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jon ancker
Приєднався 24 чер 2009
Відео
TUBA SKINNY,,,, Lake St George Brewery, Liberty, Maine,,,, 24/08/2019,,, " I'm Going Back Home ",,
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TUBA SKINNY,,,, Lake St George Brewery, Liberty, Maine,,,, 24/08/2019,,, " I'm Going Back Home ",,
BILL EVANS Trio,,,, SPRING IS HERE,,,,1960
Переглядів 3586 років тому
Bill Evans, Piano..Scot LaFaro, Bass.. Paul Motian, Drums
WARNE MARSH,,, " Sweet Georgia Brown "
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From the Album "Release Record- Send Tape " ,,, Late 1950's,,, Personnel listed in opening image....
SQUIRREL FOREPLAY
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A Nature Film.... Thanks to Boots Randolf for the Musical Background....
Joel Selwood..... Picking Himself UP ( Nat "King" Cole... Music )
Переглядів 3477 років тому
Joel Selwood..... Picking Himself UP ( Nat "King" Cole... Music )
BRAZILIAN SERENDADE,,,, Lee Konitz and the Brazilian Band,,1996
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BRAZILIAN SERENDADE,,,, Lee Konitz and the Brazilian Band,,1996
Lars Gullin,,,, DANNY'S DREAM,,,1954
Переглядів 52 тис.8 років тому
Lars Gullin,,,, DANNY'S DREAM,,,1954
LEE KONITZ,, BOP GOES THE LEESUL
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LEE.... Having a little Fun.... 1954.... LIVE in Boston.....
Errol Garner,, PLAY Piano PLAY,,1947
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Errol Garner,, PLAY Piano PLAY,,1947
Slam Stewart and Erroll Garner,, PLAY FIDDLE PLAY,,1945
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Slam Stewart and Erroll Garner,, PLAY FIDDLE PLAY,,1945
Lee Konitz AND Stan Kenton,,,OF ALL THINGS
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Lee Konitz AND Stan Kenton,,,OF ALL THINGS
HAPPY AGAIN,,,, Lars Gullin Quartet......1957
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HAPPY AGAIN,,,, Lars Gullin Quartet......1957
PHIL WOODS,,, From the album " Rights of Swing",,, Part IV ,,SCHERZO
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PHIL WOODS,,, From the album " Rights of Swing",,, Part IV ,,SCHERZO
Lars Gullin,,, I FALL IN LOVE TOO EASILY
Переглядів 1,1 тис.10 років тому
Lars Gullin,,, I FALL IN LOVE TOO EASILY
Lee Konitz AND Sal Mosca,,, BACKGROUND MUSIC
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Lee Konitz AND Sal Mosca,,, BACKGROUND MUSIC
Konitz Meets Giuffre,,, DARN THAT DREAM,,,1959...Saxophone Quintet
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Konitz Meets Giuffre,,, DARN THAT DREAM,,,1959...Saxophone Quintet
Warne Marsh and Ted Brown,,, DIXIE'S DILEMMA,,,1956
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Warne Marsh and Ted Brown,,, DIXIE'S DILEMMA,,,1956
Ted Brown and Warne Marsh,,, JAZZ OF TWO CITIES,,,1956
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Ted Brown and Warne Marsh,,, JAZZ OF TWO CITIES,,,1956
WARNE MARSH,,, You Are TOO Beautiful ,,, 1957
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WARNE MARSH,,, You Are TOO Beautiful ,,, 1957
Warne Marsh with Lee Konitz,,,MARSHMALLOW,,,1949
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Warne Marsh with Lee Konitz,,,MARSHMALLOW,,,1949
LEE KONITZ,,, WHEN YOU'RE SMILING,,,October 1957
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LEE KONITZ,,, WHEN YOU'RE SMILING,,,October 1957
Outrageous melody- especially the bridge.
nice tribute ! ! ! thx so much....where did you find the you and me original score?
The Al Cohn Memorial Jazz Collection t East Stroudsburg University
This threw me back and I appreciate it sooooooo much
awesome
What a guy
You said it!
Yessss
Absolut famousd...
What a smooth, smooth guy Mose was.
Casey means "Watchful" . Some people wear Gems on thier foreheads to represent the third eye(watchful) as well as marriage! Gemma, what a beautiful name! - Mark S 😉
Well, From Severance of course! 😅
THIS recording was WAY Before Severance
***** simply brilliant
The very definition of hat.
Uh I meant hot.
Why is the pitch of this recording so “low” (flat) ? It seems like the band is playing in Bb but the actual sound is almost a (sharp) A. Any thoughts ?
Why is the pitch of this recording so “low” (flat) ? It seems like the band is playing in Bb but the actual sound is almost a (sharp) A. Any thoughts ?
The Official trump Theme Song.
Wonderful Lester Young !
I was fortunate to see him in person in 1984 at the Mt. Hood Festival of Jazz near Portland, Oregon. (I also go to see Dave Brubeck, Herbie Mann, Lionel Hampton(?), and others...)
Thank You!
❤❤❤❤
Last episode ending scenes always have good songs at the end and so did severance
My favorite two musicians in one spot. Died and gone to heaven. And there’s Slim too. Hallelujah!
Does this particular version appear on a album?
1:06
1:24
0:31
0:35
0:35 0:38 0:42 0:48 0:50 0:57 1:06 1:10 1:14 1:16 1:21 1:25 1:34
Song for Drumpf. 😁
LESTER YOUNG! Wow. What a sound all around. And I notice his tenor solo has the same 'authority' as charlie parker. Some guys when they start their solo, it's like the world stops.
Ah, so inspiring and joyful!
0:50 0:57 1:01
People use the term "ahead of their time" too often, but holy shit...this was like out a a time machine, nothing was even CLOSE to this in 1949! Also -- is this song a counterfactual of Cherokee? The changes sound so similar!
Damn!
Love Art, Carl , he moves it.
Great lyrics!!!
Performance sur cette grille que nous aimons tellement Superb
Love his Music.
My grandfather was born on a cotton plantation in rural Mississippi, and later worked at a cotton gin. In 1936, at the age of 25, he heard Lester Young in the Count Basie Orchestra and immediately fell in love with Prez’s playing. Shortly after hearing Prez, he bought himself a used tenor saxophone, which he taught himself to play. He was so good that he would gig all over the country and made a good living as a jazz musician. After retiring, he taught my father how to play and he would teach me before passing away at the age of 89. My grandfather hero-worshipped Lester Young, and it was because of Prez that he got out of rural Mississippi and made something of himself. Thank you Prez 🙏🏾🎷
Liberating Lester!
My grandfather was born on a cotton plantation in rural Mississippi, and later worked at a cotton gin. In 1936, at the age of 25, he heard Lester Young in the Count Basie Orchestra and immediately fell in love with Prez’s playing. Shortly after hearing Prez, he bought himself a used tenor saxophone, which he taught himself to play. He was so good that he would gig all over the country and made a good living as a jazz musician. After retiring, he taught my father how to play and he would teach me before passing away at the age of 89. My grandfather hero-worshipped Lester Young, and it was because of Prez that he got out of rural Mississippi and made something of himself. 3:18 is quite right. Thank you Prez 🙏🏾🎷
Wonderful story---Thank you.
Hey, what a nice story to share! Appreciate that. I'm an old white boy that played the tenor when he was young and Lester was always one of my favorites. I still have a lot of his albums AND a t-shirt with his picture on it. Thanks again for the great story.
out of tune piano
My God, Lester Young literally reinvented the tenor saxophone. Before Prez came along, the way to play the tenor sax was the way that Coleman Hawkins and Ben Webster played tenor. But Prez played with a relaxed, cool tone and used sophisticated harmonies that influenced every saxophonist that came after him, from Charlie Parker to John Coltrane. Rest In Peace Prez 🙏🏾🎷
Near the end of his life, when he was deteriorating rapidly both mentally and physically, Lester Young played one of his greatest solos ever. Lester may no longer have had the capacity to play some of the jubilant solos of his earlier days, but that did not matter. The song was “Fine and Mellow” and during this recording and filming session for CBS Lester was reunited after several years with female singer Billie Holiday. I do not know if Lester and Billie were ever romantically involved, but there is no doubt in my mind that they loved and respected each other very deeply. Because that’s what their music tells me. Lester was so frail that day that no one was sure if he would be able to play with the band. But oh did he play! Tenor saxophonist Ben Webster played his solo before it was Lester’s turn. Webster was no slouch. After all, the great bandleader and composer Duke Ellington thought highly enough of Webster to ask him in 1935 to join his band. But when Webster solos on “Fine and Mellow” you know what he is playing - a tenor saxophone. His instrument sounds like it’s supposed to, like you’d expect it to sound. Contrast that to Lester’s solo a little later in the tune - it doesn’t sound like a tenor saxophone at all. It doesn’t sound like any instrument that has ever existed. It is pure Lester, pure emotion. It’s as if there are no mechanics, no reed, no instrument there at all, just Lester’s spirit, Lester’s soul. Lester’s lean solo contained only about 50 notes or so, whereas Webster’s probably contained two or three times as many. Amazingly, Lester’s playing seems to have a pronounced effect on the band; the tempo slows a bit, the band plays more softly and it’s as if the members of the band are stepping aside for the moment out of reverence and respect for Lester. Compare Lester’s “Fine and Mellow” solo to ones like his blazers on Taxi War Dance, or Woodside, or Limehouse Blues and one cannot help but be astonished at the range and depth of expression that Young was able to communicate through his horn. Jazz critic Nat Hentoff was in the control room during the recording of “Fine and Mellow” and recalled that Lester’s solo literally brought everyone in the control room to tears: “Lester got up, and he played the purest blues I have ever heard, and [he and Holiday] were looking at each other, their eyes were sort of interlocked, and she was sort of nodding and half-smiling. It was as if they were both remembering what had been-whatever that was. And in the control room we were all crying. When the show was over, they went their separate ways.” The great jazz musicologist, Gunther Shuller wrote, “Billie and Lester - two great tragic figures of jazz - never saw each other again. Little more than a year later, they were both gone; they died within four months of each other. Billie was only 44, Lester, 49.
My God, Lester Young literally reinvented the tenor saxophone. Before Prez came along, the way to play the tenor sax was the way that Coleman Hawkins and Ben Webster played tenor. But Prez played with a relaxed, cool tone and used sophisticated harmonies that influenced every saxophonist that came after him, from Charlie Parker to John Coltrane. Rest In Peace Prez 🙏🏾🎷
Prez was great....to Charlie Parker to John Coltrane to the greatest Sonny Rolllins.
I loved his Mohican/Mohawk!!!!!
Saw him in 1974 Pittsburgh Civic Arena. Tight and super freaking loud! I was a Senior in High School and played in my HS jazz band. After hearing him I felt like I was still in the sandbox stage. Graduated High School and went into the Marine Corps and played with the band for 4 years. Had the honor of playing with some awesome musicians from all over the states. Still playing my bass and always looking to jam with others. If you play or have played,stay with it! It’s something you can do until the end. The body has a shelf life for sports but music you can play until the day you drop!
Lester Young died in 1959, so you cannot have seen him live in 1974!
Basie the pianist is tops in my book.
Confirmed
Is this the main 1939 recording anyone?
SHE'S ALIVE!!
Bird of course is brilliant, but let's not overlook the remarkable pianist and bandleader who employed him here. The Man From Muskogee deserves major acclaim.
Aww thanks so much I love this I'm an up and coming aspiring studied Jazz singer and I'm from Kansas City I love and have taking all our heritage here I'm so inspired.
Kansas City’s a great town!
Very deep ,,,,,
Lester Young invented the expression, 'Cool'. You heard it here first............................
No...... This is common knowledge to anyone who knows Lester... Ya Dig ????
RIP Lee Konitz