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Kay
Добавлен 28 авг 2013
Видео
Sonja enjoying a bit of sport.
Просмотров 311 месяцев назад
Sonja, a beautiful kitten, plays with her box and her game.
Sonja helps make the bed by hunting lunps
Просмотров 14Год назад
Sonja helps make the bed by hunting lunps
Jazz Legends in Their Own Words Documentary
Просмотров 53 тыс.2 года назад
Jazz Legends in Their Own Words Documentary
Jazz DJ Dick Buckley doing what he does best
Просмотров 1152 года назад
Dick Buckley in the WBEZ studio announcing "the good ol' good ones". A true radio legend.
Eldersburg Elementary School - Playground fun ~ 1984
Просмотров 1742 года назад
Eldersburg Elementary School - Playground fun ~ 1984
Resonance
Просмотров 93 года назад
A moment of impromptu chanting and intoning in an old grain storage shed in Tamil Nadu, near the Gingee fort.
A drive through greater Coimbatore, TN
Просмотров 1126 лет назад
A drive through greater Coimbatore, TN
Radio Faces
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.9 лет назад
1989 - WTTW production examining the business and culture of radio in Chicago. Some personalities featured include: WGN 's Bob Collins, WGCI's Tom Joyner, WBEZ's Dick Buckley, WXRT's Terry Hemmert, students programming music radio at Northwestern University's WNUR, and WLUP's Steve Dahl, Gary Meyer, Kevin Matthews, and Jonathon Brandmeier. I do not own this show and am sharing entirely out of n...
funny juxtaposition at 9:17 where he says louis is the first great jazz soloist while playing a recording of louis recreating king olivers dippermouth blues solo note-for-note
Sorry to be a pain but ANY chance you can sort out the Stretched-Out video to widen & make it a correct perspective, please? Thanks!
Wow! A whole documentary on jazz and not. mention of Billie Holiday. Incredible.
😅 miss Bob
So much incredible talent! So many God given gifts for all of us to enjoy forever!
I'm glad this video ended with Ella Fitzgerald. When she sang "The Man I Love" I recalled one of the reasons why I like her so much. She starts the song sounding like a young girl and then her voice turns throughout the song to expose a deeper tone. I am often surprised by her voice and that's why it has appeal. Such sophistication.
Ppl 7mm 😊hy909
Love ❤️
Thank God Lord Fcuknuckle didn’t have the last say!!
That's hilarious!
NOTICE HOW THEY REFUSE TO CALL BLACK JAZZ AFRICAN AMERICANS GIFT TO THE WORLD
What the hell are you talking about, this whole documentary is showing black artists' gift to the world
Thanks for sharing ❤I am impressed
Great! Education, entertainment and therapy converge in this great documentary. Thank you.
It's nice to see Count Basie has lost weight, or is it the wrong aspect ratio?
I loved this! I loved them all, but really Love the Count. For some reason the songs with Sinatra sound so much better to me with Count Bassie.. Duke was great too(senimental mood), but really loved the personality of the great Cab Calloway. thank you for posting this.. I'm probably one of the few at my age into this era compared to my counterparts.. keeny G is great, but I prefer the older stuff including Coltrane and Miles.. thank you again for putting this up for us. Jazz needs a resurgence in my opinion.
I’m with you on the Count. In my mind his 60s album “Straight Ahead” is the greatest Jazz big band album ever !
@@DavidMScott-cs8pp Thank you for your response.. I'll pay more attention to it..
I remember being 4 or 5 years old, sitting in the hallway with my record player (my parents had to get me my own, as I would get up in the morning progressively earlier and earlier to put records on THEIR Hi-Fi), dropping the needle in the same spot, over and over, listening to the middle break-down of Basie's "Blues in Hoss Flat". It swung so hard and it felt so good to me. I knew it was something special.
SIMPLY THANKS TO ALL responcible for this posting. John❤
Very very very good. Brother Louie Armstrong broke my heart I don't believe white people made him I believe his mama and his daddy made him and his talent made him. Sad to see he felt that his oppressors not all the most are the things that made him.
To fully understand Pops' comments requires exploration of his childhood. That said, Google an ABC "Nighjtline" piece about his personal tape recordings. He was no Tom. He cared deeply about black people. Love the BBC footage, but it lacks context and perspective relative to Armstrong.
ruclips.net/video/zAfKwEneFfg/видео.htmlsi=6Ss7_W7RC0D1fgZq
Yes, very good! Today we sometimes call them sponsors. Armstrong was referring to who had the money/connections to get him where he was and who sustained him in 60s and 70s. Check out "Mo Betta Blues" (Spike Lee), reference about Black People in general not supporting Jazz, especially Armstrong's style during the 60s and 1970s. Interesting NOTE : 31:10 was an inside joke with Duke holding the chart, making fun of Hodges, because Johnny could hardly read music (I heard in another documentary).
Well worth watching this and for most of us, learning more about the wonderful jazz that offers deep pleasure to so many. Playing jazz is even better, and so varied - try it if you can. Your life will be enhanced man.
Great.
This was cool to watch! When I lived in Northwest Indiana in the early 1980s I used to listen to WGCl and WBMX , and in later years started listening to news radio stations like WMAQ and WBBM in Chicago! Thanks for sharing this video!