I had the incredibly good fortune to be a student of Emily’s in NYC back in ‘86 or ‘87. Words can’t describe how cool it was to spend an hour with her, guitars in hands, every week. It was Magical.
Same here! I think I was '86, remember the year because of the Mets World Series. I was back from GIT out in CA and found her ad in the Village Voice. I never really grasped jazz on a studious level (still haven't in a lot of ways) but she was great. Never once made me feel like miles beneath her while playing. Flavored coffee, I think (not 100% sure) it was that flavored cream-like stuff you'd pour into coffee. Really nice memories.
@@Raildig oh man, you’re going to make me cry. She was soooooo real. I’ll respond a bit more later when I’m not so tired. Regarding the ad in the voice. Me too. I actually still remember the words. ‘Jazz guitar. Emily Remler now accepting students’. I had no idea who Emily Remler was! The first time I went to her apt (east side in the 20’s, I think?) I somehow managed to offend her and she said ‘who the fuck do you think you’re talking to, get the fuck out’. I almost pissed my pants. After a few minutes of serious groveling, she relented. Thank goodness. Do you remember the beautiful notes she made and the cassette tapes? Oh god. How blessed I was. She was all about making music and the tune. Guitar per se was almost secondary. We did a deep dive into bosa that was almost guitar free. She had lots of Astrud anecdotes. Did she sing during any of your lessons? She would make me play the chords to a tune and she’d sort of sing/hum the melody and tap the rhythm. She was focused on music first. Sorry for rambling. Last thing. Sadly, my crack head ex friend stole my Strat and sold it. Much as I miss the guitar, it was nothing compared to the notebook with all Emily’s lesson notes and those cassette tapes with her slightly whiny, nyc Jewish girl voice. Oh god I’d give anything to go back to those days.
@@GreggBennett-j3p Maybe she moved but I'd take (I think, long time now) the Knapp Street exit off the Belt Parkway coming from Suffolk. She was not too far from Coney Island... again, I think. I'm out on Long Island and as a rule don't drive much past Nassau. Man, you got her pissed off at you??? I never saw that side. I was a bluesy / rock player (a BS player... LOL) with a small hint of jazz from GIT, so it was probably a waste of time for her but we got on well. I always hated playing standards or any covers...yeah, that was not popular at GIT. I still am that way... a bit thick-headed probably. We'd just work on feel and lots of chromatic stuff, which I'm still hooked on. My best memories are that damned cheesy flavored coffee and listening to her play her Ovation and wondering why she wasn't either better known or flush financially, or both. Then you realize... jazz doesn't pay like even low-tier rock bands. Listening to her now, being a lot older, makes me nostalgic, happy and sad that she left too soon. Still, glad to have been around her for even a short time.
@@Raildig I vaguely remember she was living in Brooklyn after she go back from California. She was in Manhattan during the fairly brief (a few months) when I was taking lessons with her. So maybe it was ‘85? I was living in queens at the time. I wasn’t a very advanced guitarist. Mostly rock and blues and punk (hardcore) stuff. Emily didn’t seem to care. She even matched me up with another one of her students to play with. From the beginning, she would repeatedly say ‘we have to find you someone to play with’. One more thing, I posted a similar comment on another video of Emily, and a woman guitarist (silly to use the gender adjective, but it’s relevant here) and she said she briefly studied with Emily in CA in the early 80’s. She said Emily was playing in an orchestra pit at some live musical type show, and that, in those days, female jazz guitar teachers were essentially unheard of. Anyway, thanks for the reminisces. Btw, do you still have Emily’s lesson notes and cassette tapes? She’d write me whole paragraphs of lessen instructions and hand write (beautifully) the music for me to practice. Since then I’ve had a handful of ‘jazz’ teachers, but they were nothing compared to the awesome Emily Remler. My few months with her 40 yrs ago has completely colored my guitar playing to this day.
@@GreggBennett-j3p Cool backstory there! I don't recall notes or cassettes. I was never a reader and more often than not it was lots of casual feels... working on playing in pockets. I think I had a jingle or two on local radio out here on Long Island at the time using my tiny studio using MIDI or some kind of early time code (still, I think, new-ish at that point) and we had talked about messing with it... never did get that chance of course. Prior to Emily I'd done a brief (and I mean brief!) stint at Berklee and then GIT and I think she kind of figured that I was never going to be a proper jazzer, though I'd steal fun bits like Wes's octaves and everyone's chromatic usage. Long time ago...
I got to meet her in Chicago when a drummer buddy of mine was playing in her band. Unfortunately, I went to hear them after my gig was over and they had just finished by the time I got there. My buddy introduced us and he said, "Ernie is a great local guitar player" and Emily said, "Oh yeah? Let's play!" I didn't take her seriously, but I guess we could've jammed in her lodging or at my place and I'll always regret that I didn't take her up on that. She was really sweet and a cutie to boot! And of course, a great jazz player! I have a couple of her albums I could hear that Wes Montgomery was a big influence, which is not to say she didn't have her own thing. Tragically, she passed away at such a young age, 32 years old. She had so much more to give. R.I.P. Emily.
List of tunes and approx time starts. Moanin' : 1:45 How Insensitive: 13:04 Tenor Madness: 28:02 All Blues: 38:15 Bluesette: 59:40 Black Orpheus: 1:12:22 Yesterdays 1:28:30 Emily’s original tune - 2nd childhood : 1:42:00 Snowfall: 1:47:40 Joy Spring: 1:56:38 So What: 2:04:52
Calling this footage a treasure is not hyperbole. Thank you, Tom, for sharing it. And no reason at all to excuse your playing - both your comping and soloing are spot on. Nice job!
Thank you Tom, and your playing is wonderful! Emily sounds great here too. The lesson we should all get is to play like it's your last gig, because it just might be. Thank you Emily, Rest In Peace.
I think you are absolutely right your remark about playing as if your life depends on it which IT might VERY WELL MY filosofie is nowadays this every single time I pick up My guitar I start the record button and in this way you always have the maybe genius moment's for if you didn't record it how you'd know that there even is a good moment 🎉😂😮😅
Oh LORD. 😥 My DAD took me to see EMILY at the ol’ musos club in Sydney. I’m a professional muso; l actually spoke with her. We’re both tiny. 😊 We spoke ( she was a sweetheart; & made arrangements to have a jam together. She was found dead 2 days later. I was SHATTERED. For her OF COURSE; & that l missed playing with her. Emily, when l cross, we’ll have that jam. It’s way to sad….. 😔😰
What a treasure! Thanks so much for sharing. Emily pours her soul into her compositions and renditions. So sad she left us at such an early age. Saw her perform in the 80's either in New Orleans or on Beale Street. R.I.P. Emily
Tom - Buddy! ...Cheers for posting this - so very much, Thank You Dearly. No apologies to be made for the 'novicicity' (...Cool name for a BeBop tune perhaps!?), ...from your open, you're swingin' Bro' ~ Thanks most sincerely for sharing this sweet little treasure.
I grew up watching George Golla on Aussie TV in the 1960's. I can't remember the TV shows, but George on his Maton (Australian made guitar) blew me away. And in the same way Emily knocked my socks off big time. Emily, I have just In the last two days found/discovered her. Gee what a breath of fresh air and illumination to me.
I have only seen one video of Emily's playing. This is priceless. Thank you for such a gift. She was an unbelievable guitarist. These jazz musicians are incredible also. What an honor to her memory. In this life as, in all genera's of music we lose so many way too soon. For example, Scott Lafaro, Bill'Evans Bass, then Bill, and Chet Baker, sometimes in car accidents, an overdose, other extenuating circumstances. Many others that were not in the music life, but also have been great examples in other areas. But we have this extradinary massive of legendary of music for all of us to still hear. Thank you so much!!!❤
What a geat testimony to that great guitarist Emily was...to see and hear such things make UA-cam the great tool it can be when people use it like that, truly wonderful..Many thanks Tom!
I work from home at a computer and often with music streaming on my personal PC. Usually the music is just for background but in this case the visuals of Emily's fancy fretwork (I'm a guitarist too) proved to great a distraction to get much work done. Wow.
Upsides @ downsides, now , thanks to this we can "be here now" as many times as you want. Of course it would be nice if we still "had" her here but , this is a gift.
WonderfuI Mr. Kassai. Great admiration for Mr.EmiIy RemIer and her feIIow musicians this evening and the magic moment you shared. We aII feeI sad for the tragedy . Greets from Wes(t) germany
Wonderful (yet tragic)! How fortunate am I, that UA-cam's algorithm just suggested this video posting to me, apparently based on my recent video views. And how generous that you posted this video, after keeping it to yourself (and, I'm guessing, to close family & friends) for so many years. May her memory be for a blessing.
I HAVE just discovered Emily Remler and then when I was going to say something nice to her about the fantastic blue bluesy improvisations And then to realize that she's been gone for over 30 years that's A nasty Blow for me why is it people who are the Top of the JAZZ Community of the world 🌎 seem to have to die either from tragic accident's or Heart failure Wat is it does it give the lord some satisfaction to take these wonderful souls away because I guess it's Him the greatest JAZZ fan of ALL IS OUR LORD MAYBE I HOPE SO 😢
I agree, Tom apologises in the description but he (and the others) played so well - great chemistry with such a talented guitarist presumably with not much time together playing as a band
Thank you so much Tom for sharing this!!! It is wonderful to experience these moments and see Emiliy appear to be so happy and in her element on this night! I grieved a lot back then when I heard she had passed and watching this brings a peace to the whole thing for me..
Tom--thanks so much for posting this wonderful video of Emily and the band! Very nice solo by the way on the first tune--the rest of the show you sound top notch.
Wow! If this woman's playing makes me feel like this then this woman is definitely not dead, if you know what I mean. Now I have to find more of her stuff. Thanks so much for the upload.:)
1990 was the same year my father passed away. It was after her passing that I found out that we were actually some what neighbors , living near the JFK Airport in Queens, New York , in the US. Deepest & Fond Regards to memory of Lady E. R. 🙏🏽🌹🙏🏽
Thank you very much for sharing this sir!!🙏 I had the pleasure to see Emily and Larry Corryell play together in the late 80's at the Northsea Jazz Festival. She played sooo good!
Just came across her wikipedia when I was looking Wes Montgomery's wiki. Just her picture made me interested. Then I saw that she died at 32 years old. Wow Rest in Peace.
I had the incredibly good fortune to be a student of Emily’s in NYC back in ‘86 or ‘87. Words can’t describe how cool it was to spend an hour with her, guitars in hands, every week. It was Magical.
Same here! I think I was '86, remember the year because of the Mets World Series. I was back from GIT out in CA and found her ad in the Village Voice. I never really grasped jazz on a studious level (still haven't in a lot of ways) but she was great. Never once made me feel like miles beneath her while playing. Flavored coffee, I think (not 100% sure) it was that flavored cream-like stuff you'd pour into coffee. Really nice memories.
@@Raildig oh man, you’re going to make me cry. She was soooooo real. I’ll respond a bit more later when I’m not so tired. Regarding the ad in the voice. Me too. I actually still remember the words. ‘Jazz guitar. Emily Remler now accepting students’. I had no idea who Emily Remler was! The first time I went to her apt (east side in the 20’s, I think?) I somehow managed to offend her and she said ‘who the fuck do you think you’re talking to, get the fuck out’. I almost pissed my pants. After a few minutes of serious groveling, she relented. Thank goodness. Do you remember the beautiful notes she made and the cassette tapes? Oh god. How blessed I was. She was all about making music and the tune. Guitar per se was almost secondary. We did a deep dive into bosa that was almost guitar free. She had lots of Astrud anecdotes. Did she sing during any of your lessons? She would make me play the chords to a tune and she’d sort of sing/hum the melody and tap the rhythm. She was focused on music first. Sorry for rambling. Last thing. Sadly, my crack head ex friend stole my Strat and sold it. Much as I miss the guitar, it was nothing compared to the notebook with all Emily’s lesson notes and those cassette tapes with her slightly whiny, nyc Jewish girl voice. Oh god I’d give anything to go back to those days.
@@GreggBennett-j3p Maybe she moved but I'd take (I think, long time now) the Knapp Street exit off the Belt Parkway coming from Suffolk. She was not too far from Coney Island... again, I think. I'm out on Long Island and as a rule don't drive much past Nassau.
Man, you got her pissed off at you??? I never saw that side. I was a bluesy / rock player (a BS player... LOL) with a small hint of jazz from GIT, so it was probably a waste of time for her but we got on well. I always hated playing standards or any covers...yeah, that was not popular at GIT. I still am that way... a bit thick-headed probably. We'd just work on feel and lots of chromatic stuff, which I'm still hooked on.
My best memories are that damned cheesy flavored coffee and listening to her play her Ovation and wondering why she wasn't either better known or flush financially, or both. Then you realize... jazz doesn't pay like even low-tier rock bands. Listening to her now, being a lot older, makes me nostalgic, happy and sad that she left too soon. Still, glad to have been around her for even a short time.
@@Raildig I vaguely remember she was living in Brooklyn after she go back from California. She was in Manhattan during the fairly brief (a few months) when I was taking lessons with her. So maybe it was ‘85? I was living in queens at the time. I wasn’t a very advanced guitarist. Mostly rock and blues and punk (hardcore) stuff. Emily didn’t seem to care. She even matched me up with another one of her students to play with. From the beginning, she would repeatedly say ‘we have to find you someone to play with’. One more thing, I posted a similar comment on another video of Emily, and a woman guitarist (silly to use the gender adjective, but it’s relevant here) and she said she briefly studied with Emily in CA in the early 80’s. She said Emily was playing in an orchestra pit at some live musical type show, and that, in those days, female jazz guitar teachers were essentially unheard of. Anyway, thanks for the reminisces. Btw, do you still have Emily’s lesson notes and cassette tapes? She’d write me whole paragraphs of lessen instructions and hand write (beautifully) the music for me to practice. Since then I’ve had a handful of ‘jazz’ teachers, but they were nothing compared to the awesome Emily Remler. My few months with her 40 yrs ago has completely colored my guitar playing to this day.
@@GreggBennett-j3p Cool backstory there! I don't recall notes or cassettes. I was never a reader and more often than not it was lots of casual feels... working on playing in pockets. I think I had a jingle or two on local radio out here on Long Island at the time using my tiny studio using MIDI or some kind of early time code (still, I think, new-ish at that point) and we had talked about messing with it... never did get that chance of course.
Prior to Emily I'd done a brief (and I mean brief!) stint at Berklee and then GIT and I think she kind of figured that I was never going to be a proper jazzer, though I'd steal fun bits like Wes's octaves and everyone's chromatic usage. Long time ago...
Emily died on the 4th May 1990 only hours after this concert. Such a fantastic player and performer, such a tragedy R.I.P Emily
Only hours after this concert...She had so much more to give us. R.I.P.
I got to meet her in Chicago when a drummer buddy of mine was playing in her band. Unfortunately, I went to hear them after my gig was over and they had just finished by the time I got there. My buddy introduced us and he said, "Ernie is a great local guitar player" and Emily said, "Oh yeah? Let's play!" I didn't take her seriously, but I guess we could've jammed in her lodging or at my place and I'll always regret that I didn't take her up on that. She was really sweet and a cutie to boot! And of course, a great jazz player! I have a couple of her albums I could hear that Wes Montgomery was a big influence, which is not to say she didn't have her own thing. Tragically, she passed away at such a young age, 32 years old. She had so much more to give. R.I.P. Emily.
Thanks for sharing your story!!! R.I.P. Emily Remler
Classic missed opportunity...always jump into the water.
I feel like I just struck gold !
So sad to loose this brilliant guitarist ..!!♡:(
RIP.
RIP Emily
What an absolute treasure this is!
So miss Emily and her remarkable, beautiful muse and playing. Rest easy, angel. 💜
List of tunes and approx time starts.
Moanin' : 1:45
How Insensitive: 13:04
Tenor Madness: 28:02
All Blues: 38:15
Bluesette: 59:40
Black Orpheus: 1:12:22
Yesterdays 1:28:30
Emily’s original tune - 2nd childhood : 1:42:00
Snowfall: 1:47:40
Joy Spring: 1:56:38
So What: 2:04:52
THANK YOU!!
Calling this footage a treasure is not hyperbole. Thank you, Tom, for sharing it. And no reason at all to excuse your playing - both your comping and soloing are spot on. Nice job!
So incredibly Beautiful and incredibly sad at the same time.. One of the all time great guitarists.
Very sad to lose her from her abuse of drugs. Very very sad loss to everyone.😢
This is gold, she was a great player!
but a lib tard tiskkkkk
Thank you Tom, and your playing is wonderful! Emily sounds great here too. The lesson we should all get is to play like it's your last gig, because it just might be. Thank you Emily, Rest In Peace.
I think you are absolutely right your remark about playing as if your life depends on it which IT might VERY WELL MY filosofie is nowadays this every single time I pick up My guitar I start the record button and in this way you always have the maybe genius moment's for if you didn't record it how you'd know that there even is a good moment 🎉😂😮😅
@@nielsanderson4926 then why did she do Heroin? oh yeahhhhh lib tarded
Oh LORD. 😥 My DAD took me to see EMILY at the ol’ musos club in Sydney. I’m a professional muso; l actually spoke with her. We’re both tiny. 😊 We spoke ( she was a sweetheart; & made arrangements to have a jam together. She was found dead 2 days later. I was SHATTERED. For her OF COURSE; & that l missed playing with her. Emily, when l cross, we’ll have that jam. It’s way to sad….. 😔😰
What a treasure! Thanks so much for sharing. Emily pours her soul into her compositions and renditions. So sad she left us at such an early age. Saw her perform in the 80's either in New Orleans or on Beale Street. R.I.P. Emily
Amazing. My favourite jazz guitar player of all time. I learned so much from her instructional videos. Sad we lost her so young.
To think that she died the very next day…such a tragic loss.
Thanks for posting this important recording. She was gifted.
Thank you so much for sharing this treasure.
She was Fantastic! I wish She was still with Us.
Bluesette wowee on the piano transition to guitar and then the guitar and bass together PERFECTO!!
Tom - Buddy! ...Cheers for posting this - so very much, Thank You Dearly.
No apologies to be made for the 'novicicity' (...Cool name for a BeBop tune perhaps!?), ...from your open, you're swingin' Bro' ~
Thanks most sincerely for sharing this sweet little treasure.
I grew up watching George Golla on Aussie TV in the 1960's. I can't remember the TV shows, but George on his Maton (Australian made guitar) blew me away. And in the same way Emily knocked my socks off big time.
Emily, I have just In the last two days found/discovered her.
Gee what a breath of fresh air and illumination to me.
I have only seen one video of Emily's playing. This is priceless.
Thank you for such a gift. She was an unbelievable guitarist. These jazz musicians are incredible also.
What an honor to her memory.
In this life as, in all genera's of music we lose so many way too soon.
For example, Scott Lafaro, Bill'Evans Bass, then Bill, and Chet Baker, sometimes in car accidents, an overdose, other extenuating circumstances. Many others that were not in the music life, but also have been great examples in other areas.
But we have this extradinary massive of legendary of music for all of us to still hear. Thank you so much!!!❤
Oh Yes! She was a queen of jazz guitar! What a talent, her frasers melodical lines and comps she knew it all...
Fantastic performance! Such a tragedy Emily has not been here these last 30 years. She would be only 66 now -- in her prime.
I can't believe it...the day before the tragedy. This is a real piece of history you've shared...thank you for that.
Priceless.
Historical document. Many, many thanks!
This is a treasure.
And your playing is superb.
There will never be another Emily! What a lovely person and musican!!! I was very fortunate to meet her a few times and she exuded warmth and love.
This video is pure gold! It must've been a dream to play with her
I'm in my early 30's, an ex-addict, and an avid guitarist. Emily's story hits home, but this was quite the swan song.
Thank you so much for posting this. Emily was a fabulous musician and great guitar player. sorely missed.
This is why we have UA-cam. Many thanks to the algorithm that brought me here, and to you, Tom.
God Blessed this talented woman and let her share her emotions through her music, just saw this and love it
God is a selfish, heartless SOB, why did it kill her?
Treasure recording. Thank you so much.
Gone too soon. Way too soon. 🙏
We miss you Emily!!....amazing musician!! God keeps you in His glory!!
She is talented lady guitarist. Smooth sound. I got her few albums. Greetings from Jazzman Kuala Lumpur.
This is great.
Great playing, great choice of tunes and, unfortunately, a great loss but our Australian jazz musicians really did us proud here 💖
Tanx for sharing, great playing as always from her
Wow wow wow. Chills. Thanx for posting. Never even heard of her. New fan!! Great band. I feel lucky
Plenty of 'chorus' effect which was heavily popular at this time
Thank you so much ❤
Amazing🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥!
What a geat testimony to that great guitarist Emily was...to see and hear such things make UA-cam the great tool it can be when people use it like that, truly wonderful..Many thanks Tom!
I work from home at a computer and often with music streaming on my personal PC. Usually the music is just for background but in this case the visuals of Emily's fancy fretwork (I'm a guitarist too) proved to great a distraction to get much work done. Wow.
What a beautiful concert.☮
Phucken AWESOME Tom. I wish I was at this concert.
Upsides @ downsides, now , thanks to this
we can "be here now" as many times as you want.
Of course it would be nice if we still "had" her here
but , this is a gift.
I have most of Emily's CDs. I started getting into her music in 1990, a few months before she died. I wish she was still with us.
Thank you so much for this share ! 💖
WonderfuI Mr. Kassai. Great admiration for Mr.EmiIy RemIer and her feIIow musicians this evening and the magic moment you shared. We aII feeI sad for the tragedy . Greets from Wes(t) germany
One of my favourite guitarists. She passed away the day after the concert on the 4th of may 1990 at the age of 32.
So many thanks for this.
Wonderful (yet tragic)! How fortunate am I, that UA-cam's algorithm just suggested this video posting to me, apparently based on my recent video views. And how generous that you posted this video, after keeping it to yourself (and, I'm guessing, to close family & friends) for so many years. May her memory be for a blessing.
I HAVE just discovered Emily Remler and then when I was going to say something nice to her about the fantastic blue bluesy improvisations And then to realize that she's been gone for over 30 years that's A nasty Blow for me why is it people who are the Top of the JAZZ Community of the world 🌎 seem to have to die either from tragic accident's or Heart failure Wat is it does it give the lord some satisfaction to take these wonderful souls away because I guess it's Him the greatest JAZZ fan of ALL IS OUR LORD MAYBE I HOPE SO 😢
I discovered the music of the late Ms. Remler three years ago. She was a great guitarist and musician. Thanks for sharing this concert with us.
This is great! Not much video footage of Emily live, especially a whole show... thank you!
Your playing is very good btw.
I agree, Tom apologises in the description but he (and the others) played so well - great chemistry with such a talented guitarist presumably with not much time together playing as a band
What a diamond. Thank you very much for posting this.... I can't imagine that you played with her and soon heard that she's passed away....
Much appreciated!
Great musical and historical document. Thank you ever so much for posting this.
This is wonderful!-----I saw her perform in Worcester, MA, at the College of the Holy Cross, not terribly long before this, I think.
Wow! Tom, this is so fantastic. Such a sad time. She was such a monster & force. Great footage & nice band too man, K.
Wow! Thanks for posting this!
Thank you so much Tom for sharing this!!! It is wonderful to experience these moments and see Emiliy appear to be so happy and in her element on this night! I grieved a lot back then when I heard she had passed and watching this brings a peace to the whole thing for me..
Outstanding. Thanks so much for sharing. A few days after this remarkable concert I attended her funeral. Miss her terribly.
where was it mate?
@@tomkassai Emily's funeral took place in New Jersey in America. Sad day.
Love this, ty for sharing
Thank you so much for sharing this Tom! Priceless footage! Emely seems to be having so much fun.
Amazing!
That chorus pedal is getting in the way of me really enjoying this..
i know what u mean..
A product of her times. Sime jazz guitarists did that to their tone. But she could seriously play.
Thanks for sharing.
She was already a great player at that time. If she were still alive, she would be one of virtuosos.
Tom--thanks so much for posting this wonderful video of Emily and the band! Very nice solo by the way on the first tune--the rest of the show you sound top notch.
Wow! If this woman's playing makes me feel like this then this woman is definitely not dead, if you know what I mean. Now I have to find more of her stuff. Thanks so much for the upload.:)
1990 was the same year my father passed away. It was after her passing that I found out that we were actually some what neighbors , living near the JFK Airport in Queens, New York , in the US.
Deepest & Fond Regards to memory of Lady E. R. 🙏🏽🌹🙏🏽
Tom, Thank you so much for sharing. This is a "Treasure." I had never "heard" her or "of heard". Sad loss.
Thanks so much for sharing this.
She is the angel with a 335 ❤
Loved the piano on "How Insensitive". Good job, man
Fantastic! Thanks for posting.
Tom a great video - it is great listening to your fantastic "
" novicicity' piano playing....
Thank you very very much! I like this video,good band. my first jazz guitar record is FIRE FLY.
I remember reading about her death in one of the Guitar Mags at the time.
How have I missed this??? Whoever that guitarist is you’re playing with isn’t bad…
Not much video exists of her performing, this is gold!!
Wow! I heard this existed but didn't believe it was real. Thank you for sharing.
thanks for this.
Thank you very much for sharing this sir!!🙏 I had the pleasure to see Emily and Larry Corryell play together in the late 80's at the Northsea Jazz Festival. She played sooo good!
Sad irony that Larry died in his sleep right after playing a gig at The Iridium in NYC in 2017.
@@jefffelderman2409 Oh I didn't know that. Indeed very sad
The North Sea people have been putting up a lot of their videos, I'm gonna look and see if that one's up, if not, here's hoping they put it up
Thanks. This is great.
I love Emily's playing she was a master ❤ it's sad that talented creative artists have a such tragic lifestyles
An album with Larry Coryell is a blast!
Wow
Lovely stuff thanks love you solo in How Insensitive
One of the greats😔☮️❤️✨………….Lefuj
Grandiosa.
I love Emily style!!
ty4 music Em, Tom and crew.
13:04 What a beautiful intro! Reminds me of "The Shape of My Heart" by Sting...I'm stealing this one!!
Just came across her wikipedia when I was looking Wes Montgomery's wiki. Just her picture made me interested. Then I saw that she died at 32 years old. Wow Rest in Peace.
genial!!