Till Brönner on his Journey from Classical Music to Jazz | Parallels & Paradoxes Part 1/2

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
  • In part 1 of this series of "Parallels & Paradoxes", Till Brönner explains to Daniel Barenboim his journey from Classical Music to Jazz and the differences between those two genres. Together they explore the role of the trumpet in Classical Music & Jazz.
    ► All episodes of "Parallels & Paradoxes" can be found here:
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    "Parallels & Paradoxes" brings Daniel Barenboim face to face with a grand variety of representatives from different disciplines of art. Through debating a wide range of topics and diving deep into an interdisciplinary discourse, multiple parallels and paradoxes between arts, philosophical standpoints and the understanding of music, are elaborated.
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Комментарии • 29

  • @annedwyer797
    @annedwyer797 6 лет назад +5

    I recently heard Wynton Marsalis express that same sentiment about "everyone knowing instantly if you play a wrong note" when you're a brass player. He too said it's the thing that bonds classical and jazz musicians. It would be a treat to listen to a conversation with Wynton and Daniel Barenboim!

  • @andreaskonig451
    @andreaskonig451 6 месяцев назад +1

    As some commentators mention Winton Marsalis - who is great: watching Till Brönner here with Barenboim is wonderful. Brönner has been one of the most gifted contributors to Jazz and Jazz trumpet playing over the last decades. He’s is absolutely on par with the great Marsalis :)

  • @theimprovisor
    @theimprovisor 5 лет назад +3

    I think Music is just one since the dawn of time. Of course there are different idioms, like dialects, but the grammar beyond is always the same.
    What I think is changed by the time is how composers and players treat the dissonance, or, the tension and release if you like. As time goes by tension being held for more time probably because ears became more tolerant to it.
    Improvisation is born with music way before the idiom of Jazz brought it to life again. All great composers where improvisers, Scarlatti, Bach, Mozart, Chopin just to name a few, you name it.
    They where teachers, composers, interpreters, players, in one word they were real musicians. Youn can analyze Charlie Parker's solos and find the same lines Bach wrote, just with some "Jazz" accentuation.
    Then something bad happend: careers were separated.
    Improvisation, as well as playing by ear, became forbidden in the "academic" world. Damage done.
    To be an improviser, a real one, not a pattern player, you need to be a composer and develop some quite fine technical skills because you can't choose the best fingering, or have the chance to "erase" what you've played. In other words you don't wake up in the morning and decide to become one. Hard work behind the scenes.
    An improviser can't look for perfection, he looks for something unique he never heard or played before.
    Don't be caged by the plethora of labels market created for their own interests. There's only one Music: the bad one and the good one.

  • @FredHMusic-gr7nu
    @FredHMusic-gr7nu 7 лет назад +6

    I was once a full on classical guy but then I did a Level 3 Extended Diploma in Music where I was thrown into the world of pop, rock and jazz. I play saxophone and piano. 2 years later, my favourite artists are not just Beethoven and Liszt but also Pink Floyd, David Bowie, John Coltrane, Miles Davis, Owl City (Adam Young) and Alexander Rybak just to name a few. I believe that in today's society, only swimming in the classical pool simply isn't enough to sustain a strong musical career. I know many classical musicians who look down on almost all other forms of music because "it isn't quality art". It's highly dangerous to say because it makes you blind to the many more ways of writing a symphony besides using an orchestra and 4 movements.

  • @santiagomartinez4579
    @santiagomartinez4579 7 лет назад +5

    This conversation is amazing, it would also be nice to have Wynton Marsalis

    • @annedwyer797
      @annedwyer797 6 лет назад

      I second that opinion!

    • @annedwyer797
      @annedwyer797 6 лет назад +1

      In case you're interested: an interview of Wynton Marsalis and Simon Rattle on the premiere of Wynton's "Swing Symphony" with the Berlin Philharmonic www.digitalconcerthall.com/en/concert/339#watch:339-3

  • @horaciobottino6383
    @horaciobottino6383 5 лет назад +1

    Gran representante de la Patria grande Latinoamérica ,no solo de Argentina

  • @chakaalakak
    @chakaalakak 7 лет назад +3

    Still very young!

  • @pabloslender
    @pabloslender 6 лет назад +2

    Tremenda entrevista! Gracias máster!

  • @nikt7883
    @nikt7883 7 лет назад +1

    Cyprien Katsaris improvised. Hopefully more will have the courage.

  • @leonardoiglesias2394
    @leonardoiglesias2394 Год назад

    I dont understand. In the 80s you went to Saturn and you could buy ANY jazz recording you wanted or needed. ANY.

    • @andreaskonig451
      @andreaskonig451 6 месяцев назад

      But not necessarily in Bonn, right? - and not all of the records in the store in Cologne if I remember correctly :)

  • @tommasomarino1575
    @tommasomarino1575 7 лет назад +2

    You are fantastic Daniel Barenboim

  • @borotosic189
    @borotosic189 7 лет назад +1

    What a shame to write Haydn as "Hayden" in the EN subtitles!

  • @manuelgonzalezp.1098
    @manuelgonzalezp.1098 7 лет назад +2

    Grande Daniel

  • @mariaamparo7100
    @mariaamparo7100 3 года назад

    El Jazz es todo improvisación. Me encanta, porque cada músico pone su Alma..Gracias MAESTRO Daniel Barenboim

  • @chmendez
    @chmendez 2 года назад

    Mozart, Beethoven were great improvisers. Many stories about that ability they had. Beethoven was very famous first as a piano virtuoso and improviser and only later as a composer. Viennese people loved improvisation.

  • @Songs_of_Sam
    @Songs_of_Sam 7 лет назад +3

    No French subtiles :'(

    • @ironmaz1
      @ironmaz1 7 лет назад +2

      here you go! pls correct if i have any mistakes:
      Aujourd'hui, je suis tres veinard d'avoir pres de moi M.
      qui est a la fois mon parallele et mon paradoxe car il est en effet un
      musicien, mais il joue un autre chose de musique.
      Je veux discuter sur ce sujet. Tu sais, je viens d'Argentine ou le noyau de
      musique est le tango. Et c'est le tango que tous les musiciens classiques connaissait, jouait et
      dansait.
      Aux Etats-Unis, Jazz etait toujours quelque chose isole. Le plupart des musiciens ont l'avis qu'il ne
      faut pas melanger Jazz avec Classique et inversement. Et maintenant, voici quelq'un qui a attenu le plus haut
      socle de joueur trompette, et qui a dedicace son vie a jouer au Jazz.
      La premiere difference que j'ai songe quand j'etait tres jeune (la derniere annee :P) c'est que la majorite de Jazz
      est improvisee. Autrement, tu sens quelque inspiration ou idee, et tu devise. Chez classique, on a limitee a la musique sur papier.
      Il y a 200 ans que musicians sont tres grands improvisateurs, comme Mozart a fait avec ses cadences sur les piano concerti. Je suis de facon
      desole que le monde classique a perdu cette merveilleuse emotion de liberte qu'on recevoir quand on improvise. Est-ce-que ca qui vous etez attirer
      dans le Jazz?
      T: Je me mettre d'accord avec l'idee que cette liberte m'a visite immediatement. J'avais une education classique a l'epoque (j'avais debut quant j'etait 9 ... D: tu avais des
      poumons formidables!), et cette jeune age de commencement vient de mon cadre familiel. C'etait une tres agreable experience avec les organistes et autres gens dans l'ecole
      de jadis. Mon maitre insiste que 'la trompette est ton avenir, car les gens aimaient toujours ce bel son que tu produce, un des plus importants ingredients. Donc, alors on joue
      du Haydn et du repertoire classique'. Tous roulait biens avec les orquestres et les ateliers, mais au moment qu'un de notre joueurs au bass montre-nous un disque de Charlie Parker,
      ma vie etait transformee. C'est comme tous etait prener une nouvelle couleur, apres d'etre en noir et blanc.
      D: Et tu etait?
      T: 12, et je ne l'oublie jamais. Le piece etait 'Anthropologie' ---- il joue -----. Et ainsi de suite. On a beaucoup des notes au dessus d'une melodie centrale, qui aurait
      deja existee. D'apres je trouve que tous ces merveilleux ebats autour de la melodie sont fondes sur autres compositions de Parker. En effet, il les a prener (

    • @Songs_of_Sam
      @Songs_of_Sam 7 лет назад

      ironmaz1 Oh thank you very much and don't worry i Can understand what you write :)

  • @ArgoBeats
    @ArgoBeats 6 лет назад +1

    I would like to see Mr Barenboim playing some Jazz.

    • @annedwyer797
      @annedwyer797 6 лет назад

      Enjoy!! This is a playlist that begins with several tracks from "Brazilian Rhapsody" and includes "Take the A Train" from the album "Tribute to Duke Ellington": ruclips.net/video/2FwWMUUIctM/видео.html&start_radio=1&list=RD2FwWMUUIctM.

    • @theimprovisor
      @theimprovisor 5 лет назад

      @@annedwyer797 Lol, written jazz...:-)))

  • @millalafazanska7902
    @millalafazanska7902 4 года назад

    These videos are very interesting to watch!I am so happy that the maestro gives us those conversations and 5 minutes on popular sonatas and so on.I really hope that i can have the honor to hear him preform live again!

  • @lolibermejo2985
    @lolibermejo2985 7 лет назад +1

    Muy interesante.

  • @jorgestramusic
    @jorgestramusic 3 года назад

    Excellent!

  • @PabloIzurieta
    @PabloIzurieta 3 года назад +1

    I love jazz, and I often think of it as the first draft of what eventually could become a classical composition.

  • @gerald9820
    @gerald9820 3 года назад

    I never liked jazz