'Blue Bossa' - The Rosenberg Trio met Mozes and Johnny Rosenberg
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- Опубліковано 21 вер 2013
- 'Blue Bossa' - The Rosenberg Trio met Mozes & Johnny Rosenberg. Live in Theater 'De Lievekamp' Oss 2013-05-18
Stochelo Rosenberg: Lead guitar
Nous'che Rosenberg: Rhythm guitar
Nonnie Rosenberg: Double bass
Johnny Rosenberg: Rhythm guitar (Vocals)
Mozes Rosenberg: Lead guitar
www.therosenbergtrio.info/
contact@therosenbergtrio.info
www.sintimusic.nl / bookings: info@sintimusic.nl
thats an unreachable level of guitar
Great musicians :) Have seen them many years ago in Zwolle in the theater. It was a real happening
Rosenberg!!!! Парни ВЫ БОГИ
Masters
‘Blue Bossa’ is an instrumental jazz composition by the American jazz trumpeter, singer, and composer Kenny Dorham. It was introduced by jazz tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson on his album 'Page One' in 1963. ‘Blue Bossa’ is a blend of hard bop and bossa nova. The tune was possibly influenced by Dorham's visit to the Rio de Janeiro Jazz Festival in1961. The tune has since been recorded numerous times by different artists (Dexter Gordon, Joe Pass, Pat Martino etc) making it absolutely a jazz standard.
The Rosenberg played ‘Blue Bossa’ probably for the first time for the German TV (ZDF). This jazz standard has been performed and recorded at The North Sea Jazz Festival 1992. Jimmy Rosenberg has recorded the tune on his album ‘Trio’ in 2004.
Henk van Beurden t
i love how Gypsy is the European answer to American Bossa nova .
There were a lot of guys ripping on bossa or playing bossa versions of bop , Al Di Meola is the most well known , for coming out of the NY NJ wedding band circuit , at the time Sinatra had cut an album with Jobim, which really put antonio, on the american map
These guys are awesome , Jimmy is really impressive as well
Thank you! I was looking all over for this.
Same as this music, Oss is wonderful too...mijn oma werd in Oss geboren, en veel van mijn familie woont er vandaag.
Agreed...Jimmy we miss. I write to him last month.
The 17 dislikes those people are clearly jealous or have no clue about music. 👍👍
Amazing..
Stochelo the best player guitar in the world
Geweldig, Wat kunnen deze mensen spelen! zo wie zo mozes is een hele grote
WORLD CLASS
Mozes krasavchiko! Lachi peskiri manera!
feels good.
Can anyone tell me what model Eimers Mozes is playing? I can't find it. Who makes these dark red guitars?? I've seen Bireli with one too.
Bestt
Thats my people..
Shuka tjawe
VIVE LES MANOUCHES TRES BELLE VERSION LATCHéSS SINTéNALé !!!!!!!!!!
grandi
Ja Ja die Rosenbergs Ghipsy Swing vom feinsten supergeil
Jejej this is like a free jazz cover of the blue bossa
Veryyyyy fasttttt speed 250 kM/ph
Who is chasing them? come on guys.. the original song isn´t that fast.
Great family God has blessed them, I find it strange that Gypsies have Jewish names??
My understanding is names like Rosenberg really are more German in origin. Jewish names would have just been like: ben Ya'akov (son of) kind of names before a certain time, right? At some point, probably for ease with census data, we were both groups that were often given names like Weiss, Rosenberg etc. that came from countries we were living in.
@@JackSoref - Historically, most people did not have last or family names. Living in small communities, first names were sufficient as identifiers. As communities grew, more specific identification became necessary. In some cases, an outstanding feature was used, i.e. klein (small), gross (large) etc. Sometimes a feature of the person's house, such as Rothschild (red shield) was used as identification. It was also common to use a person's trade, i.e. Smith, Tailor, Wainwright etc. (Your own name, for example, means goldsmith in Hebrew. While some European Jews used the Hebrew identifier, many translated the name to Goldsmith - or variations thereof.) One of the oldest, and most common, identifiers was 'son of' or 'daughter of'. This can be seen across national and ethnic groups. When people began leaving their communities of origin, whether for business of settlement, geographic names became familiar identifiers. For many generations, these 'names' were used rather informally. It was only when various governments made family names mandatory for purposes of population registration (taxes, census) that these became legal identifiers and (in most cases) inherited patrilineally.
@@JackSoref rosenberg meinhardt erbrink etc. are german last names the most of us from my family are from germany
super cette version, too bad only jimmy is missing.
Thanks, we all miss Jimmy!
Henk van Beurden He is dead? :O
No márk, he's living in Gemert (South of Netherlands. See Facebook Jimmy Rosenberg facebook.com/groups/176834335706446/?fref=ts
Thanks for the fast answer!
Rosenberg spaghetto
Y a encore du boulot à fournir ,Coluche champion vitesse de moto allait bien plus vite 😂😂😂
these guys are all killers
Its not Blue Bossa, its anything but no Blue Bossa
Sorry Rosenbergs...aber mit Bossa Nova hat das nicht mehr viel zu tun.
BEING A FAN OF THE ROSENBERGS I DON'T LIKE THIS VERSION OF BLUE BOSSA;GREAT DISPLAY OF TECHNIQUE BUT WHERE IS THE BOSSA FEELING,THE MELODY JUST A RACE TO THE FINISH.
SORRY GUYS