© 2024 WGLT
A public service of Illinois State University
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Jazz Heavyweights Herbie Hancock And Kamasi Washington Announce Joint Tour

Kamasi Washington, left, and Herbie Hancock. The jazz luminaries have announced they will be going on tour together this year.
Photo of Kamasi Washington: Getty Images. Photo of Herbie Hancock: courtesy of the artist.
Kamasi Washington, left, and Herbie Hancock. The jazz luminaries have announced they will be going on tour together this year.

Herbie Hancock and Kamasi Washington, two of the biggest names in jazz, will join forces for a North American co-headlining tour this summer.

Their initial slew of dates, starting July 30 in Vienna, Va. and ending Aug. 23 in Berkeley, Calif., should go on sale to the general public this Friday. (Tickets for the pair's first date, in Virginia, are already available.)

Hancock, a 14-time Grammy-winning pianist and NEA Jazz Master, will lead a band similar to the one featured a few years ago in a Jazz Night in America concert film: Lionel Loueke on guitars, Terrace Martin on alto saxophone and synthesizers, James Genus on electric bass, and Vinnie Colaiuta on drums. Their set list will combine Hancock favorites and material from a highly anticipated forthcoming album.

Hancock has long been an exemplar of jazz crossover: he's the rare instrumental virtuoso to credibly break through to a mainstream audience, let alone the pop album chart. He received his first gold record in 1974 with Head Hunters, the self-titled debut by his new jazz-funk band. At the time, the critic Lee Underwood stamped a concert review with a smirk: "Mr. Communicate-With-A-Wider-Audience, Herbie Hancock, opened to a full house recently, again pleasing the funkers while disappointing the more cerebrally oriented connoisseurs."

Washington has earned a similar reputation since the release of his debut triple album, The Epic, in 2015. A tenor saxophonist and bandleader with a talent for the ecstatic, Washington is the key figure in what has lately been touted as a jazz resurgence in popular culture. ("Mr. Communicate-With-A-Wider-Audience" is an epithet he'd probably wear as a badge of honor.)

His follow-up to The Epic, a double album titled Heaven and Earth, received widespread acclaim last year, landing at No. 12 on the NPR Music Jazz Critics Poll. And at the beginning of this year, Washington had a premiere at Sundance: As Told to G/D Thyself, a dreamy, episodic short film, featuring the work of African-American filmmakers like Bradford Young and Jenn Nkiru. (The film has just been made available for streaming on Apple Music.)

Both Hancock and Washington will be busy in the weeks and months leading up to their tour. Hancock, as chairman of the Herbie Hancock Institute of Jazz, is preparing for International Jazz Day festivities in Australia at the end of this month, culminating in a global all-star concert in Melbourne on April 30. Hancock is also scheduled to perform at the Beacon Theater in New York on Aug. 1, and at the Newport Jazz Festival in Rhode Island on Aug. 2 and 3.

Washington is also headlining at Newport, on Aug. 3, but that's far from the only synchronicity he has with his co-headliner. Terrace Martin, a longtime Washington associate, is another one. (It seems likely that Martin will also play with Washington on the tour.) Hancock and Washington also both appeared on You're Dead!, the 2014 album by producer Flying Lotus. And there have been reliable reports that Hancock's next album-in-progress will feature Washington (along with Martin, Flying Lotus and rapper Kendrick Lamar).

Moving out of the realm of the speculative, there's a bit of precedent for this tour. In 2017, Hancock headlined a concert at the Hollywood Bowl, with Washington as the opener. Reviewing that concert for the Los Angeles Times, Chris Barton painted the picture of a hometown victory lap for Washington, and a show of dominion by Hancock.

"The only note missing in Hancock's arsenal was a guest spot from Washington, a seemingly natural choice that could have built a bridge between two generations," Barton wrote. "A missed opportunity for a special moment, maybe — but if you were listening, the bridge was there all along."


Dates

7/30/19 - Vienna, VA, Wolf Trap

8/4/19 - Philadelphia, PA, The Met

8/6/19 - Toronto, ONT, Roy Thompson Hall

8/7/19 - Huber Heights, OH, Rose Music Center at The Heights

8/8/19 - Detroit, MI, Aretha Franklin Amphitheatre

8/9 or 10/19 (TBC) - Chicago, IL, Huntington Bank Pavilion at Northerly Island

8/14/19 - Denver, CO, The Mission Ballroom

8/16/19 - Seattle, WA, Marymoor

8/17/19 - Portland, OR, Oregon Zoo

8/23/19 - Berkeley, CA, The Greek Theatre

Additional performances are expected to be announced shortly.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Tags
[Copyright 2024 WRTI Your Classical and Jazz Source]