My Point of View | ||||
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Studio album by Herbie Hancock | ||||
Released | Early September 1963 | |||
Recorded | March 19, 1963 Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs |
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Genre | Jazz | |||
Length | 42:59 | |||
Label |
Blue Note Records BST 84126 |
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Producer | Alfred Lion | |||
Herbie Hancock chronology | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Down Beat | |
Allmusic | |
The Rolling Stone Jazz Record Guide |
My Point of View is the second album by pianist Herbie Hancock. It was released in 1963 on Blue Note Records as BLP 4126 and BST 84126.
Hancock has changed personnel for this album and expanded beyond Hard Bop's traditional quintet. Notably, the album is one of the first released to feature drummer Tony Williams who replaces Billy Higgins. Tony Williams, only 17 at the time, would join Hancock just a couple of months later in Miles Davis's second great Quintet on two of the tunes from Seven Steps to Heaven. Dexter Gordon has been replaced by Hank Mobley and Hancock utilizes Grant Green on guitar on the songs "Blind Man Blind Man" and "And What If I Don't". Donald Byrd—Hancock's mentor, whose 1961 album Royal Flush was Hancock's Blue Note debut—is also in the line-up.
All compositions by Herbie Hancock.
"Blind Man, Blind Man" was written by Hancock trying to evoke "something that reflected my Negro background". The blind man standing in the corner playing his guitar was in fact one of the things Hancock experienced in his neighbourhood in Chicago. The piece is reminiscent of "Watermelon Man", one of his greatest hits. According to Hancock, "King Cobra" was an attempt to "expand the flow [of jazz tunes and chords] so that it would go in directions beyond the usual".