Bennie Maupin is best-known for his association with
Herbie Hancock and his atmospheric bass clarinet playing on
Miles Davis' classic
Bitches Brew album.
Maupin started playing tenor in high school and attended the Detroit Institute for Musical Arts, playing locally in Detroit. He moved to New York in 1963, freelancing with many groups, including ones led by
Marion Brown and
Pharoah Sanders.
Maupin played regularly with
Roy Haynes (1966-1968) and
Horace Silver (1968-1969), recording with
McCoy Tyner (1968),
Lee Morgan (1970), and
Woody Shaw. After recording with
Miles, he joined
the Herbie Hancock Sextet. When
Hancock broke up his group to form the more commercial
Headhunters in 1973,
Maupin was the only holdover. He led dates for ECM (1974) and a commercial one for Mercury (1976-1977), but failed to catch on as a bandleader and has maintained a low profile during the past 15 years, emerging in 2006 with the critically acclaimed
Penumbra on the Cryptogramophone label.
Early Reflections followed two years later.
–
Scott Yanow, Rovi