Herbie Hancock Siblings: All About Jean and Wayman Hancock Jr.

Herbie Hancock PHOTO/Pinterest
Herbie Hancock is one of the most influential and versatile figures in modern music.
Born Herbert Jeffrey Hancock on April 12, 1940, in Chicago, Illinois, he is an acclaimed American jazz pianist, keyboardist, bandleader, and composer whose work has spanned jazz, funk, electronic music, and beyond.
Raised on Chicago’s South Side by parents Winnie Belle Griffin, a secretary, and Wayman Edward Hancock, a government meat inspector, he showed extraordinary musical talent from a young age.
His parents, who had migrated from Georgia, encouraged education and culture in their household, and Hancock began piano lessons at seven.
By age 11, he performed Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 26 with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, marking him as a child prodigy.
He attended Hyde Park High School and later graduated from Grinnell College with degrees in music and electrical engineering, a combination that would later inform his innovative use of electronics in jazz.
Siblings
Herbie’s older brother was Wayman Hancock Jr., with whom he shared a supportive relationship during their childhood on the South Side.
Hancock has recalled how Wayman Jr. included him in activities and helped foster a sense of family unity in their modest two-bedroom home.
His younger sister, Jean Hancock, born in 1943, was a brilliant individual often described by Herbie as a genius.
She excelled academically from an early age, teaching herself advanced math before starting school and later becoming a computer consultant and analyst.
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Jean also had a creative side, teaching herself guitar and writing lyrics that were recorded by her brother as well as artists like Earth, Wind & Fire, Dianne Reeves, and Booker T. and the MGs.
Tragically, Jean died at age 41 in a 1985 plane crash, a loss that deeply affected Hancock and his family.
Career
Hancock’s career is marked by constant innovation and boundary-pushing across decades.
He began professionally in the early 1960s, joining trumpeter Donald Byrd’s group before being recruited into the iconic Miles Davis Quintet in 1963.
There, he contributed to a transformative period in jazz, helping shape the post-bop sound and redefining the role of the rhythm section on landmark albums like Maiden Voyage (1965).
In the 1970s, Hancock explored electric jazz and fusion with albums such as Head Hunters, which blended jazz with funk and became a commercial success.
He achieved mainstream breakthrough in the 1980s with the hit single “Rockit” from the album Future Shock, a pioneering track that incorporated scratching and electronic elements, topped charts, and earned MTV acclaim.
Hancock also composed film scores, including for Blow-Up and the 1986 movie Round Midnight, in which he appeared as an actor.
Throughout his career, he has collaborated widely, released eclectic projects like Gershwin’s World and The Imagine Project, and continued touring and recording while teaching at institutions such as UCLA.
Accolades
Hancock has won 14 Grammy Awards, including the prestigious Album of the Year for his 2007 Joni Mitchell tribute River: The Joni Letters, making him one of the few jazz artists to receive that honor.
In 1987, he earned an Academy Award for Best Original Score for Round Midnight.
Additional honors include the NEA Jazz Masters Award, Kennedy Center Honors, a UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador designation, and the 2025 Polar Music Prize.
He has also received lifetime achievement recognitions from organizations like the Jazz Foundation of America and SFJAZZ, and in 2016, The Recording Academy presented him with a Lifetime Achievement Award.
