"Scrapple From The Apple" Stan Getz, Gary Burton, Steve Swallow, Roy Haynes. (1966)
Вставка
- Опубліковано 6 жов 2024
- "Scrapple From The Apple" compsed by Charlie Parker.
Stan Getz, tenor sax,
Gary Burton,vibes,
Steve Swallow,bass,
Roy Haynes,drums.
London 1966.
This clip was uploaded in accordance with the fair use clause for educational purposes only.
Gary's solo is incredible! He's only 23 ???!!! Geeezz... These guys were all great.
Did you listen him at 33 , and at 43 , try at 53.
My parents took me to see this band when I was 13 years old, the first concert I ever went to. I still remember the personnel to this day and was surprised to see this clip pop up on UA-cam. Totally blown away.
Fine music, relaxed, vituoso and SWINGIN' !
I love the little bashful look Stan gives Roy when he inadvertently steps on one of Roy's drum breaks when they're exchanging "fours". You can even hear Stan say something to Roy or make a little exasperated sound at his mistake as he looks back at Roy. 6:20.
We were all blown away with this young kid on vibes , who had a special musical gift. Stan play Birds bridge on the head! This was history, right in front of our eyes! On the fours, Stan kept going!!! So funny!
As long as the bassist has his eyes closed, this ship will make it across the widest sea unscathed. On the other hand, if he's got 'em open and looking around, frantically, for a fire extinguisher, or submachine gun, or Pokemon on his portable, then batten down for foul weather!
Just in case you didn’t know or remember that Steve Swallow is a fully formed jazz bassist in every respect, right up there with Carter, Haden, Holland, Gomez, et. al.
en el panteon de los grandes, peacock por ahi creo...
Great band. Roy Haynes really sets a fire. Appreciative audience too! As usual the Europeans do us the great cultural service of actually filming it. America was too busy with rock n roll to bother I guess.
Thank God for their appreciation and documentation of this music. Same goes for the Japanese.
Each player was stratospheric, almost beyond belief.
Steve Swallow on the big bass. I thought he had always played electric bass. Very young Gary Burton, playing great as always. Haynes sounds great too. Good performance.
He picked up the electric bass in 1970 at a trade show. I think this was the pre-NAMM era. Gary Burton's band was one of Steve's early steady gigs on electric bass as he lost some work when he made the switch. One of his most ardent supporters was the drummer in this clip - Mr. Roy Haynes. He's still with us as of this writing - he's 96 and was, at least as far as I know, still playing! Steve is still playing a ton - with much output being with John Scofield. Gary Burton recently retired.
@@christophercharles9645 Thanks for all the info! I recently read Gary Burton's autobiography and thoroughly recommend it. It's well written, laugh-out-loud entertaining as well as thoughtful.
I love the jazz from that period!
the fuckin vibes comping for Swallow's solo!!!! I love that so much haha
Beautiful note for note bridge, the original solo by Charlie Parker. Getz showing he truly was a student of Parker. Not a copycat, a student.
Roy Haynes,💯💯💯💯💯💯
Sublime stuff all around. Met Steve Swallow in the early 80s when he was one of the instructors at a jazz workshop. One of the nicest guys you'd ever meet, and full of encouragement for everything the young students were trying to do.
Steve Swallow BEFORE the metal pick!
Great part of history since this group never recorded a 'proper' album that showed how great they were. Read Burton's autobiography for great insight and wonderful anecdotes.
This was one of the episodes from the BBC Jazz Goes To College Series. For a long time it was assumed that the videotape had been erased along with most of the others from the same series. However it hadn't and was shown on BBC Channel 4 a few years ago.
w/Charlie Parker's original bridge....
the way it should bw
@@atleyking2086 Why? The bridge was improvised by Parker anyway, so why should it be reproduced?
@@srrlIdl Because it's part of the original. For all we know the A section was also improvised.
@@silva777 The A part wasn't improvised. Miles Davis and Parker played it together unison :) Parker improvised the B part on his own, and in every version he played it differently.
A gem. Interesting to see Roy haynes already had all that stuff of his going on then even.
This is from 1966, Roy Haynes had all that stuff going even 20 years before this bro 👍
Gary Burton; a fountain of creativity.
Steve Swallow unrecognizable
Ignácio Ito On the other hand, Gary Burton is VERY recognizable, haha. Kinda funny how his young self in this vid and his current self look exactly the same, except with a few wrinkles. He aged very nicely.
CLASSIC Roy Haynes!
love those Ludwigs (especially the Superphonic 400 snare) and the Bee Bop Jazz Great Roy Haynes
Gary Burton is immense!
What can you say other than GLORIOUS!. Stan is my musical genius, no one graced an instrument better and what a superlative accompaniment he has with him, WOW!.
Incredible. Love the vibes.
..awesome performance, appreciate your upload!..around 2.00, Getz plays that killer lick he drops 💧 on the Getz/ Gilberto album cut Doralice I believe, he loves to lean into those blues lines with more force for dynamics..jazz lives..stay safe and stay strong..New York May 21, 2021..
Came across this looking up Roy Haynes. Absolutely brilliant! Thank you for posting. Four mighty fine musicians.
Wonderful... ❤️❤️❤️❤️ Stan Getz....
The sound Getz!!!!
Gary Burton, WOW!!
Unbelievably great solo by Gary Burton!
The old style Stan!
rather serious matter for student audience, quartett on stage very talented young men,
must all go on in showbusiness !! dancing 'BBC-four' - label upleft also very tasteful ---
a year later, when burton formed his own quartet, he took steve swallow with him as his bassist and got larry coryell for lead guitar....
Very 'modern' Stan Getz here. Great version.
Beautiful!
it's funny to see Burton putting down his 4th mallet for the solo. he didn't do that in the 70s and afterwards. Also, his soloing style changed completely in the following years. great video to see the evolution of a genius of the instrument.
Stan Getz was a great saxophonist.Thank you to whoever posted this and other videos.
Musical talent at its finest
Thank you for posting, fantastic!
This is golden!
That was an amazing performance!!!
Looks like a small venue---how nice!
Steve Swallow tried out a bass guitar out of curiosity in the early 70s. He liked it so much he stopped playing acoustic upright and still plays bass guitar to this day.
Muito chique!
Baby face Burton!
Superb
Mercy!!!
Society isn’t making anyone like this today.
That kicked ass :)
No, your eyes are not deceiving you. That was John Cleese on bass, doing a special favor for Steve, who had an emergency dental appointment that day.
Was it Coltrane that said, "Everybody would play like Stan Getz if they only could?"
Cuatro grandísimos en el universo del Jazz de los 60!! Cuando todavía Steve tocaba el contrabajo que luego lamentablemente dejaria para pasar a tocar el bajo electrico😐
Amazing!!
Toen was ik 2 jaar oud, Gary Burton legt "ballaststok" weg in rechterhand!
that frame stabilization is funny as hell
So Jazzy even the BBC Four logo can't keep still
Great stuff. Not sure I've seen Gary stash the fourth mallet for soloing (but use for comping and the head). Maybe he did something in the young days...
Very 'modern' Stan Getz here. Haynes drumming is great as usal. Great version overall.
I like how Burton looked like a hippie in another video
excellent rhythm section
A bunch of geniuses
Rien que ce thème par Getz, c'est deux jours de taf. et le solo , une semaine, mais c'est le prix à payer.
Awesome!!!
wonderful l
Is there a cd of this gig floating around? maybe a bootleg? or released? Man this stuff is so good!
ua-cam.com/video/TNeV7O_IgzI/v-deo.html
❣️💚🙂
7:06 boy that’s trippy
Steve Swallow was better on upright than electric.
I don’t agree. And neither does he. Each to his own....
meu Deus!!!!!!
Roy Haynes is still playing drums !!!
YAY
Steve Swallow has gigantic hands!!!
Got to to play such an unwieldy instrument
i submit directly ;)
I think at this point of his career, Stan was more inventive but less sensitive that at the end, but it's only my feeling.
gary burton, 23 y.o.... fuck o.0
1:43
that flat note 😬
I m looking fro transcription solo from Stan Getz or dexter gordon, someone knows where to find it?
Why is the screen shaking? Really a great video though.
It appears they, for some reason, used the stabilization option when they were editing this. Can't understand why the original would need shots stabilized.
Sadly swallow doesn’t play upright anymore, never really much liked his electric tone 😢
mmm
mmm
This doesn't seem to be one of Stan's greatest moments.
Awful camera man
Getz is a giant, far superior to Coltrane for instance.
That's two absurdly unsupportable opinions you've posted.
@@stefanmichaud2007 They are not opinions, it's criticism.
@@Rickriquinho If it's not a matter of objectively demonstrable fact, it's opinion. Critical opinion, and unfounded.
@@stefanmichaud2007 If you can't see the objective qualities of the musicians, dear amateur, what can I do?
@@Rickriquinho You can STFU because you're clearly an idiot.
Gary Burton is just a scale maker not really a soloist...
You are revealing your lack of ears, sir...
@@ivoryconsort The fact is that you can't see Burton's problems, dear amateur.
Noisy drumming
Burton's style is boring...
why?
Raef Black Because he only has technique. He is not a real soloist. Listen to Hutcherson or Jackson to see the difference.
Ricardo da Mata
Okay , I see where you are coming from and won't disagree with you. Thanks for answering the question.
he was just 23 there... he got really better as he aged.
welcometomygrave He is still boring nowadays.