You are Freddie Hubbard's daughter? Wow. I didn't know he had kids. But I do know, he is the best Tpt player ever imo. I am just a pianist. Never really dug the horse neigh thing he does sometimes lol, but his harmonic skills and timing are simply genius. If I remember right, drugs got him into a bit of a decline in the end and then the cocky Wynton dared to challenge Freddie's throne. I'm rambling. Anyway, that's cool. Did not know he had children.
Katrina your Dad is a huge part of musical history and always will be. I don't like to compare guys and it's unfair to compare any of these guys like your father to current day players. The 50's and early 60's were my favorite period for jazz. Those guys like your father in their early 20's were the game changers. Another level in my opinion with all due respect to the cats today. I am not putting anyone down btw.
Kat, First of all, as a trumpet player, just getting into jazz, RED CLAY came out and your pops hooked me! His agility, physical “chops,” and ATTITUDE, (Swagger)was PURE ENERGY, exhibiting the most powerfully creative, (harmoniously and rhythmically) musical poetry. I think about him quite often. His style has influenced my style for sure, but his agility was UNMATCHED! He was Art Blakey’s LUCKY find, INDEED! R.I.P. Freddie Hubbard!
Freddie at his best! I'm fairly sure that the pianist is the late, great Kenny Drew, who worked in Europe for many years up until his death in 1993. Kenny, Niels Pedersen and Alex Riel formed the house band at the famous Cafe Montmartre in Copenhagen, Denmark during the 1960s & 70s and often provided peerless, rhythm section support for a long list of visiting top drawer jazz artists.
I saw Freddie Hubbard may years ago at Blues Alley in Washington with McCoy Tyner, and he played like a man on fire!Woody Shaw and Freddie Hubbard are my favorite Trumpet players.
It's actually a Conn 8B Artist model. It's very similar in design to the Constellation (.438 bore), the only difference is it's a lightweight horn with a smaller bell diameter. Freddie, Lee Morgan, & Woody Shaw all played the Conn 8B throughout most of the 60s and early 70s, it's a really great horn!
He's playing a Conn 8B, they are on Ebay often and I designed a newer more intune version called DW A6 by Adams Instruments he's my fav and that's my fav trumpet to play very easy in upper register and endurance, small bore horn .436 as opposed to .459 most horns.
This ABSOLUTELY KILLS! I could thank you a thousand times for posting it, but that would be insufficient. Just posted for a group on Facebook, Jack Walrath's Trumpet Forum. Dig Jazz Trumpet? Come on over! Peace Out.
Wow Katrina i had the shear joy of meeting your dad at Calicchio trumpets in Hollywood. Chris Calicchio said look who's at the door it was your dad and I had just kinda blew Straight Life on a raw flumpet Chris just had found that his grandpa had made. That was 1991. He was before and still is the greatest complete trumpeter ever!
Message to any of the ppl that gave this a thumb's down - you're an ass. RIP FH, my hero, and I'm not even a tpt player. I can't decide what I like better - his low register, his harmonic mastery, or just his stance :-) If you look the word "Hipster" in the dictionary, there is a picture of Freddie.
Hubbard could bop, be a mainstay for not at all out there CTI records, and appear on FREE JAZZ and ASCENSION, avant garde jazz alpha and beta. I discounted the CTI period until I recognized his horn on the abovementioned avant garde clsssics. His horn reminds the listener this isn't as out there as you think, and BIRD was mocked, too, so listen closely. It's the present anchored in the past, and therefore not so NEW you can't dig IT.
@@quinnwalkermusic I just watched a performance of Freddie with McCoy Tyner and Joe Henderson, where he introduced this tune as a tribute to Charlie Parker
My Dad Freddie was 28 playing Here..Like someone said. Man to be Young..And Talented..
You are Freddie Hubbard's daughter? Wow. I didn't know he had kids. But I do know, he is the best Tpt player ever imo. I am just a pianist. Never really dug the horse neigh thing he does sometimes lol, but his harmonic skills and timing are simply genius. If I remember right, drugs got him into a bit of a decline in the end and then the cocky Wynton dared to challenge Freddie's throne. I'm rambling. Anyway, that's cool. Did not know he had children.
I've worshiped your dad since I was 16 years old. I'm 71 now.
Katrina your Dad is a huge part of musical history and always will be. I don't like to compare guys and it's unfair to compare any of these guys like your father to current day players. The 50's and early 60's were my favorite period for jazz. Those guys like your father in their early 20's were the game changers. Another level in my opinion with all due respect to the cats today. I am not putting anyone down btw.
Man, this cat was GONE!
Kat,
First of all, as a trumpet player, just getting into jazz, RED CLAY came out and your pops hooked me!
His agility, physical “chops,” and ATTITUDE, (Swagger)was PURE ENERGY, exhibiting the most powerfully creative, (harmoniously and rhythmically) musical poetry. I think about him quite often. His style has influenced my style for sure, but his agility was UNMATCHED!
He was Art Blakey’s LUCKY find, INDEED! R.I.P. Freddie Hubbard!
I don’t have to hype Freddie’s playing, I just listen and enjoy. Explaining genius is an impossible and meaningless exercise.
Freddie is probably the greatest Trumpet technician ever. Flurries, space notes, melodic lines, he does it all flawlessly.
For me he is best trumpet player in jazz but bass!!!! Maaaan!
I watch this video regularly
Awesome harmonically adventurous rythemically challenging trumpet solo vocabulary, that keeps its audience continually listening, thanks for sharing
Freddie at his best! I'm fairly sure that the pianist is the late, great Kenny Drew, who worked in Europe for many years up until his death in 1993. Kenny, Niels Pedersen and Alex Riel formed the house band at the famous Cafe Montmartre in Copenhagen, Denmark during the 1960s & 70s and often provided peerless, rhythm section support for a long list of visiting top drawer jazz artists.
I saw Freddie Hubbard may years ago at Blues Alley in Washington with McCoy Tyner, and he played like a man on fire!Woody Shaw and Freddie Hubbard are my favorite Trumpet players.
Freddie is so killing here! Some of his best playing here.
It's actually a Conn 8B Artist model. It's very similar in design to the Constellation (.438 bore), the only difference is it's a lightweight horn with a smaller bell diameter. Freddie, Lee Morgan, & Woody Shaw all played the Conn 8B throughout most of the 60s and early 70s, it's a really great horn!
the best trumpet solo ever
He's playing a Conn 8B, they are on Ebay often and I designed a newer more intune version called DW A6 by Adams Instruments he's my fav and that's my fav trumpet to play very easy in upper register and endurance, small bore horn .436 as opposed to .459 most horns.
I enjoy my A6 very much. Thank you 🐬
The Sound,,, the Control.. his Class.
This ABSOLUTELY KILLS! I could thank you a thousand times for posting it, but that would be insufficient. Just posted for a group on Facebook, Jack Walrath's Trumpet Forum. Dig Jazz Trumpet? Come on over! Peace Out.
Freddie made those boys play like they'd never played before!
THIS IS ONE OF MY FREAKING FAVORITE SOLOS OF FREDDIE I COULDN'T FIND IT ON HERE FOR A MIN AND GOT WORRIED. Thanks Alexbjazz for posting
The time is always right for Woody, Freddie, and George Tolliver...
I was 10 years old then. I've been (as a bassist) playing jazz music for 40 years now, but it seems that everything was said by then already.
NHOP is a MONSTER!
On the Mount Rushmore of great blowers.
YEAH!!!! I likes that!
damn... that's a sick trumpet solo! So glad to find this here!
Wow Katrina i had the shear joy of meeting your dad at Calicchio trumpets in Hollywood. Chris Calicchio said look who's at the door it was your dad and I had just kinda blew Straight Life on a raw flumpet Chris just had found that his grandpa had made. That was 1991. He was before and still is the greatest complete trumpeter ever!
FREDDIE!!!
Always blows my mind!!
Wow! Freddie really showing his early chops. No wonder he had such a stellar career. Just powerful stuff!
RAW FIRE. Freddie, you are my hero. Thank you.
I'm glad I saw your comment. I had never heard of Tolliver before but now i'm diggin him!
Alex! this is just sublime thank you
SMOKIN'!!!
3:04 I wish I could play that That it solid platinum Freddie Hubbard
amazing!
Excellent !! Great to see the full version of it. Thank you for posting.
Message to any of the ppl that gave this a thumb's down - you're an ass. RIP FH, my hero, and I'm not even a tpt player. I can't decide what I like better - his low register, his harmonic mastery, or just his stance :-) If you look the word "Hipster" in the dictionary, there is a picture of Freddie.
Awesome Freddie, thanks for the post.
)Uncle Freddie
Freddie is way too good !!
Thanks for posting this!!!!
FREDDIE HUBBARD IS SWAG!!!!!
godlike
If God came down from heaven to play the horn. He came as Freddy. There is no question about that.
Ah Youth...
Modes9 I think you meant to say Charles Tolliver (not George). Charles Tolliver was and still is a great player!!!!!!!
Sure wish his album 'Paper Man' with Herbie Hancock, Joe Chambers, Ron Carter and Gary Bartz would be reissued. Wonderful album.
THE LICK AT 1:31!!!
Who's the drummer? Neils Pederson on bass.
Alex Riel on drums!
If NHØP is in the gang, who could not be better then best.
Does anyone one have any idea what horn freddie is playing in this video ? Please tell me if you know I'm dying to find tis a horn like it>
Rufino Henriquez conn 8B
where is the rest of this concert? please
💙🌾🌱🙄
Hubbard could bop, be a mainstay for not at all out there CTI records, and appear on FREE JAZZ and ASCENSION, avant garde jazz alpha and beta. I discounted the CTI period until I recognized his horn on the abovementioned avant garde clsssics. His horn reminds the listener this isn't as out there as you think, and BIRD was mocked, too, so listen closely. It's the present anchored in the past, and therefore not so NEW you can't dig IT.
he plays masterfully on Out To Lunch
Kenny Drew Osted Pedersen and? Alex Riel?
Is that a constellation he's playing on?
Conn 8B
As of today, 13 people are just "off".
Personnel?
0:58 roy hargrove
Is "birdlike" a homage to Charlie Parker - anyone know?
Tee Gildemeister actually it's Donald Byrd!! Byrdlike!
@@quinnwalkermusic I just watched a performance of Freddie with McCoy Tyner and Joe Henderson, where he introduced this tune as a tribute to Charlie Parker
wyton can you play like this
jay pete irrelevant question. each has his own voice, life's experience, style, etc.
No he Couldn't..
ya and freddie hubbard is better
Freddie is better, and Wynton would be the first to admit this.
Does Freddie play a higher vocabulary in classical and Dixieland than Wynton?... no, but they're wonderful trumpet players, no comparison.
@Funkenstein256 Byrdlike = Donald Byrd
Who is the pianist?
+Larry McRae I think that's tommy flanagan...?
McCoy Tyner
Kenny Drew for sure!
YOUNG McCoy TynerWow!!!
It's Kenny-he squeezes that one lick in.
Doesn't compare with his solo on the album version.
The opening line of the solo is the same tho 😅
quality trash
amazing!