Комментарии •

  • @eyeswideopen935
    @eyeswideopen935 Год назад +22

    🙏When giants walked on the Earth🙏

  • @ahmaniel
    @ahmaniel 3 года назад +169

    Watching Elvin Jones and his wild polyrythmic performance at work is a great gift.

  • @keiitikawai2747
    @keiitikawai2747 6 лет назад +101

    Dolphy is amazing..

    • @sanyatyr
      @sanyatyr 6 лет назад +11

      Two Giants together! Dolphy was absolutely non standart thinking player with extraordinary feel of music. Coltrane was kind of musical philosopher and sage of jazz.

    • @Jiv_Ing57819
      @Jiv_Ing57819 3 года назад +3

      Es better than trene ,: 0

    • @raulmacias1311
      @raulmacias1311 3 года назад +5

      Quote by ERIC DOLPHY ~ "My greatest fear?
      No, it's not death because it's inevitable and it will happen to everybody sooner or later.
      But yes, I fear God. I love God."

    • @raulmacias1311
      @raulmacias1311 3 года назад +3

      Quote by JOHN COLTRANE ~ "May we never forget that in the sunshine of our lives, through the storm and after the rain ~ it is all with God ~ in all ways and forever."

    • @raulmacias1311
      @raulmacias1311 3 года назад +7

      @@sanyatyr I can only imagine how Eric Dolphy would have sounded on the latter Coltrane albums such as "A Love Supreme" and "Meditations".
      After the untimely death of Dolphy, Eric's parents gave Coltrane Dolphy's Bass Clarinet as a gift!
      Coltrane plays it briefly on "The Father, The Son And The Holy Ghost."

  • @theox8276
    @theox8276 Год назад +45

    Eric really nailed it. He was the link between Free and Hard Bop. Simply unique.

  • @raulmacias1311
    @raulmacias1311 3 года назад +71

    Quote by JOHN WILLIAM COLTRANE ~ "My music is the Spiritual expression of what I am, my faith, my knowledge, my being."
    Quote by ERIC ALLAN DOLPHY JR. ~ "Music is like the wind. You don't know where it comes from and you don't know where it went. But, once you hit that note, it's over with.
    So don't put on some earphones and start trying to analyze everything that you play cause it's over with.
    It's gone."

    • @jeanhodgson8623
      @jeanhodgson8623 Год назад +1

      It's sad that John's faith was not in the Lord Jesus Christ. He never got saved. What was said in connection with "A Love Supreme" is rubbish.
      "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved." (Acts 16:31)

    • @cemardayakut3486
      @cemardayakut3486 Год назад

      @@jeanhodgson8623 yeah sure you know better than he did. Islam or Christianity, what difference does it make? They are both bullshit. But John Coltrane being a muslim, christian, buddhist or whatever it is, does not reduce my love and respect to him and to his music. So cut the crap and try to enjoy something, loser.

    • @nealluczkiewicz6846
      @nealluczkiewicz6846 Год назад +5

      @@jeanhodgson8623 You cannot know anyone else's heart or mind. I would guess you mean well but was it not Jesus Christ who advised "Judge not lest he be judged."
      What we THINK is someone else's fate is unknown and practically none of our business.
      Isn't it difficult enough to keep our own soul in life
      line?
      I do not think it was kind, nor wise, to call another human being's spiritual expression "rubbish."

    • @aeyeq
      @aeyeq Год назад +5

      It is sad to read the ramblings of a religious extremist.

    • @nealluczkiewicz6846
      @nealluczkiewicz6846 Год назад +1

      @Thierno Athie Exactly.
      Religion, in its' purest sense, or perhaps best sense, should be an indication towards God.
      The Names may vary but
      ultimately all the rivers of religion should flow to the
      GREAT truly un-nameable,
      unknowanlble OCEAN of the ONE Creator.
      Just an opinion.

  • @jupiterlegrand4817
    @jupiterlegrand4817 2 года назад +55

    Let's not forget McCoy. His chord voicings and angular soling makes the whole sound of Coltrane's band at the time.

    • @GjaP_242
      @GjaP_242 Год назад

      Stuart Nicholson - OCTOBER 21, 2021
      Along with Coltrane and Coleman, Eric Dolphy played a significant role in influencing the development of the avant-garde in jazz in the late 1950s and early 1960s. He featured on Coleman’s seminal Free Jazz from 1960, and toured and recorded extensively with both Mingus and Coltrane.
      Source: Jazzwise
      Great. Access the source and read the full article. 4:26

    • @henrym.7858
      @henrym.7858 Год назад

      M.Tyner continued the tradition as best as he could with a number of excellent small goup and big band performances.

  • @raulmacias1311
    @raulmacias1311 3 года назад +228

    It's not widely known that Coltrane and Dolphy would listen to birds singing and would transcribe the notes and incorporate them into their Improvisations!

  • @joeyfloress1131
    @joeyfloress1131 3 года назад +180

    Dolphy’s brain is so flipping incredible- he knows exactly what he’s playing. Those aren’t just random notes and he’s not just flopping his fingers around aimlessly.

    • @emilianoturazzi
      @emilianoturazzi 3 года назад +10

      it's quite evident... same for lots of other players (Ornette, Ayler, Braxton...)

    • @gabriellprophete5081
      @gabriellprophete5081 3 года назад +1

      Damn I'm not the best play then cause it sound like there is no purpose for the notes

    • @Rickriquinho
      @Rickriquinho 2 года назад +4

      Dolphy always plays the same thing independently of the composition!

    • @gabriellprophete5081
      @gabriellprophete5081 2 года назад +2

      @@Rickriquinho but why that so like bad

    • @Rickriquinho
      @Rickriquinho 2 года назад +5

      @@gabriellprophete5081 Because this is not a style, it is a poor and repetitive manner. Dolphy was a talented man but free jazz ruined his career.

  • @davissinclair4945
    @davissinclair4945 Год назад +20

    These guys right here are some of the greatest musicians EVER.

  • @JoeyvanLeeuwen
    @JoeyvanLeeuwen 2 года назад +52

    I can't believe I never knew that this video existed. Sometimes just seeing John's face brings tears.

    • @GjaP_242
      @GjaP_242 Год назад +5

      2:47
      While most of the other “free jazz” players sounded very serious in their playing, Dolphy's solos often came across as ecstatic and exuberant. His improvisations utilized very wide intervals, a variety of nonmusical speechlike sounds, and its own logic.
      Dolphy's impact resulted largely from his brilliant playing of not only alto saxophone but also flute (then uncommon in jazz) and bass clarinet (which he virtually introduced into jazz improvisation).
      Sources: Blue Note Records; Britannica

    • @DPOWER222
      @DPOWER222 Год назад +1

      I know! Listening to the Trane crew makes me cry with joy!!

    • @tomgeorgearts
      @tomgeorgearts 3 месяца назад

      'Trane was on another plane.

  • @pappymartinlegacyjazzcolle4534
    @pappymartinlegacyjazzcolle4534 2 года назад +12

    BLACK CLASSICAL MUSIC!

  • @SwingMASA
    @SwingMASA 2 года назад +26

    This bassist is not Jimmy Garrison!
    This bassist is Reggie Workman!

  • @luiszuluaga6575
    @luiszuluaga6575 2 года назад +26

    I listen to a lot of people who play saxophone but the beauty of listening to someone like Trane is that his sound is instantaneously recognizable within the space of one bar.

  • @postpunkhah
    @postpunkhah Год назад +22

    Crazy to think this was 1961. Sounds so fresh and modern! And just think of all the moribund pop music that was happening during this same time period, by comparison. WOW!

    • @gtripmusic2906
      @gtripmusic2906 10 месяцев назад +2

      This music sounds like outer space compared to what pop music sounded like in 1961

    • @james-jg8iu
      @james-jg8iu 9 месяцев назад

      That’s Bebop

  • @efroncal
    @efroncal 5 месяцев назад +4

    I forgot how good Eric Dolphy was...

    • @AMEER-114-
      @AMEER-114- 5 месяцев назад

      How about a month and day ?

  • @raulmacias1311
    @raulmacias1311 3 года назад +12

    This was THE JOHN COLTRANE QUINTET!

    • @GjaP_242
      @GjaP_242 Год назад

      The RUclips algorithm selects videos for viewers with two goals in mind: finding the right video for each viewer, and enticing them to keep watching. 5:00 [Hootsuite]

    • @brucescott4261
      @brucescott4261 Год назад

      raul macias ...John Coltrane Quartet with guest artist Eric Dolphy.

  • @ice-iu3vv
    @ice-iu3vv 3 года назад +85

    coltrane died at 40, dolphy at 36, charlie parker at 34. if they had each lived and played until the age of 70, that would make 100 additional years of their music. (210-110) they barely PLAYED 45-50 cumulative years. so there would be 3 times as much of their art . man. jazz history would be unimaginably deep at that point. it would be very very sax heavy too.

    • @jabu003
      @jabu003 3 года назад +3

      at least till 50

    • @T.Ramby11
      @T.Ramby11 3 года назад +12

      Definitely tragic but at least we were still lucky enough to be blessed with a considerable number of recordings from all three. Coltrane in particular was incredibly prolific. The amount of music he recorded in just the ten-year period (1957-1967) from when he first recorded as a leader to the day he passed away is astounding.
      But you’re right. It would have been truly amazing to see all the places their music would have gone had they lived longer.

    • @skineyemin4276
      @skineyemin4276 3 года назад +11

      Which was why Sonny Rollins was chosen to be one of the last of the true great ones standing, then, actually retire from playing completely as of 2014. He is currently 90 years old.

    • @cocoonecoco
      @cocoonecoco 3 года назад +4

      They are still playing, but for different audience! Hope even better than ours!

    • @mananaadamia1657
      @mananaadamia1657 3 года назад

      Yes

  • @raulmacias1311
    @raulmacias1311 3 года назад +20

    Eric Dolphy took the Alto Saxophone into the stratosphere!

  • @froggdanger
    @froggdanger Месяц назад +1

    Eric Dolphy's abstract phrasing is like sonic cubism (Picaso's abstract painting style). Amazing!

  • @cgmmv
    @cgmmv Год назад +5

    Dolphy was one of a few friends of Coltrane. Coltrane was often isolated; only Dolphy opened Coltrane's hearts and minds.

    • @minoru3140
      @minoru3140 Год назад +1

      Friends mean reliable close friends.

  • @spensert4933
    @spensert4933 4 месяца назад +5

    Fucking height of music in the 20th century.

  • @alexandernoethiger5338
    @alexandernoethiger5338 2 года назад +5

    audio quality is impressively good

  • @ericjurgens6976
    @ericjurgens6976 2 года назад +27

    Masters of their craft at the top of their game. Tyner, Garrison, and Jones were peerless players, and Dolphy could match 'Trane's intensity and power.

    • @jamesclawson3118
      @jamesclawson3118 2 года назад +4

      That's right. This quartet at a peak, and Dolphy is the perfect fit.

    • @0SW13
      @0SW13 2 года назад +6

      in this instance it is reggie workman on bass, playing some utterly magnificent lines. he can also be heard with this group on "ole" and some of the village vanguard recordings. it is interesting to compare him with garrison - especially on such an emblematic tune as 'impressions' - workman utilises a wider and more fluid octave range but plays less chords than garrison does, also garrison is more melodic and tuneful to my ears

    • @MahavishnuProject
      @MahavishnuProject Год назад +2

      Reggie Workman on bass, actually.

  • @frankdavino7187
    @frankdavino7187 2 года назад +12

    The swing of Elvin Jones here is something to to hear and see along with the fine clean performance of Sir Coltrane....

    • @davissinclair4945
      @davissinclair4945 Год назад

      You can here his influence in Mitch Mitchell's playing with Jimi Hendrix.

  • @stanmenshic8993
    @stanmenshic8993 3 года назад +34

    My God a dream team of Dolphy & Coltrane, 2 of the finest musicians/composers ever in any genre & both lives cut tragically short ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

  • @bobsabin
    @bobsabin 3 года назад +20

    Reggie Workman on bass!

    • @PAOComposer
      @PAOComposer 2 года назад

      I knew that it did not look like Jimmy Garrison.

  • @superdiscount100
    @superdiscount100 3 года назад +12

    I'm a trumpet player and both these two make we wanna take up sax lol

  • @DPOWER222
    @DPOWER222 3 года назад +14

    Everybody is extraordinary 💙🖤🌻👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

  • @PepperWilliams_songcovers
    @PepperWilliams_songcovers 2 года назад +12

    Coltrane is crying so good! His tone alone is worth GOLD!!! And Elvin (Mr Poly-rhythmic)i s definitely my favorite intense drummer. He listens to EVERYTHING! McCoy and Jimmy unbelievable!~ Eric Dolphy.....a true ORIGINAL in every sense of the word! The Thelonius Monk of the alto sax. This video is an instant classic....History in the making!!!

  • @hugo888888888
    @hugo888888888 5 месяцев назад +4

    The death of these two giants was an irreparable loss for humanity.

    • @jeffstevens9729
      @jeffstevens9729 9 дней назад

      I hear you man but they did a TON of stuff while here with us.

  • @kenlenga9298
    @kenlenga9298 Год назад +9

    I love Reggie Workman with this group as much as Garrison... he and Elvin are so crisp here

  • @raulmacias1311
    @raulmacias1311 3 года назад +6

    The John Coltrane Quintet!

  • @mananaadamia1657
    @mananaadamia1657 3 года назад +7

    I love 💝 John Coltrane

  • @jaswmont
    @jaswmont 6 лет назад +37

    Reggie Workman on bass

    • @Jiv_Ing57819
      @Jiv_Ing57819 3 года назад +1

      Is Reggie ,: 0

    • @renvicjack628
      @renvicjack628 3 года назад +1

      right 🔥🔥🔥🔥✨💖💖

    • @858jc7
      @858jc7 3 года назад

      Reggie is locking it down!!!

  • @Robbover
    @Robbover Год назад +5

    Jazz at it finest! I wished I could go back in time and give these guys a hug... Much Love and Respect

  • @billfletcher7602
    @billfletcher7602 3 года назад +12

    Love this video so much. Happy birthday, Eric Dolphy!

  • @jt1929
    @jt1929 Год назад +6

    Eric Dolphy is amazing!!❤️

  • @milton112
    @milton112 3 месяца назад +1

    “Free” = You can take the grove where you want and everyone will follow.

  • @johnrobinsoniii4028
    @johnrobinsoniii4028 3 года назад +5

    I heard Trane on records and CDs, but this is the FIRST time I saw him play on video.

    • @brucescott4261
      @brucescott4261 Год назад

      John ROBINSON III ...Perhaps you weren't even born then.

  • @aaronalter2000
    @aaronalter2000 Год назад +3

    Correction on the bass player. It was Reggie Workman, not Jimmy Garrison.

  • @bjburb8334
    @bjburb8334 Год назад +24

    So to me this illustrates well the difference between these guys. Dolphy is a master of phrasing and transposing and his MO is to roll out a round of awesome improv, retreat back to his home base riff, plan his next move and do it again. You can hear it in almost everything he does. In Out to Lunch, he loosens that a bit and scratches at free jazz.
    JC, on the other hand almost never does that, except on some blues numbers. He does not do licks. He plays a melody, (or a raga) then it's related scales for a few rounds, and then barrels on to explore it in a different way, with some twisting, inverting voicings..... and then does it again and again. No retreat to anything like a home or repitition, just endless exploration of versions of the melody that he hears in his head, or that he discovers in real time. No pausing for him either, perfectly seamless.
    He is the rarest of artists for this reason. Also, he was not just a conceptual artist. His musicianship, technique and craft was at the top of the heap.
    Long live John Coltrane.

    • @michaelg3074
      @michaelg3074 Год назад +1

      Yes.
      What you said.

    • @timcardona9962
      @timcardona9962 5 месяцев назад

      Well said. Dolphy seems to do this a lot less when he's on Flute or Bass Clarinet, where his phrasing and note choice is more interesting to me.
      Softly from The Illinois Concert is one of my favorite Dolphy solos for this very reason: no stock licks at all

  • @leebraun4100
    @leebraun4100 2 года назад +4

    This is perhaps one of the greatest collaborations musically ever.My goodness.Everyone was on the exact same wave reaching out into the farthest region of the musical heavens.African American modern music otherwise known as jazz. There is no music it's equal. None!

    • @scamli
      @scamli 2 года назад

      Hear hear!

  • @jameswebb4593
    @jameswebb4593 2 года назад +4

    I am an old long time Jazz fan , for what its worth , Coltranes best work was with Monk , Brilliant solo's , Dolphy's solo here is virtually the same as his on Mingus Presents album ,playing " if Sigmund Freuds Wife was your Mother " . But Eric can best be listened too with Booker Little , Mal Waldron "Live At the Five Spot " . three volumes .

  • @dimitrimoliavko-visotzky381
    @dimitrimoliavko-visotzky381 2 года назад +3

    Incredible and beautiful Dolphy!

  • @TheJarotevil
    @TheJarotevil 7 месяцев назад +1

    The best Quartet ever + Eric Dolphy 🤯🤯🤯

    • @AMEER-114-
      @AMEER-114- 5 месяцев назад

      How about a month and day ?

  • @afrigal2420
    @afrigal2420 20 дней назад

    still love it!!

  • @davissinclair4945
    @davissinclair4945 Год назад +4

    4:00 - Look at Elvin's right hand changing over to straight 8ths on the snare drum while he keeps that swing with the ride. That's polyrhythm. There aren't many modern drummers I've seen that have that kind of independence and discipline on the drum kit. Maybe Neil Peart.

    • @canalrandom7912
      @canalrandom7912 6 месяцев назад

      Those aren't straight 8s, these are quarter note triplets

    • @davissinclair4945
      @davissinclair4945 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@canalrandom7912Meant his left hand on the snare.

    • @canalrandom7912
      @canalrandom7912 6 месяцев назад

      @@davissinclair4945 I know

    • @JohnDoe-me9jh
      @JohnDoe-me9jh 3 месяца назад

      ginger baker

  • @albertbrown359
    @albertbrown359 2 года назад +2

    This music these musicians are way out there and all together as one.My Lawd what a great people you have Created.There is no music more cerebral than African American modern music.

    • @samrobinson2454
      @samrobinson2454 Год назад

      I agree, but would say "that was the case ever since jazz and blues began to appear." Every step of the way has been innovative and grew organically from what preceded.

  • @haysfordays
    @haysfordays 3 года назад +5

    I used to have this in the 80's on a Japanese import VHS. Had subtitles during the interviews. It had another later performance of Impressions with Jimmy Garrison and no Dolphy. Supposedly Trane was tired for that taping and it doesn't have the same energy. But Trane on an off day is maybe like a hydrogen bomb instead of a nuclear one.

  • @EuphoricImpact
    @EuphoricImpact Год назад +3

    So pleased to have access to this.
    Thank you for sharing!!
    Subscribed...and looking forward to exploring your channel.

  • @KnocheChristof
    @KnocheChristof 2 года назад +7

    Looks to me like that's Reggie Workman on bass.. Great video!

  • @anthonyfischer2408
    @anthonyfischer2408 2 года назад +4

    Amazing...there's so much going on here that time actually stands still (for me). I hear each man's entire life up to that point...and then realize the clip is on 6:57 long. Thank you for the journey to the artistic side of the brain.

  • @ricvossen
    @ricvossen 3 года назад +2

    Impressions is the first tune I have ever listened from John Coltrane !

  • @dariusmolark6820
    @dariusmolark6820 3 года назад +5

    brilliant. just fabulous!

  • @deniscleyet-merle3136
    @deniscleyet-merle3136 Год назад

    Incredible footage. Thanks for posting!

  • @WillsJazzLoft
    @WillsJazzLoft 20 дней назад

    This is splendid to see the two of them together in what is obviously a very rare performance. Thank you for posting

  • @shkyrbty
    @shkyrbty 2 года назад

    Oh, wow.....thank you for the upload.

  • @alexseago9937
    @alexseago9937 3 года назад +5

    Incredible

  • @kwootamuckbear9294
    @kwootamuckbear9294 2 месяца назад

    The mode all can’t hear to understand…Dolphy gets the edge here🎶🎵🎶🎵🎶🎷

  • @jasonpfinch
    @jasonpfinch Год назад +1

    Incredible stuff, thanks.

  • @michaelg3074
    @michaelg3074 Год назад

    Thank you for this post

  • @Jiv_Ing57819
    @Jiv_Ing57819 3 года назад +4

    Great 2 see this again ,: 0 👍

  • @tonytony1035
    @tonytony1035 2 года назад +4

    Stunning video. Thank you so much for posting. I'm currently obsessing on McCoy Tyner, but Coltrane is always nice to hear.

  • @ypolchenko-freejazz-guitar
    @ypolchenko-freejazz-guitar 3 года назад +4

    amazing record! they play as if today and talk of today. magic

    • @adbl.d6324
      @adbl.d6324 2 года назад

      well, there is Olé. That’s the band, just not credited as such. Dolphy represented by the name George Lane due to contractural restrictions.

  • @neilmedina6096
    @neilmedina6096 5 месяцев назад

    This is so amazing!!!!

  • @pahoehoe
    @pahoehoe 6 месяцев назад +1

    Elvin's drum technique is insane

    • @AMEER-114-
      @AMEER-114- 5 месяцев назад

      How about a month and day ?

  • @georgesember9069
    @georgesember9069 7 месяцев назад

    Thanks for posting this simply legendary music!!

    • @AMEER-114-
      @AMEER-114- 5 месяцев назад

      How about a month and day ?

  • @freejazzbone
    @freejazzbone Год назад

    thanks for sharing!

  • @user-tn3tn8bd1p
    @user-tn3tn8bd1p 7 месяцев назад +1

    E・ドルフィのアルトサックス、サイコーコルトレーンカルテットもいいし大好きな作品です。🎉🎉🎉

    • @AMEER-114-
      @AMEER-114- 5 месяцев назад

      How about a month and day ?

  • @bubajazz
    @bubajazz 2 года назад

    Wow! What a piece!

  • @alfredoechevarrieta7512
    @alfredoechevarrieta7512 2 года назад

    Muchas gracias !!

  • @jonnybeck6723
    @jonnybeck6723 Год назад

    This is the band that defined avant garde and with Eric added just made it so insane
    Thanx for posting (!)

  • @engineel19
    @engineel19 3 года назад +1

    Most powerful and timeless

  • @babaolatunji
    @babaolatunji 4 месяца назад

    Thank you!

  • @JosephHuether
    @JosephHuether 5 месяцев назад

    This quintet was perfection!

    • @AMEER-114-
      @AMEER-114- 5 месяцев назад

      How about a month and day ?

  • @jakemkultra
    @jakemkultra 5 месяцев назад

    Thanks!

    • @AMEER-114-
      @AMEER-114- 5 месяцев назад

      How about a month and day ?

  • @raulagarcia4744
    @raulagarcia4744 2 года назад

    Music from this world to the next!

  • @brunoghezzi5957
    @brunoghezzi5957 2 года назад +6

    Trane felt his music was created for doing good; likewise Dolphy. I believe the world would be a better place if each of them had lived another 20 years.

  • @johndickson8405
    @johndickson8405 Год назад +1

    Thanks for this! I love all these guys and I never knew this existed!…and for the producer that thought it would be cool and artsy to film Dolphy through the erector set……points off!

  • @user-gd8td5pr7b
    @user-gd8td5pr7b 3 года назад +2

    경쾌합니다 타악기가 신명나게하네요

  • @tapiceriaautomotorjazz
    @tapiceriaautomotorjazz Год назад

    Tremendo, explosión total y genialidad inigualable

  • @nightfish0101
    @nightfish0101 Месяц назад

    ドルフィーが凄すぎる。まさに魂の解放。
    Eric Dolphy is too amazing. A true liberation of the soul.

  • @claudiocerioli729
    @claudiocerioli729 Год назад

    Togliamoci il cappello di fronte ad un quintetto così, chapeau

  • @kaljic1
    @kaljic1 3 года назад +2

    Hipnotic!

  • @jazzorphin
    @jazzorphin 11 месяцев назад +2

    This is not Jimmy Garrison on bass, Reggie Workman replaces him here. Fantastic video. Frankfurt/Germany 1961 ?? Thanks for posting!

  • @MrHochette
    @MrHochette 3 года назад +1

    yesss !!!!

  • @StephenGrew
    @StephenGrew 3 года назад +2

    Very Power Full

  • @franciscorodriguezbarrient247
    @franciscorodriguezbarrient247 Год назад

    Lo que se dice un line up de súper lujo...

  • @strangersname
    @strangersname 3 года назад +2

    Pure pleasue

  • @colaoutlaw8271
    @colaoutlaw8271 2 года назад +2

    Reggie Workman is workin'
    !

  • @cyprianpakua1451
    @cyprianpakua1451 2 года назад +2

    2:46 Dolphy 🙏

  • @user-cw6qc8ch7u
    @user-cw6qc8ch7u 2 года назад +3

    素晴らしい!

  • @TheMaurob1979
    @TheMaurob1979 Год назад

    wow..legends

  • @MikeL-7
    @MikeL-7 2 года назад +1

    Sick.

  • @MrHochette
    @MrHochette Год назад

    Que des génies !!!!

  • @alexrottlaender3891
    @alexrottlaender3891 3 года назад +2

    sounds like reversing a VHS tape playing that fast

  • @user-kf5uy8no3u
    @user-kf5uy8no3u 2 года назад +4

    correction bass : Reggie Workman not Jimmy Garrison.

  • @Massimo898
    @Massimo898 5 месяцев назад

    WOW!!!

  • @Navroze
    @Navroze 2 года назад

    All asters at their very best.. seven stars

  • @CamiciNera-17m
    @CamiciNera-17m 3 месяца назад

    💎