I listen the modern piano players and many of them have excellent technique and chops but they lack what so many of the masters have..real soul and feeling. Buds ability and expression puts him on another plane and raises the level of the melody and changes
Bud Powell influenced many of the great jazz pianists including Bill Evans. Evans said “If I had to choose one single musician for his artistic integrity, for the incomparable originality of his creation and the grandeur of his work, it would be Bud Powell. He was in a class by himself” - Bill Evans
The second tune that Bud plays here is a amalgamation of two of his compositions: the "A" part is from "Monopoly", and the Bridge is from "Marmalade", respectively Tracks 5 and 4 of his 1958 album "Time Waits".
Oh yes indeed Ronald ! See him playing , hi express with body and soul....i adore this short video , two wonderful piece , just heavenly....G'day ! I wish you all the best . Cheers !
notice how he rarely if ever looks down at the piano, and every part of his body is almost motionless except for his arms and fingers (not hands or wrists). No one will ever beat Art Tatum or Oscar Peterson for technical perfection, but there's a reason why people considered Bud an unmatched virtuoso, and that's on display for only a fraction of a moment here. This man is playing almost entirely by touch, ear, and intuition.
I listen the modern piano players and many of them have excellent technique and chops but they lack what so many of the masters have..real soul and feeling. Buds ability and expression puts him on another plane and raises the level of the melody and changes
Bud Powell influenced many of the great jazz pianists including Bill Evans. Evans said “If I had to choose one single musician for his artistic integrity, for the incomparable originality of his creation and the grandeur of his work, it would be Bud Powell. He was in a class by himself” - Bill Evans
I can feel his soul. Something I don't feel with many other pianists.
After the abuse he had in his life , it’s amazing he could play at all. What an extraordinary talent he was .
It's truly wonderful to see any footage of Mr. Powell, especially one that captures his playing so eloquently. A true genius.
Unfortunately, this is Powell far past his prime.
The greatest of them all. Modern jazz piano would not exist, as we know it, without him.
So amazing, what dedication this man had and all the obstacles he faced to produce beautiful art at such a high level.
What a magic moment. So clean and melodic. Love Bud.
Amazing !!!
He was like a cross between Monk and Tatum. Great stuff.
The second tune that Bud plays here is a amalgamation of two of his compositions: the "A" part is from "Monopoly", and the Bridge is from "Marmalade", respectively Tracks 5 and 4 of his 1958 album "Time Waits".
Thanks Marcello for the precision.
あ、ほんまですね!Thema部がMonopolyで、サビ部がmarmaladeです
。気付きませんでした、。どうも、ありがとう。Thank you!
A very Monkish tune indeed!
Bud Powell is actually the second best composer of Monkish tunes ever. There are many!@@jamesperry2322
@@marcellomentasimonsennico5670 are you referring to Monk or is there someone else?
A jazz genius completely dedicated to his art. G’day folks & Cheers!
Oh yes indeed Ronald ! See him playing , hi express with body and soul....i adore this short video , two wonderful piece , just heavenly....G'day ! I wish you all the best . Cheers !
beautiful bud
This channel is such a hidden gem.
i"'m glad you like it.
Love this so much! He’s a genius!
If you listen closely you can hear some chord resemblance with him and Monk. They were close friends
In fact, Bud's version of "Sweet & Lovely" is very reminiscent of Monk's recorded version for Prestige in 1952.
@@jamesperry2322 good ears my man!
And monk even went on this play this solo piano on his album solo monk in the early 60’s. The mutual influence is fascinating
What a great musician and pianist that influenced so many pianists such a shame that he had such an unhappy life
Who said that there is justice in this life ?
He really was...well...amazing
notice how he rarely if ever looks down at the piano, and every part of his body is almost motionless except for his arms and fingers (not hands or wrists). No one will ever beat Art Tatum or Oscar Peterson for technical perfection, but there's a reason why people considered Bud an unmatched virtuoso, and that's on display for only a fraction of a moment here. This man is playing almost entirely by touch, ear, and intuition.
Good observation 👍🏼
彼の使う和音が素晴らしい。
Incredible
Quote from They All Laughed in his solo over Napoli Swing I believe
Love this ♥️♥️♥️♥️
Genio.
Sounds like Monk who followed him in places also maybe both roots in Joplin or Tatum?
he was a student of Monk. they were good friends
4:11 - 4:16 gotta transcribe this
❤
❤❤
👏👏👏👏🥰
Such concentration with those goons in the background up in his face with video cameras
Those are film cameras. They wouldn't be doing that with a classical pianist!
Was the crowd complaining about the photographers? Around 5:45 they start whistling.
Left leg on the damper.
Michel Petruciani used also left leg :)
He liked to turn his body out when he played
🎉
👍
動画は
初めて
今年
パウエルCD
大量購入
楽しい
blues guitarist
今年70才
齊藤基一
JESUS IS THE WAY TRUTH AND THE LIGHT IN THE NAME OF THE FATHER THE SON AND THE HOLY SPIRIT IN JESUS NAME AMEN
How does he do that ?
5:50 I hear The Bud.
Swing napoli?!
anyone have the name of the photographer or where the photos from this festival ended up?
Jean PIerre leloir was one of them www.kapandji-morhange.com/lot/25939/5815715-charles-mingus-et-bud-powell-f
People sleep on Bud Powell
Со своим чёрным бесом разговаривает во время игры. Круто.
monk-ish!
Too bad they couldn't find him an in-tune piano. Seeing how it was a, uh, Jazz Festival."
It is notoriously difficult to keep a piano in tune outdoors, and I suspect this is outdoors.
カラー映像😂
Too bad he's playing on such a lousy out of tune piano....and who is that stupid photographer that walks right up to him while he's playing!😮