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The Brass Pedagogue
United States
Приєднався 18 вер 2020
Welcome to The Brass Pedagogue! Where we cover the lives and Histories of some of the brass world's pioneers in performance and pedagogy.
Sound Comparison: Bach 3C vs Yamaha Bobby Shew Jazz
Music used:
Bordognis Etude 1
Charlier 2
Arban 24
Bordognis Etude 1
Charlier 2
Arban 24
Переглядів: 447
Відео
Rafael Mendez “El Gitano” in Cowboy (1958)
Переглядів 282 місяці тому
Rafael Mendez “El Gitano” in Cowboy (1958)
Rafael Mendez in “Holiday in Mexico”, 1946
Переглядів 702 місяці тому
Rafael Mendez in “Holiday in Mexico”, 1946
Rafael Mendez- Tre-Mendez Polka 1957
Переглядів 14211 місяців тому
With his two sons on the Art Linkleter Show #trumpet #archive #50s
James Fitch playing “There Will Never Be Another You” by Warren/Gordon 5.2023
Переглядів 87Рік тому
At Carlos’ Mexican Restaurant, Dana Point, CA 5.2023
James Fitch soloing over “Emily” by Johnny Mandel
Переглядів 63Рік тому
The Real Empanada San Clemente, California. 4.2023
Jame Fitch Soloing over “Solar” at SemiTropic Wines 1.2023
Переглядів 35Рік тому
“Solar” By Miles Davis, SemiTropic Wines Costa Mesa, California
James Fitch Quartet- Happy Go Lucky by Carl Saunders
Переглядів 34Рік тому
From a rehearsal in November 2022. “Happy Go Lucky” by Carl Saunders. Personal: James Fitch, Trumpet William Luster, Guitar Liam Coats, Bass Andres Hernandez, Drums For contact/bookings/inquests: jfsmusicbox@gmail.com
Lew Soloff on Choosing the Right Mouthpiece
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Lew Soloff on Choosing the Right Mouthpiece
There will never be another you trumpet a capella
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There will never be another you trumpet a capella
Warren Luening’s Trumpet solo on Cotton Tail.
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Warren Luening’s Trumpet solo on Cotton Tail.
Frank Sinatra “Stormy Weather” trumpet scream chorus.
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Frank Sinatra “Stormy Weather” trumpet scream chorus.
Maurice Murphy- Purcell Sonata in D, I: Allegro
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Maurice Murphy- Purcell Sonata in D, I: Allegro
BSO/Ozawa-Bartok Concerto for Orchestra trumpet excerpt
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BSO/Ozawa-Bartok Concerto for Orchestra trumpet excerpt
Maurice Murphy Talks about Star Wars
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Maurice Murphy Talks about Star Wars
A TBP Review: F. Besson Najoom Classic C Trumpet
Переглядів 3652 роки тому
A TBP Review: F. Besson Najoom Classic C Trumpet
I think the Shew Jazz does weird things to my intonation and is thus harder to manage than the 3C. I have various 3C size mouthpieces but always come back to the Bach. It's too good of an all-rounder. I also like the Yamaha 11B4 & 14B4 for what it's worth.
Comcerto? WTF?
They had to re paint the walls after that!
My wife turned me onto Sunday morning (she's been a fan since the Charlie Osgood days).
Just watched this movie today! Amazing! And your playing is awesome!
The Shew has too soft of a bite, in my opinion. I much prefer the Bach rim.
At least he didn't curse anything...
This was in 1987....Marsalis was already accomplished in 1987, but was no where near where he's been the past 25-30 years. Miles has a legitimate point here, but Marsalis developed substantially since and I would suspect Miles would improve his comment were he around today.
The third one is definitely the best
Absolutely right, he is a good trumpet player - but nothing more.
might be the coolest guy ever
Who’s the guy (tpt) next to him?
Wynton is a legend, but he missed the mark here. This piece does not translate well to people trying to put their spin on it. Abblasen demands fidelity to the way it was originally written.
A beautiful and tremendous trumpeter!!!
It's crazy how now when wynton plays, you know it's him. Wynton was a young player when he first met miles.
It always puzzles me that the Haydn is (was?) always part of Grade 8 for Bb trumpet and ARCM exam, yet it was written for, and played on an Eb by all the soloists! In other words, pro trumpet soloists have an easier time than students!
he's talking about a person who is 7 years into what is now a 44 year career (starting when Wynton joined Blakey)
He is a dirty dawg though, hitting Nicky Benedetti, what a fine piece of dago booty. 👊🏿🤙🏿😉
One thing we should remember is that Wynton is classically trained. Have any of you heard him perform Trumpet Concertos with Orchestra? In 1987, he didn't have too many albums to his name. He had just finished recording his Standard Time Vol. 1. Wynton has come A LOONG WAY since that album. I feel he has found his own voice and he has so many great albums to his credit including Live. Wynton is a pure jazz musician through and through.
To each his own!
Wynton is Wynton,he plays from the heart, everybody can't be a Miles Davis. 🤔
Wynton is a pain in the A and I think that his nature
@@twittertwice That's your opinion buddy.😂
Miles wasn't the only musician to say this about Wynton Marsalis. When I think of great virtuoso trumpeters (Woody Shaw, Dizzy Gillespie, Freddie Hubbard and others who came later) they knew the history but were also interested in moving forward. Marsalis is almost like a classical musician playing jazz in the way it's "supposed to be played". One of the things I love about jazz is it is values individual expression and innovation. I don't really hesr that from Marsalis, in any environment, even playing Ornette 's material or playing with Clapton. Great technician, though; but while I admire his slickness, I don't find his music that interesting to me. (I grew up with a lot of 60s and 70s free jazz.)
The Charles Kuralt version was my favorite. It was simple, clean and unassuming. The current one is too frilled for my taste.
Highly overrated this man. Just my opinion.
Wynton since then has been able to play any style he wants, haha. I have heard him play three times and he is without a doubt the greatest trumpet player i've ever heard in person by a long shot. I never heard any of the old heads back in miles' day, so i'm sure i would be saying differently if i had. That being said, I would still put Wynton in my personal top 5 favorite trumpet players of all time still. Call it bias, but you can't deny how talented Wynton is and how good of a music educator he also is.
He has ventured in to so many fascinating projects. From playing classical trumpet concerts to Live at the Vanguard to being in a "Big Band" with Ruben Blades at Lincoln Center performing salsa and Latin jazz.
@@jazzywayz9773 yeah totally! i absolutely love his new orleans style combo stuff and all the latin influenced jazz stuff he’s been a part of!
Also Davis did NOT like Wynton. Davis was being nice here.
I feel he did not UNDERSTAND Wynton, musically speaking but that's ok. Geniuses can be wrong too. Wynton was young back then and classically trained. He has come a long way since then and found his own voice..
Wasn’t it 2004 when the first one
Miles was full of crap. Wynton is the best there is, and that includes Miles.
I feel that Miles did not UNDERSTAND Wynton, musically speaking but that's ok. Geniuses can be wrong too. Wynton was young back then and classically trained. He has come a long way since then and found his own voice and is probably the greatest jazz musician alive today..
The best live performance.
Chert baker....❤
It's the same in guitar. Lots of people know the scales and chords but they are boring to listen to. Music is like a language. Knowing how to spell doesn't make you a good writer.
when he says that marsalis is a 'good trumpet player',....you have to remember the miles rule..there are musicians, good musicians, and mothefuckers....
Miles was being nice here. 😅 I’ve always said that the Miles/Wynton juxtaposition was backwards: the old head was trying to move forward and innovate, while the young buck was stuck in the past. Yes, Wynton is a master trumpet player; possibly the most technically gifted jazz trumpet player ever. But it means more to me if you can play AND you changed music forever.
Wynton Marsalis = the Wiener Philarmoniker coming back on stage every single year for the New Year Concert and stating "listen, guys, you may all play waltz, galop, polka, and so on the way you want, drunk at Oktoberfest or clean, sober and well-dressed at Carnegie Hall, but WE set the standard you comply with or deviate from". You need Mason Bates and Peter Eötvös to bring change, but you also need people who reminds you of what the standard is.
This is accurate. But not everyone can be an innovator, or has a compelling unique voice in music, like Miles Davis. The same is true with Coltrane. Which tenor sax player sounds better than Coltrane, no matter how many transcriptions they have done.
May the creator bless his soul, he's one if not the greatest trumpet player ever, but I don't like it (black on black....) do it behind door! Food for thought! I love Wynton Marsalis, but he's no miles Davis, but an excellent trumpet play! 🥂🍷⚫️
Miles used to blow some bum notes sometimes. Wynton doesn’t. I prefer imperfection.
Wynton Marsalis is so reminiscent of Neil deGrasse Tyson in that smug pomposity and ultimate mediocrity of such self-proclaimed guardians. The so-called 'classical' music scene is a necrophile orgy of technique fetishism, empty virtuosity and disciplinary obsession substituting for art that, frankly, at this point it only appeals to hard working first generation immigrant children -- just one step above a spelling bee. Jazz is, correctly speaking, the classical music of black America, and Wynton is doing his very best to kill it just as dead with his conservatism as European 'classical' music is dead and buried in the banal elitism of difficulty for the sake of difficulty and superiority for the sake of superiority.
Still true.
Miles Davis = Mugen Wonton Marsalis = Jin Both excellent swordsmen with two completely different approaches.
He’s straight though, competition is in every field…. Give him his propers Miles, he was a great trumpet player…. 🤔🤣😂
Once Miles said something like this about Improvisation: i don't want to hear what you know, i want to hear what you don't know
Telling McLaughlin to play like he was a beginner on In A Silent Way was so perfect for that recording. Genius.
@@enriqueernesto738 Miles also said: "Play what you don't hear." You could spend your life trying to figure out what tha hell THAT actually means.
@@awwfunkme I think it probably means "surprise yourself"
@@TheMalibuDar That's possible. OR...it could mean: "Play what you've NEVER heard anybody play before on that instrument." Who knows? I've uttered some deeply profound things when I was high on coke, too.
@@enriqueernesto738 "Cocaine is a hellava drug." Rick James
37 years later: nope Wynton's still the same.
Yes classically trained is not jazz as maestro miles knows
Wint be playing too much with those NEADERTHAL'S!! This is what Miles would have said off camera, or 30 years priorto this taping he would have said it that way to anyone's face!
Marsalis is a master musician. Miles was an artist.
That is a very good way of stating the reality. Love listening to both.
You nailed it!❤
Wrong. Miles was an avant garde artist. A master musician sits in an orchestra pit, which is fine. Wynton is so much more than that and deserves not to be snobbed at.
@@---wd3hp I don't think Wynton is snobbed at by anyone. One of the most respected musicians on the planet.
@@---wd3hpWynton is single handedly responsible for decline in jazz, toxic jazz neo-conservativism and narcissistic elitist attitudes that has reduced jazz to an academic cocktail profression.
Davis is an incredible artist, but so is Wynton Marsalis, Davis said basically nothing in his answer?
Love them both but they are polar opposites. Wynton is carrying the torch for a style of music that is being pushed out by dj, rappers and techno ponces. Where has the melody, class and musicianship gone. You don't Even have to play an instrument to call yourself a musician these days. Love Wyntons candor when he is tapping his toes while he is listening to other play. Listening to other is a lost art these days.
Chet is the best
Well we know miles ain’t straight and that’s for sure.
It’s the difference between alert and Bonham