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Herbie Hancock: Thrust

Courtesy Michael Ochs
Fired from the quintet in ‘68, 'for returning late from his honeymoon' (a rather unsympathetic ground for dismissal, although typical of the often icy Davis), Hancock started focusing on his own music, which would increasingly incorporate mainstream elements into his otherwise challenging compositions.

Tony Williams
drums1945 - 1997

John McLaughlin
guitarb.1942

Mahavishnu Orchestra
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1971

Chick Corea
piano1941 - 2021

Return to Forever
band / ensemble / orchestraGolden flights.
By the late Sixties

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940

Ron Carter
bassb.1937
Fired from the quintet in '68, "for returning late from his honeymoon" (a rather unsympathetic ground for dismissal, although typical of the often icy Davis), Hancock started focusing on his own music, which would increasingly incorporate mainstream elements into his otherwise challenging compositions. Following the peak of his experimental thrust, with the three commercially disappointing 'Mwandishi' albums, Hancock decided to ground his then-stratospheric explorations, rooting them in the earthy foundation of Funk. It was a brilliant move.
The result, in 1973, was Headhunters, a hip-swanging, finger-snapping jazz funk outing, which crossed over into the mainstream Billboard charts. This was followed by Thrust, which, across its four monstrously tight yet galaxy-traversing tracks, seemed to perfectly meld the alchemic reaches of Jazz sophistry with the dizzying musks of Funk.
Like Darth Vader.
The best of funk has a lot in common with the best of cheese (well, for those brave of palate; the others can stick to Fourplay and cheddar)they contain layers of intrigue, and something almost a little bit off. It's got Whiff.
If Headhunters was embraced by the hip mainstream for its melodic, even rhythmic accessibility, Thrust ventured deeper into the vines and stars.
In the CD-reissue's liner notes, drummer

Mike Clark
drumsb.1946
The four tracks on Thrust are blistering sonic events. Even the relative ballad, the gorgeous dream "Butterfly," crackles with energy. As beautiful and cool as the melodies weaving from Hancock's hands and flautist

Bennie Maupin
woodwindsb.1940
This article was first published in Muse magazine.
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