About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 64. Chapters: Herbie Hancock, Robert Noyce, Peter Coyote, Raymond A. Hare, Harry Hopkins, John Garang, Clair Cameron Patterson, Tom Cole, Walter Koenig, Kenneth Adelman, Frank W. Cyr, Bruce Nissen, James Wilson, Marshall Poe, Waid Vanderpoel, Charles B. Hoyt, Jesse Macy, Emily Bergl, William A. Noyes, Fred W. Kaltenbach, Leonard Paulu, Thomas Cech, Joseph N. Welch, Theodore E. Burton, Albert Shaw, Benjamin Barber, Bennett Bean, James Norman Hall, Fred Hersch, Erastus Milo Cravath, Sen Katayama, Edward Hirsch, Bruce Friedrich, Otha Wearin, Patricia T. O'Conner, Margaret Hedstrom, Christianne Balk, Hallie Flanagan, Dean F. Martin, Paul McCulley, Mary Sue Coleman, Adrian W. DeWind, Ian Roberts, John Bell Hatcher, Ed Levine, George A. Wilson, Alan Wheat, Martha Cooper, Amy Clampitt, Josh Quittner, Samuel Hoyt Elbert, Christopher Williams, Kevin Cannon, Pat Irwin, Carmen Trotta, Sam Tanenhaus, Clark Dimond, Paul Gardner, Morgan Taylor, R. W. Scott McLeod, Aad J. Vinje, Zander Cannon, Nathaniel Borenstein, Thomas Meglioranza, Donald Hayworth, Thomas Merrill, Carol Myers-Scotton, Wallace Loh, Harry E. Narey, Marilyn J. Monteiro, M. E. H. Lewis, Charles A. Rawson, Bobby Ciraldo, George Moose, Henry Carter Adams, Scott Raecker, James W. Gilchrist, Dana W. Bartlett, Gary Giddins, F. Hudson Miller, John Spencer, Roberta Smith, Harris Coggeshall, David Schreck, Joseph Rosenfield, Paul H. Appleby, Nordahl Brue, E. C. Alft, John Van Liew, Ned Shank, Joshua Eric Dodge, Mary Bucholtz, David Feldman. Excerpt: Herbert Jeffrey "Herbie" Hancock (b. April 12, 1940) is an American pianist, bandleader and composer. As part of Miles Davis's "second great quintet," Hancock helped redefine the role of a jazz rhythm section, and was one of the primary architects of the "post-bop" sound. He was one of the first jazz musicians to embrace synthesizers and fun...