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  1. Future Shock is the twenty-ninth album by American jazz pianist Herbie Hancock, released in August 1983 by Columbia Records. It was his first release from his electro-funk era and an early example of instrumental hip hop. Participating musicians include bass guitarist Bill Laswell (who co-produced), guitarist Pete Cosey and drummer ...

  2. Hancock approved, and after hearing scratching for the first time on Malcolm McLaren’s track, “Buffalo Gals,” he found his curiosity about this radical innovation mirrored in the demo tapes that Material’s prime members, Bill Laswell and Michael Beinhorn, played for Hancock.

  3. Future Shock es un álbum de estudio del tecladista y compositor norteamericano Herbie Hancock. Productor. Fue producido por "Material" y Hancock y publicado por Columbia en 1983. Dicho álbum es notable por su fusión de Funk, Hip Hop, Pop, Fusión y Techno.

  4. 1 de sept. de 2023 · Four decades ago, Herbie Hancock’s ‘Future Shock’ found bewildering commercial success with the cutting-edge grooves of the NYC underground. Two architects of this early hip-hop classic, producer and bassist Bill Laswell and pioneering turntablist GrandMixer DXT, remember how it all happened.

  5. 18 de ene. de 2016 · True to its name, Future Shoc k felt like something from the distant future: sounds and styles collided, scratching turntables gave way to fluid jazz passages, computers shared space with sacred drums, and underneath it all was Laswell’s bass, grooving to its own inner drummer.

  6. Even though it’s released under Hancock’s name only, all songs except “Future Shock” were written collaboratively by Michael Beinhorn, Herbie Hancock and Bill Laswell

  7. Future Shock, co-produced with Bill Laswell and his Material partner Michael Beinhorn, represented just one facet of Hancock’s artistry, but the hit single and video “Rockit”—and the resulting Grammy and MTV attention both earned—helped make him a household name.