Terry Gibbs & Buddy DeFranco - "Giant Steps"
Вставка
- Опубліковано 17 жов 2024
- Terry Gibbs (vibes) and Buddy DeFranco (clarinet) at Joe Segal's Jazz Showcase, Chicago, July 1987. With John Campbell (piano), Todd Coolman (bass), and Gerry Gibbs (drums). "Giant Steps" composed by John Coltrane. Video by Richard Bock. Audio by Timothy R. Powell, Mark Harder, Isa Helderman, George Horn.
Two great artists. I so much appreciate videos like this
Buddy Defranco was the greatest jazz clarinet player on the planet!!!
R.I.P. Mr. DeFranco and thank you for some fabulous clarinet playing.
ua-cam.com/video/aAZLIzBdFE4/v-deo.htmlsi=Ora_yayh6OH0BnCt
I just watched this three times in a row...Terry Gibbs floored me with that solo, I need to listen to more of this guy
R.I.P. Buddy and thanks for leaving us something to aspire to.
Buddy de Franco. One of the best.
What a Great Musician.
Tremendous players! RIP Buddy - none finer! Terry is a monster! Saw him at The Village Lounge at Disney in the late 70's and it was mind bending! Harvey Lang was the drummer on the house band then. Another guy who was amazing! Jazz is certainly not dead, but it's getting harder to find the real thing. Used to be able to hear Doc and the NBC Staff on Carson every night! Won't find anything resembling that on a TV "house gig" anymore! But if you do, let us know!
Fuera de serie, súper músico y todos los que tocan con Buddy
Yes...
Joe Segal's Jazz Showcase (Chicago) provides the intimate setting that makes the music work. The video is fine, but it's Tim Powell's first rate sound mix that captures the music that lets us enjoy it as if we were there.
Piano player John Campbell really knows how to "hang", very sweet solo
Great playing!
The Great KId from Camden!! WOW!
Great.........
Well worth a look and listen.
What makes a piano sound like that? I'm talking about the timbre of the piano... Anyone knows? I love this sound
Very very Great
Album-"A Little Chicago Fire" 1987
grandi musicisti
John Campbell!! Woo.
Buddy was the ONLY hero that I ever had! Mort Weiss SMS JAZZ "The Mort Report" @ All About Jazz
musical !
Not too fond of the way they play the theme; too much west coast - but boy, what solos by de Franco and Gibbs!
Buddy de Franco was the father of bebop clarinet - and I think he is still the best.
I might be too young (although I doubt it), I don't get, "too much west coast".
Jazz drummer here from childhood, went to music school, and write for horns.
What exactly do we mean when we say, "West Coast", heard it all my life, but still don't get it.
I'm only interested in "Fat Horns", and Contralto through mid-range blues singing "Front Ladies".This example is the exact opposite of that, or anything like that.
However, I Love Terry Gibbs, knew I was hooked after hearing "Nose Cone" on an LP I inherited.
Please explain "West Coast" to a man that has no interest whatsoever in anything that doesn't involve "Fat Horns", out front bass/drums, dead weight stops, and hard swing.
Every other iteration of popular music is totally dead to me, unless the ballad or folk of course.
If it's all about happy cords, not interested either.
Is Johnny Otis the template?.......... If so, I'm lovin' the so-called "West Coast Movement", but still don't understand what the hell "West Coast" stands for.
White cats not playing funky! Mort Weiss
It's a catch all term for the way the L.A. scene players, in particular the white guys played bop in the 50's, and arranged their versions of standards and bop tunes. Basically, not as fast or hard driving as NYC/ East Coast based players. In this , about , the melody, he is referring to the floaty, lyrical phrasing on the head/melody resembling the arrangements done around LA at that time. The way Chet Baker and Gerry Mulligan did "all the things you are", or a thousand other 50's early 60's recording by the Lighthouse All Stars. Listen to "witch doctor" with Chet Baker. The horn arrangement is typical.
You simply have to listen to their music and compare it to what was coming out of NY at the time.
You have heard of the internet and Google and UA-cam?
Use it, and learn ya lazy bum, if youse wanna know what "West Coast Jazz" is.
@@Johnnycdrums
that's a short, dismissive and not very entirely correct answer.
listen to this. Chet and the boys playing pretty funky. ua-cam.com/video/K-6U7XbLGbk/v-deo.html@@mortweiss3151
@@MarkTarmannPianoCheck_it_out ; O.K., it's a "thing".
Of all the clarinetists, Buddy was one of the most boring and predictable.
Please, don’t be so ridiculous… Buddy DeFranco is the greatest clarinet player of jazz history. His style is very original, his technique is perfect, he is full of ideas, and very profound when he plays a ballad.
Your observation is so shallow and incorrect I can't be bothered to answer.
John Perks Amateurs...
Oh no, Mr. Perks is a professional - at stirring up trouble, then coming back at any reply by asserting that the replier is too stupid and ignorant to be worth arguing with. I once made the mistake of trip-trapping over his bridge, but I won't make that one again.
A very silly analysis, sunshine. We're not all shallow egoists like you, you know.