Magic Windows
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5 new or used available from $39.99
Average customer review:Track Listing
- Magic Number
- Tonight's the Night
- Everybody's Broke
- Help Yourself
- Satisfied With Love
- Twilight Clone
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #327733 in Music
- Released on: 1997-10-20
- Number of discs: 1
- Formats: Import, Original recording remastered
Editorial Reviews
Album Details
Recorded In 1981 and featuring the following sidemen: Ray Parker Jr. (guitar), Sheila E (percussion), Sylvester (vocals), Michael Brecker (tenor sax), Alphonse Mouzon (drums) and Adrian Belew (guitar). This is a very nice, light funk/fusion date recorded just before he went on a more gritty path with 'Future Shock', which featured the mega-hit 'Rockit'.
Customer Reviews
Funkafied!
On "Magic Number","Everybody's Broke" and "Help Yourself"
Herbie delivers rhythm guitar-heavy synth-funk at it's finest
and on the brilliant "Twilight Clone"-a totally unique brand
of synthesized,funk electronica dance music comes to the fore.
"Tonights The Night" and "Satisfied With Love" are the same exact
song with a different melody and singer,but it's still geepy R&B
balladeering to me.But up the tempo and the album COOKS!!!
The best of a bad 1977-82 crop...
Yet another in a series of albums issued under Hancock's name that offers little evidence of his keyboard talents. Allowing for that annoyance, WINDOWS is the best pop-oriented HH album of this period. At least some real singers are brought in to replace Hancock's vocoder. The material is mostly off the production line, with a moderate level of inspiration at times (plus sign: the grooves are more funk, less disco). EVERYBODY'S BROKE tosses a relevant message into the derivative party atmosphere. THE TWILIGHT CLONE ends the album on a progressive note with a Talking Heads-like polyrhythmic layer of rhythm that anticipates the upcoming projects with Bill Laswell (ROCKIT, et al.). If only this album started there and proceeded accordingly. Still, if you have to have one CD in your collection covering HH's disco/funk/r&b era, I'd go for this one. Yet, if you can resist the temptation, pass on all of them and focus on Herbie's earlier and more recent efforts, where the talent and ambition that we love Herbie for are not misplaced and miscast.
Herbie Hancock - Magic Windows
The disk was in perfect condition. The sound was clear and solid. Very, very good.




