His friend and the audience doesnt know that by imitating the exact piece only by hearing once is above genius level...the pianist jolly roger was really pissed with 1900 only toying on him.
And he even transposes it a semitone higher. I don't understand why everyone was angry at him, he literally insulted the other pianist at galactic levels with that second performance
I watched this classic with my father when i was only 12 years old. And now I'm in my 30s and i still can not figure out why this Masterpiece of a Movie never made it to the big screens.
I watched this movie when I was 15 in high school. I guess it was 2007. You know what, the repaired 4k version of this movie is just released in China two days ago in the big screens. And I have watched the movie twice. It is far beyond "legend" and I have to say that it is epic!!!! It is totally different to enjoy the movie in the big screen from your laptop or home TV. I am going to watch the movie for the third time tomorrow....
@@jingyiyu7354. Wow! I can't believe it's going to the big screens in China. You're so lucky to be able to watch it in 4k and on the Big Screen!. I'm jealous haha.
@@hitmanhearns8350 OMG! I just saw the data that the movie has already breaked 100 million ticket box in the first week in China. It's about 13 million US dollars.
He actually doesn’t play the 2nd song identically. He dramatically improves it on his left hand by rolling up to the bass note unlike JRM who played it much simpler and easier. An awesome detail that hidden in there!
Arctic I thought it was a nice amount, not too much, but enough to illustrate that he was playing a more skillful version of the song to the other guy.
I think Mr. Morton could also do the bass roll, and heck, I can do it too. It's not rocket science. It's a nice touch but was used by dozens of ragtime pianists back in the day. Charley Straight uses it a lot in his piano rolls. He, and many other pianists, also liked to put a RIGHT-HAND roll in the TENOR (accompanied by a bass note with the left hand), in musical breaks IN BETWEEN higher right hand parts. That trick gives a sort of 'third hand' effect (if one is not paying attention) but anyway can be musically useful in certain places, if not overdone.
I love the whole back and forth: Morton starts with a simple piece, 1900 responds with a simple one as well. Then, Morton plays The Crave, probably the first time anyone has heard it and 1900 copies it, by ear, after hearing it one time. Then, Morton plays a piece that would break your fingers if you're NOT Jellyroll Morton. 1900 response? A true finger breaker. Morton tries to keep up in his mind, his fingers twitching to try and match the tones he hears but can't, drops his glass and knows he lost.
Amigo, hizo mucho más que eso 1900. En el primer tema 1900 se burlo porque en vez de tomarselo en serio, tocó Noche de Paz. En el segundo tema toco The crave(el mismo tema) pero una version mejor ya que le hizo unos cambios al bajo que era muy sencillo. Y en el tercer tema 1900 hace un tema a 6 manos, imposible para un humano normal.... Simplemente épico!
What the audience didn't realize is the fact that 1900 transposed this piece he had never heard before, in an other key... From D minor to D# minor (a difficult key) This is insane.
@@Eric-yi2yl you can call it that way if you want... in jazz you will see D# minor a lot of times. Also D# minor makes more sense than Eb minor if you think about the minor tonality of F# major.
I was a 35/70mm film Projection & Sound engineer for cinemas around the world, I was installing a 12-screen cinema in Japan, the day before opening there was a VIP screening of this movie, I was there to watch & hear my work, this movie was one of the greatest made, I never saw this movie played in the States, the Caribbean, Italy, Nigeria, Guam, or on cruise ships, I only saw it played in Japan, I serviced & installed Cinema Projectors & Sound around the world. I wonder why It never made to the Big screens, it was a great movie, worth watching,
JRM was so full of his-self, well full of something. Then along comes this guy who can play anything in any musical style, just by hearing it one time. Then 1900 finally shows his true talent: A very fast piece that was meant to be a DUET. Lighting the cigarette from the piano strings and sticking in in Morton's mouth. 'That's it, i'm done with you. Now go away'. Jelly Roll Morton shuffles out, a beaten man.
When a genius meets the world's best and realize not only will they never reach them, but they're only just good enough to understand better than anyone how good that person truly is.
This is the first movie i ever watched on our first bought cd player with my father. Still listening sometimes that piano. That was the couse of me loving music and intersted. I play guitar as a hobbie but always wanted a piano. Although i love to listen all kind of music. Thanks for that movie creators.
If you have not seen this move do yourself a favor, find it. and watch it. I've seen it 3-4x and watched this video about 30x, every time i need a little pick me up. Tim Roth is true genius of an actor.
To Add to my previous post, When I first saw this movie in Japan I was a cinemas projection & sound engineer & Dolby Digital Stereo 7.1 just came out. I installed several of these Dolby EX systems all over Japan, but no movie was released yet in 7.1, so to hear it work was only with test film we had. The very first time I heard a Dolby-EX (7.1) unit work was with this movie.. The Scene: the trumpet player & 1900 got into trouble with the captain, as punishment they had to shovel coal.... they took a break, & one of them threw a hunk of coal & it hit the rear wall, of the ship, & it made a loud noise only from the rear surround speakers on the rear wall, I turned & look to see WHAT WAS THAT?, as soon as I put my eyes back onto the screen, they threw another coal & ht the wall & you heard the coal hitting the wall behind you, coming out of the rear surround speakers.. It was the greatest effect ( before Driven with Burt Reynolds)) that the 7.1 was so Bad ASS & my first time hearing 7.1 in a movie, I was use to hearing 4.1 & 5.1.... now they have 22.1, I retired after 50-yrs when it became 11.1 , great effect if you have 7.1 home theatre system, not as good as the real thing, coming from a guy to help pioneer what the real movie cinemas that is still use today & the home theatre systems, a little history for movie buffs about Dolby 7.1
Quando ripete il pezzo dell'avversario, dopo averlo sentito solo una volta, è la parte più bella della sfida. Tutti i presenti in sala sono delusi, tutti tranne uno, che capisce con che fenomeno si è imbattuto e comincia a preoccuparsi
Non è una semplice ripetizione o trasposizione, aggiunge anche diversi abbellimenti alla precedente performance di JRM (migliorandola non di poco) di cui il pubblico non si accorge perchè si tratta per lo più di gente con scarse competenze pianistiche, ma il modo in cui Novecento ripropone quel brano è clamoroso e solo JRM, che infatti ha un'espressione sconvolta, si rende conto che si trova a sfidare un mostro con cui non ha nessuna possibilità di vittoria.
Didn't know this movie till I shaw it at a reel video then I search the piano duel scenes here. What an amazing movie, amazing piano play. Grande, marvelous...! 👏👏👏👏👏
Thank you for posting. I’ve seen “parts” of this scene so many ways, but this is the first time i saw it to completion. I’d love to watch to entire movie. If i knew where I could stream it.
Here's JRM himself playing "Fingerbreaker" (sometimes called "Finger Buster", although that's also the title of a Willie "The Lion" Smith piece): ua-cam.com/video/h7FSm0tQULE/v-deo.html the above and the below are the two best-sounding dubs I can find of this on UA-cam: ua-cam.com/video/egJi9v2HllI/v-deo.html
If the Crave was an improvisation then it was an insult for Jolly to hear it from a man who had just heard it. If it was a fixed song from him then there was a possibility that he had heard it before however since he didn't have any score of it it's still impressive. Either way Jolly was stomped into the ground
Entertaining as this scene was, let me remind everyone this is pure FICTION. Jelly Roll Morton NEVER played on a cruise ship, and this mysterious "1900" man NEVER existed. Fascinating shit of a movie, though.
this hits different knowing what we've always known about racial injustice. I still don't remember the clowns we lauded as prodigies to get trounced by Jack Johnson. this land's as though counter-exceptional.
His friend and the audience doesnt know that by imitating the exact piece only by hearing once is above genius level...the pianist jolly roger was really pissed with 1900 only toying on him.
I was thinking exactly the same thing
Yep exactly 😎
he dont just imitate, theres a subtle difference between how 1900 play and how Jelly Morton plays the piece. lets just say he 'improved' the piece
Don't know the actual term for it, but he kinda adds a roll with his left hand.
And he even transposes it a semitone higher. I don't understand why everyone was angry at him, he literally insulted the other pianist at galactic levels with that second performance
I watched this classic with my father when i was only 12 years old. And now I'm in my 30s and i still can not figure out why this Masterpiece of a Movie never made it to the big screens.
I watched this movie when I was 15 in high school. I guess it was 2007. You know what, the repaired 4k version of this movie is just released in China two days ago in the big screens. And I have watched the movie twice. It is far beyond "legend" and I have to say that it is epic!!!! It is totally different to enjoy the movie in the big screen from your laptop or home TV. I am going to watch the movie for the third time tomorrow....
@@jingyiyu7354. Wow! I can't believe it's going to the big screens in China. You're so lucky to be able to watch it in 4k and on the Big Screen!. I'm jealous haha.
@@hitmanhearns8350 OMG! I just saw the data that the movie has already breaked 100 million ticket box in the first week in China. It's about 13 million US dollars.
It was by an italian writer...a monologue book made for acting written by Alessandro Baricco.
-by an italian born in florence age 20
google him
Never seen a video this high quality before
KingHenry1015 very funny boy
KingHenry1015 hmmm. Good point. Let’s get rid of everything before HD. Fuck this. Amirite? No. I’m not.
Lol this whole movie used to be on here in great quality. of course......
Clearly you've never had a Commodore 64.
Yup this is insane... How could they have 240p during the 1900s? Hahahaha
He actually doesn’t play the 2nd song identically. He dramatically improves it on his left hand by rolling up to the bass note unlike JRM who played it much simpler and easier. An awesome detail that hidden in there!
idk, thought the roll was nice but it came frequently
Arctic I thought it was a nice amount, not too much, but enough to illustrate that he was playing a more skillful version of the song to the other guy.
A pianist friend of mine told me that the way he plays it is nearly impossible
@@WildBillJP it is very nearly impossible, because a roll like that normally takes both hands and yet he does it with only his left
I think Mr. Morton could also do the bass roll, and heck, I can do it too. It's not rocket science. It's a nice touch but was used by dozens of ragtime pianists back in the day. Charley Straight uses it a lot in his piano rolls. He, and many other pianists, also liked to put a RIGHT-HAND roll in the TENOR (accompanied by a bass note with the left hand), in musical breaks IN BETWEEN higher right hand parts. That trick gives a sort of 'third hand' effect (if one is not paying attention) but anyway can be musically useful in certain places, if not overdone.
Quality is so high I thought that piano was a printer till he start playing it
Haha at least the sound was HD
1900s quality
You have me in tears
I love the whole back and forth: Morton starts with a simple piece, 1900 responds with a simple one as well. Then, Morton plays The Crave, probably the first time anyone has heard it and 1900 copies it, by ear, after hearing it one time. Then, Morton plays a piece that would break your fingers if you're NOT Jellyroll Morton. 1900 response? A true finger breaker. Morton tries to keep up in his mind, his fingers twitching to try and match the tones he hears but can't, drops his glass and knows he lost.
Amigo, hizo mucho más que eso 1900.
En el primer tema 1900 se burlo porque en vez de tomarselo en serio, tocó Noche de Paz.
En el segundo tema toco The crave(el mismo tema) pero una version mejor ya que le hizo unos cambios al bajo que era muy sencillo.
Y en el tercer tema 1900 hace un tema a 6 manos, imposible para un humano normal....
Simplemente épico!
What the audience didn't realize is the fact that 1900 transposed this piece he had never heard before, in an other key... From D minor to D# minor (a difficult key) This is insane.
You mean Eb minor I think
@@Eric-yi2yl D# minor exists too, it's the same thing as Eb minor but with different note names
@@epalegmail d# minor exists, but we won't call it that when referring to it
@@Eric-yi2yl you can call it that way if you want... in jazz you will see D# minor a lot of times. Also D# minor makes more sense than Eb minor if you think about the minor tonality of F# major.
@@epalegmail it's not really my call, the royal academy of music and trinity says so
That movie was gold.
I was a 35/70mm film Projection & Sound engineer for cinemas around the world, I was installing a 12-screen cinema in Japan, the day before opening there was a VIP screening of this movie, I was there to watch & hear my work, this movie was one of the greatest made, I never saw this movie played in the States, the Caribbean, Italy, Nigeria, Guam, or on cruise ships, I only saw it played in Japan, I serviced & installed Cinema Projectors & Sound around the world. I wonder why It never made to the Big screens, it was a great movie, worth watching,
1900's face during the last challenge, looked like me on the toilet every morning.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Every morning tho ? 🤣
Eat more fiber
You constipated or jacking off one of the two lmaaooo
Both actors was great with piano songs played by Morricone's fingers. R.I.P.
i swear he got sweaty in like 2 seconds
He needed the drops of sweat to play extra notes.
This movie is such a gem
Such a different kind of movie, Tim Roth is a great actor. He plays such an awesome role in Rob Roy
Fantastic and funny, one of my favourite scenes in an utterly enjoyable film. Superb performances by Tim Roth and Pruitt Taylor Vince.
In all the insults I have ever seen in a movie,
This has to be the single most devastating...
Such an insulting movie very classless I’m happy someone understands
idk why I could never forget this scene. I think it's bc of everyone's reaction lol
"You smoke it. I don't know how."
IT WOULD TAKE A MAGICIAN TO RETUNE THAT PIANO
i saw this when i was 6 and had an awakening to love every genre.
Same here.. 🤘
Trolling Jelly Roll at the beginning and then playing something unexpected was great. Really hit his ego hard.
I've watched this scene prolly 100 times. Still exhilarating
Today I've just watched it for one time. Now I'm gonna do it again and again and again for the rest of my life.😁
Zasto sam ga tek veceras odgledala prvi put?? 😮Film je izuzetan!
Good bye Ennio 😭
This is like the greatest piano duel of all time!
JRM was so full of his-self, well full of something.
Then along comes this guy who can play anything in any musical style, just by hearing it one time. Then 1900 finally shows his true talent: A very fast piece that was meant to be a DUET.
Lighting the cigarette from the piano strings and sticking in in Morton's mouth. 'That's it, i'm done with you. Now go away'.
Jelly Roll Morton shuffles out, a beaten man.
When a genius meets the world's best and realize not only will they never reach them, but they're only just good enough to understand better than anyone how good that person truly is.
One of the best scene never seen!!!
This is the first movie i ever watched on our first bought cd player with my father. Still listening sometimes that piano. That was the couse of me loving music and intersted. I play guitar as a hobbie but always wanted a piano. Although i love to listen all kind of music. Thanks for that movie creators.
Uno dei più famosi film che piace rivedere e rivedere ❤️❤️❤️💞😘fantastico
If you have not seen this move do yourself a favor, find it. and watch it. I've seen it 3-4x and watched this video about 30x, every time i need a little pick me up. Tim Roth is true genius of an actor.
Ah yes 240p we've meet again * dramatic turn*
You can't get a copy strike if they can't recognize the video
Lmao
haha this made me chuckle well done
Absolutely the best most underestimated movie ever!
I find it really cool how he played the music right after he heard it for the first time
also, that burn tho- SAVAGERY
To Add to my previous post, When I first saw this movie in Japan I was a cinemas projection & sound engineer & Dolby Digital Stereo 7.1 just came out. I installed several of these Dolby EX systems all over Japan, but no movie was released yet in 7.1, so to hear it work was only with test film we had. The very first time I heard a Dolby-EX (7.1) unit work was with this movie.. The Scene: the trumpet player & 1900 got into trouble with the captain, as punishment they had to shovel coal.... they took a break, & one of them threw a hunk of coal & it hit the rear wall, of the ship, & it made a loud noise only from the rear surround speakers on the rear wall, I turned & look to see WHAT WAS THAT?, as soon as I put my eyes back onto the screen, they threw another coal & ht the wall & you heard the coal hitting the wall behind you, coming out of the rear surround speakers.. It was the greatest effect ( before Driven with Burt Reynolds)) that the 7.1 was so Bad ASS & my first time hearing 7.1 in a movie, I was use to hearing 4.1 & 5.1.... now they have 22.1, I retired after 50-yrs when it became 11.1 , great effect if you have 7.1 home theatre system, not as good as the real thing, coming from a guy to help pioneer what the real movie cinemas that is still use today & the home theatre systems, a little history for movie buffs about Dolby 7.1
Call a doctor, that burn was 3rd degree
More like 4th. Call a priest. Doctor can't help.
4:16 now that’s what you call “snatching wigs”
I love this part of the movie, I swear.
Love Clarence Williams III in this film.
His grandfather was Jelly Roll Morton's friend!
Quando ripete il pezzo dell'avversario, dopo averlo sentito solo una volta, è la parte più bella della sfida. Tutti i presenti in sala sono delusi, tutti tranne uno, che capisce con che fenomeno si è imbattuto e comincia a preoccuparsi
Non solo, lo traspone pure di un semitono in su
@@TheSummoner 👏👏 complimenti per la competenza
Non è una semplice ripetizione o trasposizione, aggiunge anche diversi abbellimenti alla precedente performance di JRM (migliorandola non di poco) di cui il pubblico non si accorge perchè si tratta per lo più di gente con scarse competenze pianistiche, ma il modo in cui Novecento ripropone quel brano è clamoroso e solo JRM, che infatti ha un'espressione sconvolta, si rende conto che si trova a sfidare un mostro con cui non ha nessuna possibilità di vittoria.
@@djnatZOMG 👍👏👏
The cave 1900’s version. Amazing left hand
luis antonio castillo alfaro crave not cave
One of my favorite movie moments ever: "You asked for it, a hole"
Didn't know this movie till I shaw it at a reel video then I search the piano duel scenes here. What an amazing movie, amazing piano play. Grande, marvelous...! 👏👏👏👏👏
“I told you once you son of a bitch, I’m the best that’s ever been.”
Still one of my all-time favorite movies....
Самые прекрасные моменты.Люблю это кино,люблю Тима и вообще.............
Thank you for posting. I’ve seen “parts” of this scene so many ways, but this is the first time i saw it to completion. I’d love to watch to entire movie. If i knew where I could stream it.
3:11 the world's first "black midi"
Man I was going to say that
This moment stopped me from breathing lol
I love this movie I can't stop watching it it's a classic
Wow such high quality *clap* *clap* *clap* 😂
Best scene ever
I love this movie ❤️
The silence spoke it all
Pure class act
Where does the music we enjoy today come from? This is A starting point. Pretty great.
I found this gem when it was on tv
my favorite movie
the impressive thing is he ca pick the cig without any shaking in his hands
Greatest movie of all time....
RIP Clarence Williams
I luved this movie so much..I didn’t return the library copy and paid the $40 fine
So good
2021?
This is maked great talent beat popularity
Тим Рот великолепен..
You smoke it, i dont know how
Totalement sublime
The recording man be like:Whoopsi forgot to turn on the quality
I love this movie
Best scence :)
Great movie.
Here's JRM himself playing "Fingerbreaker"
(sometimes called "Finger Buster", although that's also the title of a Willie "The Lion" Smith piece):
ua-cam.com/video/h7FSm0tQULE/v-deo.html
the above and the below are the two best-sounding dubs I can find of this on UA-cam:
ua-cam.com/video/egJi9v2HllI/v-deo.html
hey. did he blow it? at 1:57, it looks like discontinuity
The best 1900 th
If the Crave was an improvisation then it was an insult for Jolly to hear it from a man who had just heard it. If it was a fixed song from him then there was a possibility that he had heard it before however since he didn't have any score of it it's still impressive. Either way Jolly was stomped into the ground
Good to see you 240P
この映画でティム・ロスのファンになりました🤩
Me having a test:
My last brain cells: 3:05
Me: find the video I was looking for, but it's in 240p
Also me: Ah shit here we go again!
فلم فوق الرائع
Written for two pianos, played by 2 or 3 pianos
Scena,,monumentale,,,
I want to see Dave Mustaine shred this.😵
Didn't know Samson Simpson played piano too!
Song name
Enduring movement
Not flight of the bee ffs
It's called The Crave
@@JosephSethole that's the first song, he's talking about the second
The other is Enduring Movement by Ennio Morricone
1- The crave
2- Finger breaker
3- Enduring movement
Anyone else realize 1900’s friend is Otis from the walking dead, the guy who accidentally shot Carl??
Entertaining as this scene was, let me remind everyone this is pure FICTION. Jelly Roll Morton NEVER played on a cruise ship, and this mysterious "1900" man NEVER existed. Fascinating shit of a movie, though.
woooow amazing
all these people debating who's the actual genius here when the clip ends with one of them having 4 fucking arms. what the fuck is this movie?
alternate title: famous pianist gets obliterated by crackhead on a ship
That was awesome
No one mentioned that he played the all thing that fast and the cigarette didnt move at all
Чудесно!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Memory
Franz liszt vs chopin
"The Finger Breaker" is actually J.R.M.'s song, leave it to Hollyweird to find a way to flake it up. Fun story though.
this hits different knowing what we've always known about racial injustice. I still don't remember the clowns we lauded as prodigies to get trounced by Jack Johnson. this land's as though counter-exceptional.
After the end of the last song he was probably thinking fuck I got to quit smoking
beat is so hot that jelly got smoked
Well that’s not fair, he’s got three hands.
haha... the left hand killed the old man :x the audience didn't realise :P
4:17 5:40 6:17
Hi do you still have the beginning of the scene? I don´t find it any more on your channel