|
Hancock says Grammy win is a victory for
jazz
Sue
Zeidler
LOS ANGELES—Herbie Hancock won the coveted album of the year Grammy on
Sunday, becoming the first jazz instrumentalist to win the honour in
more than 40 years and causing Hancock to remark “it’s a new day” at the
Grammys.
Hancock’s “River: The Joni Letters,” an all-star tribute to Canadian
singer/songwriter Joni Mitchell was a surprise victory at the 50th
annual Grammys, beating out other nominees Amy Winehouse’s “Back to
Black,” Kanye West’s “Graduation,” rock band the Foo Fighters’ “Echoes,
Silence, Patience & Grace” and country singer Vince Gill’s “These Days.”
“Joni Mitchell, Joni Mitchell, Joni Mitchell, thank you so much,” said
Hancock, in accepting the trophy. He also thanked the Grammy voters for
“courageously breaking the mold.” “It’s been 43 years since the first
and only time that a jazz artist got an album of the year award,” he
said, referring to 1964’s “Getz/Gilberto,” an album released by the
American saxophonist Stan Getz and Brazilian guitarist Joao Gilberto.
That album, featuring composer and musician Antonio Carlos Jobim, helped
create a bossa nova craze. It not only became one of the best-selling
jazz albums of all times, but it also transformed singer Astrud
Gilberto, who sang on the track of “The Girl from Ipanema” and “Corcovado,”
into an international sensation. “I know in the past, there have been
several jazz musicians who unquestionably deserved to win or be
nominated for album of the year, but that was then and this is now. It’s
a new day,” said Hancock, who also won best contemporary jazz album.
Jazz pianist and composer Hancock, 67, is credited with blending
elements of rock, funk, and soul into jazz.
|