubs on the album but join the group."[2]

Crossings, along with Fat Albert Rotunda and Mwandishi, was reissued in one set as Mwandishi: The Complete Warner Bros. Recordings in 1994 and as The Warner Bros. Years (1969-1972) in 2014.

Personnel

With:

Notes and References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=-ycEAAAAMBAJ&dq=hancock+Crossings&pg=PA15 Billboard May 27, 1972
  2. [Stuart Nicholson (jazz historian)|Stuart Nicholson]
  3. Web site: Opperman . Derek . Wearing A Really Different Fur: How Patrick Gleeson introduced the synthesizer to Herbie Hancock and changed jazz in the process . May 27, 2015 . May 8, 2023 . Red Bull Music Academy.