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Maiden Voyage | 
| Artist: Herbie Hancock Label: Blue Note Records Category: Music
List Price: $11.98 Buy Used: $5.43 You Save: $6.55 (55%)
New (45) Used (22) from $5.43
Rating: 35 reviews Sales Rank: 2299
Format: Original Recording Reissued, Original Recording Remastered Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 95331 UPC: 724349533127 EAN: 0724349533127 ASIN: B00000IL29
Release Date: April 20, 1999 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| ⋅ | Maiden Voyage | | ⋅ | The Eye of the Hurricane | | ⋅ | Little One | | ⋅ | Survival of the Fittest | | ⋅ | Dolphin Dance |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com essential recording In the mid-'60s, a distinctive postbop style evolved among the younger musicians associated with Blue Note, a new synthesis that managed to blend the cool spaciousness of Miles Davis's modal period, some of the fire of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers, and touches of the avant-garde's group interaction. Maiden Voyage is a masterpiece of the school, with Hancock's enduring compositions like "Maiden Voyage" and "Dolphin Dance" mingling creative tension and calm repose with strong melodies and airy, suspended harmonies that give form to his evocative sea imagery. Trumpeter Freddie Hubbard was at a creative peak, stretching his extraordinary technique to the limits in search of a Coltrane-like fluency on the heated "Eye of the Storm," while the underrated tenor saxophonist George Coleman adds a developed lyricism to the session. --Stuart Broomer
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| Customer Reviews: Read 30 more reviews...
This made me a jazz fan... January 8, 2009 David McLane (Washington, DC USA) A little place called Twins Lounge where I got to hang out with some of the better jazz musicians in and out of the main concourses of DC and elsewhere; I used to torture the players to play the only jazz song I really enjoyed and felt confortable with: "Maiden Voyage". I knew that piece was the entrainment in my brain to know something of what jazz was. The musicians got to know I would ask them to play this song and patiently gave me my reward. The thing still blesses me with good feeling.
A time-tested masterpiece October 6, 2008 Eric C. Sedensky (Madison, AL, US) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This was the first Herbie Hancock recording I purchased after The Essential Herbie Hancock. I love everything Blue Note and Rudy Van Gelder, and since I was working on learning the title track, I decided to see what other sorts of tunes Herbie was composing at the time. I think this is probably one of Hancock's most approachable recordings, and while not all five tracks are sparkling lyrical wonders, there's nothing here that might be considered a "throw away track". The title track and Dolphin Dance will stay with you all day after just one listening. This is classic jazz and a great starting point for jazz and Hancock fans.
Great jazz album July 11, 2007 Cameron (Brisbane AUSTRALIA) Great jazz album from the '60s. This one belongs high up in the pantheon of jazz albums that include Miles Davis's Kind of Blue, John Coltrane's Blue Train, and Speak No Evil by Wayne Shorter. If you feel that these other albums are essiential jazz listening, then you will certainly enjoy 'Maiden Voyage' by Herbie Hancock, and you will see why people still rave about this album today. If you are an experienced jazz fan then you will most definately already have an opinion on this album, but if you are just getting into jazz then this album should certainly be on your 'to buy' list. Firm five stars from me!
Good, but Empyrean Isles is so much better... May 26, 2007 finulanu (Here, there, and everywhere) 1 out of 6 found this review helpful
What we have here is an album that fails to live up to the standards that the first two and last tracks set. I'd rather hear Miles Davis' version of Little One found on E.S.P. - this one just plods along for a seeming eternity. So does Survival of the Fittest. Both okay songs - neither of them are bad, that's for sure - but they could've seen to be shorter. That's why I don't see Maiden Voyage as being on the same level of Empyrean Isles. It's just not. Now for the good news. The three well-known pieces on this album make it worth the buy. The title track is the token easygoing blues groover (i.e. Watermelon Man and Canteloupe Island) with a simple theme that's hard to get out of your head nonetheless. Next up is the frenetic Eye of the Hurricane, which provides a perfect contrast. Third and final is the quiet ballad Dolphin Dance, a gorgeous thing that rules as much as the other two I mentioned. And that Hancock covers such a wide range of emotions on this record is another point towards it. So I like this album, and like many others this was my first exposure to Herbie Hancock. But he's put out at least one better record, arguably two (Headhunters also makes the list).
Fantastic Voyage would be closer to the truth.. November 6, 2006 Cris V (Sunnyvale, CA USA) 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
I feel the salty smell of the sea when I listen to this album. My family and myself heard an interpretation of the title track in a cafe, in a small town on the "Pacific Coast Frontier". The wave of the melody swept over me like the evening fog. Absolutely amazing..
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