Secrets is a 1976
jazz-
funk fusion album by keyboard player
Herbie Hancock.
The album clearly followed from its predecessor
Man-Child. As ever, Paul Jackson's basslines were critical, and the other regular member
Bennie Maupin continued to provide most of the solos alongside Hancock.
Man-Child had seen the addition of electric guitar to Hancock's sound, and
Secrets saw the guitar's place in the arrangements rise to crucial importance throughout. The flamboyant rhythm guitar contributions of top
Motown session musician
Wah Wah Watson are a particularly notable feature of the album.
Where
Man-Child was evenly divided between up-tempo and laid-back tracks,
Secrets emphasised the more mellow, softly rounded mood. Even the more up-tempo tracks, "Doin' It" and "Cantelope Island", are suffused with a relaxed
Caribbean influence, and overall the album tends towards restrained, rolling grooves rather than overtly high-energy
funk. Appropriately, Hancock spent much of his time using the mellow tones of the
Rhodes piano, and took advantage of the new polyphonic
synthesizers to contribute thick
pad, foreshadowing
ambient music.
Although summery and mellow, the album was far from
lounge music, with some extremely abstract and intense sections, particular in the latter half; it is also entirely instrumental beside the "Jus' keep on doin' it" chants of the opening track. Subsequent Hancock albums saw the addition of more
vocoded lead vocals and disco...
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