
Note: the CD I listened to was the 2007 Rudy Van Gelder Edition with 3 bonus tracks.
Hancock's debut as a leader at the age of 22. The album wasn't always well-received at the time by the critics (see below), but is now considered with more respect and appreciation. In my book, it's a fantastic, swinging hard bop album that features some legends in the group playing some outstanding compositions. Plus it's freakin' Herbie Hancock, Jazzer Laureate of the United States. (I just made up that title, but it should actually exist and Hancock should be so named.) He's still touring at age 86!
Hancock - piano
Freddie Hubbard - trumpet
Dexter Gordon - tenor saxophone
Butch Warren - bass
Billy Higgins - drums
Original liner notes by Leonard Feather.
Reviews/ratings:
- Billboard: "[Hancock's] work at the keyboard is impressive as are his talents as a writer."
- Stereo Review: "He is a forceful, well-organized pianist, but here he shows little stylistic originality."
- CashBox: "A nice showing."
- Downbeat (★★★½): "slightly disappointing...Still, there is much to recommend in this release."
- The Penguin Guide to Jazz (5th ed., 2000): ★★★½
- The Rolling Stone Jazz & Blues Album Guide (1999): ★★★★½
- The Virgin Encyclopedia of Jazz (1999): ★★★★
Peak on the US Billboard Top 200 chart: Did not chart
Tracks: It's a brave move to include all original compositions on a debut album; I'd have guessed the label might have insisted on a couple of standards. But if you can write stuff like Watermelon Man and Driftin' plus the beautiful ballad Alone And I, why would you need anything else?
Bonus tracks: Alternate takes of Watermelon Man, Three Bags Full, and Empty Pockets.
Personal Memory Associated with this CD: None
Previously revisited for the blog:

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