+Dricka Van Sant Hey fvs: I'm so glad you like this. He's a rare musician that was playing at the Halifax Jazz Festival this summer. Brought down the house! FR
@bokarabo I agree! It's as though the director of photography and editor got together and said "this isn't fun enough, upbeat enough, we need to make it come alive..." Clearly an example of more-is-less. I'd rather see one set camera than all of this fast cuts, the silly stage lighting... This music can stand quite well on its own. The editing reminds me of when people film Le Cirque du Soleil or a modern dance performance and try to "choreograph" with the camera & editing. Ouch!
@EricThe12ABee Who asked the cameraman and editor to "keep up with the music"? Who needs them as a metronome?! Their job is to document the music and let the audience(TV, DVD, UA-cam) enjoy the music for what it is. If you need an example of what I am talking about: go to see Le Cirque du Soleil live, then watch one of the videos of their shows. The videos can not compare: they do many camera angles, fast cuts, editing all over the pace, as though they are trying to re-make the performance.
The left hand. The left hand. Remember this all young enterprising Jazz pianists. If your dominant hand is your right, tie that hand behind your back and make that left hand as strong as your right hand. Oscar Peterson used to stress that quite often. Don't become a one-handed pianist. You'll be amazed at what accomplishments you'll achieve.
@ThePauljcurreri I agree with you. The editing is waaaaay too much, too often, really distracting and fails at adding "creativity" to a musical act that is really quite perfecto as it is. As they say, if it's not broken... don't fix it.
Great playing, but it's tiresome with different camera shops every 1.5 second! Let us see the musicians longer please. The clipper had too much coffee that day.
KICK ASSSSSS MIKE!!
Love the feeling.
First saw Micheal in 1995 playing in a pub in Victoria, was very good even as a 15 yr old
He didn't come to Canada until he was 18.😅
@@davewightman8699 1:47 1:49
My sentiments exactly - you just saved me the trouble of writing MY thoughts! You should see this guy in person!!
there's nothing like seeing this artist performing live!
A genius musician worth the attention of everyone that likes music.
Farley...google found me with this...thanks...it is fabulous. In fact it made a so so day great. I played it twice.
Your big cousin fvs
+Dricka Van Sant Hey fvs: I'm so glad you like this. He's a rare musician that was playing at the Halifax Jazz Festival this summer. Brought down the house! FR
LIKE, WOW! WHAT ENERGY AND SO REFRESHING, GREAT
Stupendous performance!!!!!!!!
Thank you for posting.......!!!!!
Go see him live if you can, great concerts!
the piano part is INSANE!!! wow!!! sounds awesome. i wish i could play that!
Thank you for posting!!!
Bravo..enjoyed Michael performance at the Paraolympics ....
Nice song and great piano playing!
🎉❤
This stuff is TIGHT! Yea!
i want to see him live!!!!!!!
Like Totally WOW
@bokarabo I agree! It's as though the director of photography and editor got together and said "this isn't fun enough, upbeat enough, we need to make it come alive..." Clearly an example of more-is-less. I'd rather see one set camera than all of this fast cuts, the silly stage lighting... This music can stand quite well on its own.
The editing reminds me of when people film Le Cirque du Soleil or a modern dance performance and try to "choreograph" with the camera & editing. Ouch!
@EricThe12ABee Who asked the cameraman and editor to "keep up with the music"? Who needs them as a metronome?!
Their job is to document the music and let the audience(TV, DVD, UA-cam) enjoy the music for what it is.
If you need an example of what I am talking about: go to see Le Cirque du Soleil live, then watch one of the videos of their shows. The videos can not compare: they do many camera angles, fast cuts, editing all over the pace, as though they are trying to re-make the performance.
Bravo! When will all tracks be available from the Glenn Gould Night?
@bokarabo Just glad I don't have epilepsy. It's making my head spin.
Outstanding music, but the constant changing between camera angles becomes grating. Makes you want to throttle the editors....
The left hand. The left hand. Remember this all young enterprising Jazz pianists. If your dominant hand is your right, tie that hand behind your back and make that left hand as strong as your right hand. Oscar Peterson used to stress that quite often. Don't become a one-handed pianist. You'll be amazed at what accomplishments you'll achieve.
Left is his dominant hand, so he's got the jump on lots of others. Still terrific though.
Any one know who the drums and bass players are? Thank you
Marc Rogers on bass and Mark McLean on drums :)
@@lesleypike Really Marc Rogers? Looks bit like him, but ee is 1/2 this size now.
@ThePauljcurreri I agree with you. The editing is waaaaay too much, too often, really distracting and fails at adding "creativity" to a musical act that is really quite perfecto as it is.
As they say, if it's not broken... don't fix it.
Great playing, but it's tiresome with different camera shops every 1.5 second! Let us see the musicians longer please. The clipper had too much coffee that day.
patton oswalt on bass
great - only that he is n o t playing relaxed - should listen to Silvan Zingg a bit - just to also learn to enjoy his own music.......