The Headhunters
are an American jazz-funk fusion band, best known for their albums they recorded as a backing band of jazz keyboard player Herbie Hancock during the 1970s. Hancock's debut album with the group, Head Hunters
, is one of the best-selling jazz/fusion records of all time.
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THE HEADHUNTERS TICKETS
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History
Herbie Hancock originally assembled the band for his 1973 album
Head Hunters
. The Headhunters' new lineup and instrumentation, retaining only
wind player
Bennie Maupin from Hancock's previous sextet, reflected his new musical direction.
Bassist Paul Jackson was really the only other member who maintained a continuous presence in the lineup in subsequent recordings and concerts. On the original
Head Hunters
album the other band members were
percussionist Bill Summers and drummer
Harvey Mason. For the next Hancock album featuring Headhunters, 1974's
Thrust
,
Mike Clark took over drumming duties.
Both Mason and Clark contributed drums to the Hancock's 1975's solo album
Man-Child
which featured 18 musicians including
Stevie Wonder and
Wayne Shorter.
1975 also saw Headhunters first album without Hancock,
Survival of the Fittest
, featuring the hit "God Make Me Funky". This song was
sampled by
The Fugees for their track "Ready or Not," and has been covered by
Jamiroquai as a live track. While Hancock's
Man-Child
moved a bit towards more commercial sounds,
Survival of the Fittest
kept Headhunters focused to intense jazz-funk. Vocals were heard on two songs but there was still lots of experimental fusion on the album (the band's music is called "space-funk" on some re-issues of the album).
As the 1970s turned to the 1980s, Herbie Hancock drifted away from the band as he moved into his
electro-oriented phase, and they ceased operation as a visible unit. The band reunited with Hancock for the 1998 album
Return of the Headhunters
.
Clark, Jackson and Summers have since continued recording and performing as The Headhunters, based in
New Orleans, with
Victor Atkins or
Robert Walter filling in for Hancock on keyboards. They released an album,
Evolution Revolution
, for Basin Street Records in 2003, and backed up the saxophonist Rebecca Barry on her 2005 album
Rebecca Barry and the Headhunters
. In 2005 Hancock assembled a new group called Headhunters 2005. The group included guitarists
John Mayer and
Lionel Loueke, bassist
Marcus Miller, drummer
Terri Lyne Carrington, trumpeter
Roy Hargrove and percussionist
Munyungo Jackson. They toured again in 2008, without Hancock but with virtuoso bassist
T.M. Stevens.
Musical style and influences
The Headhunters' music is a complex blend of many styles and genres, including
jazz,
funk,
African and
Afro-Caribbean music. The group is also notable for its pioneering use of
electronic instruments and effects.
In the sleeve notes to
Head Hunters
, Herbie Hancock confirms that track 3, "Sly," is named in tribute to
Sly Stone, leader of
Sly & the Family Stone. This band, along with
James Brown are one of the key influences from funk music. As in funk music, the band often built a groove around a bassline; Paul Jackson's deceptively simple licks are frequently the bedrock of Headhunters material. ("
Chameleon", the famous opening track of
Head Hunters
, provides a fine example of this, although in this case the main bassline is played by Hancock.) Also taken from funk music is the technique of building a complex groove by combining many small but carefully interlocking,
syncopated contributions.
While straightforward funk depends on a snappy, danceable
backbeat from the drummer, the various drummers in the Headhunters tended to use the stability of Paul Jackson's basslines as an anchor, allowing them to play in and around his motif, creating more advanced and complex rhythmic patterns, drawing on the jazz drumming tradition. This is arguably best exemplified by the music on
Thrust
.
Early editions of the Headhunters were notable for the absence of a
guitarist. All guitar-like parts were handled by Herbie Hancock on his first two albums with the group, with one exception: The "rhythm guitar" heard interacting with Hancock's synthesizer bass early in the track
Chameleon
is actually Paul Jackson playing in the upper register of the bass guitar, as pointed out by Steven F. Pond in his book
Head Hunters
(2005).
Electric guitars were first introduced when Dewayne "Blackbyrd" McKnight appeared on
Survival of the Fittest
.
Although the Headhunters' albums were often belittled as "
pop" by purist jazz critics at the time, it is now widely accepted that they were significantly influenced by, and made a significant contribution to, the "serious
jazz" canon. Their music featured extensive
solo and group
improvisation over
chord progressions, just as in the jazz mainstream. Most of the overtly jazz-influenced material comes in the form of solos from Herbie Hancock and Bennie Maupin.
A strong connection to African music is evident, with the role of percussion hugely enhanced compared to mainstream jazz, and more extensive exploration of complex polyrhythms compared to most funk.
The Headhunters are also notable for the unusually wide range of instruments they use. Hancock used a myriad of keyboards, from the staple
Fender Rhodes electric piano to the Hohner
clavinet, as well as being an early adopter of
synthesizers, particularly instruments from
ARP. Maupin used bass, tenor, alto and soprano
saxophones, bass
clarinet and bass
flute, and oddities such as the
Saxello and
Lyricon. Unusual choices like beer bottles and the Voice Bag also featured in their instrumentation.
Members
The following members appeared on multiple Headhunters releases:
- Herbie Hancock: keyboards, electric pianos, clavinet, synthesizers
- Bennie Maupin: saxophones, saxello, clarinets, flutes, lyricon
- Paul Jackson: bass
- Harvey Mason, Mike Clark: drums
- Bill Summers: percussion
- DeWayne "Blackbyrd" McKnight: electric guitar
Discography
- Survival Of The Fittest
(1975, Arista)
- Straight From The Gate
(1977, Arista)
- Return of the Headhunters!
(1998, Verve)
- Evolution Revolution
(2003, Basin Street)
- On Top - Live In Europe
(2008, BHM Productions)
References