I think Bobby Timmons was the best pianist for the Jazz Messengers. He was that perfect fit. Like so many jazz musicians of the mid 20th century, he left us far too soon.
Along Came Betty, Killer Joe, I Remember Clifford, Five Spot After Dark, Blues March, this tune and lots of others - thank you Benny Golson - in April, '18 - still with us at 89!
Let me add - his pal Curtis Fuller is 83, Sonny Rollins is 87 and Terry Gibbs is 93 yrs old! I know there's other old jazz legends out there and God bless you all!
For someone this is just a comments under jazz video. For me you guys are like family. We never met, but we're all a part of big bebop family. God bless you all.
Thanks for posting Hip performances like this.The music represented here has artistic longevity like great Architecture a treat for the people who know the difference between those who can talk the talk and posers.These Cats are the original Hipsters.
At the Academy, we students loved jazz and our club was called Whisper Not one of the most beautiful jazz numbers by Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers. Composer was Benny Golson! Awesome jazz!.
Bobby Timmons, who wrote "Moanin'" and "Dat Dere", plays a nice solo here. "Several critics have commented that his contribution to jazz remains undervalued." - wikipedia
LIVE AT KURHAUS, SCHEVENINGEN, HOLLAND 19TH NOVEMBER 1958 UMA AULA: AQUI, O ALUNO APRENDE A SENTIR PROFUNDO RESPEITO PELO JAZZ. Bass - Jymie Merritt Drums - Art Blakey Piano - Bobby Timmons Tenor Saxophone - Benny Golson Trumpet - Lee Morgan
For horn players, which feels themselves encouraged to re-play solos: Here, "Whisper Not", from Art Farmer: pubcs.free.fr/jg/jazz_trumpet_transcriptions_jacques_gilbert_english.html#lmorgan
OH- désolé! Pardon... I have this Jazz Icons DVD but I thought it was at the Olympia like the CD that was released around the same time... sorry for the mistake...
hola amigo, en estos momentos que en el mundo no la pasamos muy bien por lo sucedido nosotros acá en peru nos encontramos en cuarentena y necesitamos apoyarte tanto a ti viéndote y en tus vídeos y con mi suscripción y también esperamos que nos apoyes y te suscribas a nuestro canal y apoyarnos de igual manera, ahora mas que nunca que tenemos solo este espacio disponible en estos duros momentos, te mando un gran abrazo y a seguir con fuerza. saludos desde Peru
Answer to your question: the next tune of the set was ‘A Night in Tunisia’. In the intro, three members of the band joined Art Blakey with latin percussion instruments. Benny Golson with maracas, Lee Morgan the clave, Bobby Timmons the campana (cowbell). The campana was on his piano, but he had no stick.- And actually, this video is not from Paris but from Brussels. Of the Jazz Messengers tour in Europe in the end of 1958, with both Benny Golson and (20 years old!) Lee Morgen, several concerts have been recorded and released on CD: two from Paris (at the Olympia and at the Club St.Germain) and one from my own country, the Netherlands (at the Kurhaus in Scheveningen). However, the full concert in Brussels (at the Palais des Beaux Arts, on 30 November 1958) was also filmed by a TV station, something that almost never happened in the US, but Europe had more respect for jazz. But the tape was lost. Some 10 years ago, it was discovered by coincidence. The DVD has been released in the wonderful ‘Jazz Icons Series 1’. It’s great!
Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers, in 1958: On Drums: Art Blakey; On Sax: Benny Golson; On Trp.: Lee Morgan; On Piano: Bobby Timmons; On Drums: Jymmie Merrit. Different Players in 'Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers': Sax: Jackie McLean, Johnny Griffin, Lou Donaldson, Hank Mobley, Benny Golson, Wayne Shorter, Donald Harrison, Bill Pierce, Michael Brecker, Javon Jackson, Bobby WatsonTrp.: Clifford Brown, Kenny Dorham, Donald Byrd, Lee Morgan, Freddie Hubbard, Bill Hardman, Charles Tolliver, Woody Shaw, Terence Blanchard, Valery Ponomarev, Wynton Marsalis, Jean Toussaint, Wallace Roney, Randy BreckerTrb.: Robin Eubanks, Curtis FullerPiano: Horace Silver, Bobby Timmons, Walter Davis Jr., Ronnie Mathews, Cedar Walton, Chick Corea, Keith Jarrett, Johnny O’Neal, James Williams, Donald Brown, Sam Dockery, Harold Mabern, Mulgrew Miller, Ray Bryant, Joanne Brackeen, Geoff Keezer, John HicksBass: Oscar Pettiford, Doug Watkins, Jymie Merritt, Reggie Workman, Lonnie Plaxico, Spanky DeBrest, Reggie Johnson, Charles Fambrough, Stanley Clarke. As far as I know.
Five beautiful, distinguished and talented men performing before an all white audience (at least it appears that way) who couldn’t steep in the same hotel nor eat in the same restaurant. So much beauty molested by so much ugly. Lovely solo, BG!
karl bachfan Benny Golson on sax (and the composer of this song), Lee Morgan on trumpet, Bobby Timmons on piano, Jymie Merritt on bass, Art Blakey on drums, the bandleader.
+jovesheerwater This is a downright silly remark. So pretentious, as if you were spouting some deep wisdom. There is nothing and nobody in this world who is above criticism.
+Sumwun Yumaynotno We are incredibly fortunate to have access to this concert, which shows the band at the peak of its powers, playing a wonderful composition beautifully, and yet you have to let your big, fat ego get in the way. When you look at the ocean, is it too blue for you? Keep your negative subjective remarks to yourself - nobody cares what you don't like about it.
Rest in peace, Benny. Thank you for this wonderful tune.
Art Blakey, Lee Morgan, Benny Golson, Bobby Timmons and Jymie Merritt. Fantastic!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Gracias
horace silver?
Claudio Vernetti is el
Gracias solo me faltaba el nombre del contrabajista
I think Bobby Timmons was the best pianist for the Jazz Messengers. He was that perfect fit. Like so many jazz musicians of the mid 20th century, he left us far too soon.
this just 'made my night' ....
Benny Golson floated like a butterfly 🦋... Sweet.
AWESOME! Every solo sounds like SOMETHING...very beautiful somethings. Such a great era of music. Also I love that little bridge haha.
Classic among classics, best duet ever, Lee Morgan and Benny Golson.
...first time heard with "Blues march" when I was eighteen, I was at vocational high school at Cannes, French Riviera !
Quelle classe ! Quel morceau magnifique, si emblématique du jazz cool !
C'est tellement vrai !
One of the best renditions of this tune fabulous group never tire of listen
n to this
Along Came Betty, Killer Joe, I Remember Clifford, Five Spot After Dark, Blues March, this tune and lots of others - thank you Benny Golson - in April, '18 - still with us at 89!
Let me add - his pal Curtis Fuller is 83, Sonny Rollins is 87 and Terry Gibbs is 93 yrs old! I know there's other old jazz legends out there and God bless you all!
And shout outs to these Hollywood cats - Jack Sheldon -86, and Dick Nash and Doc Severinsen are both 90!
For someone this is just a comments under jazz video. For me you guys are like family. We never met, but we're all a part of big bebop family. God bless you all.
My favorite piece of music ever.
Hay i’m 2024
Es milagroso. Esta grabación es de hace 60 años y no hay en ella desgaste alguno. Una reunión de maestros. Júbilo.
One of the best versions..
Thanks for posting Hip performances like this.The music represented here has artistic longevity like great Architecture a treat for the people who know the difference between those who can talk the talk and posers.These Cats are the original Hipsters.
Superbe ... avec ces musiciens... Lee Morgan ... j'adore
At the Academy, we students loved jazz and our club was called Whisper Not one of the most beautiful jazz numbers by Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers. Composer was Benny Golson! Awesome jazz!.
Awesome great!
Thank you Luis Miguel Casal
Thanks Jonathan Zielke
Lee Morgan's Solo Starts: 1:09
Great performance. I think the best version of this classic.
My god...what playing, what a tune, what a group !
Blakeys cymbal hit right before golsons chorus' make it super eerie
The smile that comes on Art face when benny soloing
😂
As students we had a Jazz dispute that was called Whisper not! Benny Golson composed it and Art Blakey and his Jazz Messengers played it awesomely!
Great song
3:32 softly as in a morning sunrise quote. yes....
Bobby Timmons, who wrote "Moanin'" and "Dat Dere", plays a nice solo here. "Several critics have commented that his contribution to jazz remains undervalued." - wikipedia
Magnifique solo, en effet.
Clean. Amazing.
LIVE AT KURHAUS,
SCHEVENINGEN, HOLLAND
19TH NOVEMBER 1958
UMA AULA: AQUI, O ALUNO APRENDE A
SENTIR PROFUNDO RESPEITO PELO JAZZ.
Bass - Jymie Merritt
Drums - Art Blakey
Piano - Bobby Timmons
Tenor Saxophone - Benny Golson
Trumpet - Lee Morgan
The band includes two of my favorite unsung muscians Lee Morgan and Bobby Timmons
I was just thinking about how little I hear about Lee. Trumpet players love him obvs, but I rarely hear him from others
one of the greatest earlier jazz records!
R.I.P. Benny Golson 🎷
Thank's for sharing, lionja46! Still one of THE top-interpretations for me.
For horn players, which feels themselves encouraged to re-play solos: Here, "Whisper Not", from Art Farmer: pubcs.free.fr/jg/jazz_trumpet_transcriptions_jacques_gilbert_english.html#lmorgan
From Bobby Shew: www.jazztrumpetsolos.com/solo.asp?soloist=BobbyShew&Solo=WhisperNot
The way Morgan is quoting Spongebob at 1:33 is pure genius.
Benny Golson was one BAD A++ composer. So melodic
This will always be my favorite lineup of the messengers. Shame that Bobby and lee died young.
RIP Benny Golson 🙏 xxx
Thanks for sharing 🎶👍
wow! look how young lee morgan is!
Enjoying this masterpiece while cooking some njami food
God bless Philadelphia and the Moanin' Band.
les messengers sont toujours aussi bons !
These guys are the coolest of the cool
why would anybody dislike this?
Rip Benny Golson😢
I heard this in a documentary on the Situationist International.
Same here
A classic Benny Golson tune. Lee Morgan and Benny Golson play the melody here with the rest of the Jazz Messengers.
2:18 and at the beginning of Chorus piano player plays SINISTER chord... then lays out
rest in peace benny golson
Great sound.
Paris, Olympia Theatre! Merveilleux.. Joyeux...
Yes, merveilleux ! But not Paris. It is Brussels, Palais des Beaux Arts, 30 Nov 1958.
OH- désolé! Pardon... I have this Jazz Icons DVD but I thought it was at the Olympia like the CD that was released around the same time... sorry for the mistake...
Jazz at it's best!
really like it
Can someone help me? At roughly 2:34 the tenor plays a lick, and it reminds me of a song, but I can't remember what it is.
Epicpants ryummy I think it reminds you of the song MOANIN' from that album by Blakey and it's Golson who plays on that song too.
Leader Art Blakey!
Grazie
Morceau qui m’a fait découvrîtes le jazz en 1959
Lee Morgan:
Solo: 1:09
1:24 ⭐️
B: 1:43
A2: 1:59
Benny Golson:
Solo: 2:16
Does anyone know why Lee make signs to Jymie at 3mn10s ?
Good question !
DeGrate1896 Merci, DeGrate 1896.
I appreciate it.
MichaelJ/Michel, de France.
I think he is asking Bobby Timmons if he is going to take a solo after Benny Golson
hola amigo, en estos momentos que en el mundo no la pasamos muy bien por lo sucedido nosotros acá en peru nos encontramos en cuarentena y necesitamos apoyarte tanto a ti viéndote y en tus vídeos y con mi suscripción y también esperamos que nos apoyes y te suscribas a nuestro canal y apoyarnos de igual manera, ahora mas que nunca que tenemos solo este espacio disponible en estos duros momentos, te mando un gran abrazo y a seguir con fuerza. saludos desde Peru
Good Morning Josh Evans
Very smart.
Any idea why Benny takes a drumstick at the end of the tune and gives it to the pianist?
Answer to your question: the next tune of the set was ‘A Night in Tunisia’. In the intro, three members of the band joined Art Blakey with latin percussion instruments. Benny Golson with maracas, Lee Morgan the clave, Bobby Timmons the campana (cowbell). The campana was on his piano, but he had no stick.- And actually, this video is not from Paris but from Brussels. Of the Jazz Messengers tour in Europe in the end of 1958, with both Benny Golson and (20 years old!) Lee Morgen, several concerts have been recorded and released on CD: two from Paris (at the Olympia and at the Club
St.Germain) and one from my own country, the Netherlands (at the Kurhaus in Scheveningen). However, the full concert in Brussels (at the Palais des Beaux Arts, on 30 November 1958) was also filmed by a TV station, something that almost never happened in the US, but Europe had more respect for jazz. But the tape was lost. Some 10 years ago, it was discovered by coincidence. The DVD has been
released in the wonderful ‘Jazz Icons Series 1’. It’s great!
I love you mirii wirii mdr
@@logebrink Thank you! The spirit of Phil Schaap appreciates your info.
Est-ce Benny golson qui a inventé le son "smooth" ? Formidable !!!
The great Bobby Timmons at the piano!
My prefered version of Whisper Not.
Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers, in 1958: On Drums: Art Blakey; On Sax: Benny Golson; On Trp.: Lee Morgan; On Piano: Bobby Timmons; On Drums: Jymmie Merrit. Different Players in 'Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers': Sax: Jackie McLean, Johnny Griffin, Lou Donaldson, Hank Mobley, Benny Golson, Wayne Shorter, Donald Harrison, Bill Pierce, Michael Brecker, Javon Jackson, Bobby WatsonTrp.: Clifford Brown, Kenny Dorham, Donald Byrd, Lee Morgan, Freddie Hubbard, Bill Hardman, Charles Tolliver, Woody Shaw, Terence Blanchard, Valery Ponomarev, Wynton Marsalis, Jean Toussaint, Wallace Roney, Randy BreckerTrb.: Robin Eubanks, Curtis FullerPiano: Horace Silver, Bobby Timmons, Walter Davis Jr., Ronnie Mathews, Cedar Walton, Chick Corea, Keith Jarrett, Johnny O’Neal, James Williams, Donald Brown, Sam Dockery, Harold Mabern, Mulgrew Miller, Ray Bryant, Joanne Brackeen, Geoff Keezer, John HicksBass: Oscar Pettiford, Doug Watkins, Jymie Merritt, Reggie Workman, Lonnie Plaxico, Spanky DeBrest, Reggie Johnson, Charles Fambrough, Stanley Clarke. As far as I know.
anyone know why Golson is handing Timmons a drum stick at the end?!
The very next tune in this concert is Night in Tunisia and the horns and Bobby play percussion. Here: ua-cam.com/video/ADWODreyby0/v-deo.html
That’s right.
2:47 jonah hill spotted in the audience
wow :)
Five beautiful, distinguished and talented men performing before an all white audience (at least it appears that way) who couldn’t steep in the same hotel nor eat in the same restaurant. So much beauty molested by so much ugly. Lovely solo, BG!
Benny sounds like Lester Young sometimes... Touching... ^^
+Afawk Touhaml So true. Love that breathiness.
Who is who in this excellent performance?????
karl bachfan
Benny Golson on sax (and the composer of this song), Lee Morgan on trumpet, Bobby Timmons on piano, Jymie Merritt on bass, Art Blakey on drums, the bandleader.
+Gabriel Lecluyse Thanks to Ron Sunshine for listing the names of the performers.
magia pura
does someone knows how the fuck lee does it at 1:59?
🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
entero zarpao el tono del pana golson
Bach can be proud !
?
Mmmmm I love that Morgan!
Mes amis.
Lee morgan Oh my god...
bobby timmons got shafted with no applause after his solo. feels bad man
Lee Morgan was a musical god and anyone who disagrees should jump off the end of a pier .
Quel super musicien que Lee Morgan! Par contre j'aime beaucoup Benny Golson comme compositeur mais moins comme improvisateur
Debord...
Yup
pk ya que des anglais ici chui le seul francai srx?
oyen le RatJeux nn
Ba non t pas seul 😂😂😂
...& here's the True Thing...
Great band, terrific soloists, intriguing tune by a great composer (sax player Benny Golson) - but played too slowly.
+Sumwun Yumaynotno There are no buts in music.
+jovesheerwater This is a downright silly remark. So pretentious, as if you were spouting some deep wisdom. There is nothing and nobody in this world who is above criticism.
+Sumwun Yumaynotno We are incredibly fortunate to have access to this concert, which shows the band at the peak of its powers, playing a wonderful composition beautifully, and yet you have to let your big, fat ego get in the way. When you look at the ocean, is it too blue for you? Keep your negative subjective remarks to yourself - nobody cares what you don't like about it.
The music is played too slow, what an objective critisicm there buddy, not pretensious at all
WhatEVER!! Played by the composer...you like it or not. I LOVE it!