I was lucky enough to live in the Chicago area during the height of the Solti era, and had the pleasure of hearing Bud Herseth, Dick Oldberg, Frank Crisafulli, and Arnie Jacobs in concert countless times. (Chichowicz had retired from the CSO by then and was focusing on teaching at Northwestern.) The entire orchestra was and is a phenomenal band, but the brass section in particular was on a whole other level. Extraordinary musicality, extraordinary technique, and that wall of sound they could produce with no apparent effort (except for Herseth's red face) was just incredible. I got to hear them perform a lot of my favorite pieces: Most of the Mahler symphonies, Bruckner 4 and 7, all of the Brahms symphonies, Beethoven 9, The Rite of Spring, the list goes on. Wonderful memories.
Vince Cichowicz gave me the entire recording of this which performance I believe was intended for radio broadcast. Have it in CD and backed up several x. What a dear man…
i heard these boys do this live, in the spring of 1970, at northwestern, although i think the horn player must have been frank brouk. but it was bud on top and jake on the bottom, no mistake about that.
I recognize the background of the picture of Bud at three and a half minutes.I believe it was taken on the 8th floor of 529 South Wabash, the old Schilke factory.
This is amazing, the thing that amazes yer confuses me is this one question, how are these videos made, so Many people from so many places all in one video, do they send in videos, how is this done, what is the process, I jave seen many videos like this, but never did I get to know how they are made....?
Jacobs is almost definitely playing the York here. He was famous for almost never using F tubas, preferring to use (on occasion) a very small C tuba over playing F.
Arnold Jacob's sound is to die for
***** phrasing and tone perfection
I had a lesson with Arnold Jacobs in the 60s.
Yes, I had no idea he was part of CSO, just knew that the tuba always sounds amazing...always present and such a full resonant sound
Jonathan Wenas it's pretty amazing
I was lucky enough to live in the Chicago area during the height of the Solti era, and had the pleasure of hearing Bud Herseth, Dick Oldberg, Frank Crisafulli, and Arnie Jacobs in concert countless times. (Chichowicz had retired from the CSO by then and was focusing on teaching at Northwestern.) The entire orchestra was and is a phenomenal band, but the brass section in particular was on a whole other level. Extraordinary musicality, extraordinary technique, and that wall of sound they could produce with no apparent effort (except for Herseth's red face) was just incredible. I got to hear them perform a lot of my favorite pieces: Most of the Mahler symphonies, Bruckner 4 and 7, all of the Brahms symphonies, Beethoven 9, The Rite of Spring, the list goes on. Wonderful memories.
I am SO jealous!
My favorite romantic era work for brass quintet and the best performing it.
Vince Cichowicz gave me the entire recording of this which performance I believe was intended for radio broadcast. Have it in CD and backed up several x.
What a dear man…
Love Frank Crisafulli playing 🪄
The best of the best. Absolutely outstanding.
Thanks posting. Drop dead beautiful musicianship.
Best recording ever.
Legendary and outstanding in every respect. But I also love the following interpretation: ua-cam.com/video/797qvenE3NE/v-deo.html
The Best Brass Quintet
0:00 1st mov
5:20 2nd mov
8:56 3rd mov
Stunning
Love , Love, Love! Thanks for posting!
i heard these boys do this live, in the spring of 1970, at northwestern, although i think the horn player must have been frank brouk. but it was bud on top and jake on the bottom, no mistake about that.
I think the horn player may have been either Dale Clevenger or Phil Farkas.
Could have been Jay Friedman on trombone…
@@visiblethought not clevenger when i heard them live, and farkas was already long gone by 1966.
I am a member of the River Valley Brass Quintet based in Peoria, IL, and we love working on and performing this piece! We also have numbers 2,3.
Is there a CD of your performance?
Legendary.
8:16 - SOUND
wonderful
I recognize the background of the picture of Bud at three and a half minutes.I believe it was taken on the 8th floor of 529 South Wabash, the old Schilke factory.
8:55
This is amazing, the thing that amazes yer confuses me is this one question, how are these videos made, so Many people from so many places all in one video, do they send in videos, how is this done, what is the process, I jave seen many videos like this, but never did I get to know how they are made....?
recorded in 1966 bud
Bud Herseth Tribute Edit 3
WOW and thanks for posting! Do you have any more CSO quintet recordings from this era?
cool dude
0:00
5:20
Where can I purchase an album of this brass quintet?
+Isaiah Mason It was not released commercially.
5:21
A wonderful recording. Is Mr Jacobs on his York here?
nah its probably an F tuba.
I can't say for sure, but I've definitely read somewhere that he usually played on his York in quintet.
Jacobs is almost definitely playing the York here. He was famous for almost never using F tubas, preferring to use (on occasion) a very small C tuba over playing F.
Cameron Farnsworth definitely York my guy
@@DaveBurnett97 Probably because he only had half a lung...
自分用8:55
Bruh
And yep, I fucking suck
Amazing