If you can extend the bundle until New Year’s Day I’ll buy it now. Unfortunately, I watched this awesome video after Christmas. Thanks for your incredible work to promote the appreciation of jazz and encouraging the study of a great American art form.
Also the dude's playing is always so fire, and he never has to be a showman either. He's the most anti-Instagram musician, and yet, to me, is still the most interesting living musician today.
I totally agree with you, not knocking it. However, I also love the showmanship because it further entertains and sometimes the person just can’t sit still like how others can to great rhymical music and it’s good for the soul. It's like you are not just hearing it, you are also hearing it in your bones, your blood is dancing and to sit still would cause more stress than to dance. Those that dance and sing more are less likely to be depressed than those that sit stiff to wow music cos they only feel it in their head and not their body. I guess it's hard if you can't relate just as much the same those that dance can't imagine how one can sit still - both parties can empathise though! I had a friend once and he said the reason he doesn't dance to music is that he doesn't know how and feels to embarrassed. In that moment I felt so sorry for him and I thought to myself, what do you do to free your soul that can be very en-caging. Also, that type of stiff upper feeling must translate in bed with your woman or man. What it means is you move your body very little and therefore unable to feel satisfaction or give satisfaction suffice enough you don't feel frustrated. I've always thought to myself never go out with someone that can only move their body one way let alone a person who generally doesn't move their body. These countries where they move their body or ethnicities what do you think is going to happen in bed. They are going to dance their body and soul with the other person. As for two stiff upper - that will lead to someone always being frustrated. Certain ways in cultures can do more harm than good and the same with food in cultures. Look at the Western diet, it kills you and causes disease whilst other diets keep you healthy. The body is more that just a vessel for keeping you up-right!
Brad Mehldau single-handedly got me into jazz, I was a teenager really into Radiohead and he recorded a bunch of Radiohead songs and a pop/jazz album with Jon Brion which I really liked. Then I branched into his trio stuff which I only half-understood but was intrigued by and slowly I followed those roots into jazz generally.
These are the kind of breakdowns I adore. I learn so much every time. Especially things like grouping the solo by shapes and chord outlines. It makes it seem so much more accessible! Thank you!
As much as many of us here in the comments who might be blown away by some of Charles' playing in our context. It's amazing to see Charles just floored by another jazz musician! Love this!!
Brad Meldau's finger independence, dynamics and improv are all top tier, and he plays so many genres!! Give his solo and trio versions of Blackbird a listen 😁
So glad you didn't really quit! Absolutely LOVE Brad's playing - but it's exhausting listening because there's always so much to unpack. Endlessly fascinating.
Mehldau is one of the GOATs of modern jazz. Thank you for introducing his music to casuals and even dissecting the solo for us jazz musicians. Now if someone could explain how Mehldau does his arrangements that sound like he has 3 hands lmao.
Brad Mehldau’s collaboration with Mark Guiliana is absolutely incredible. I know it might not be your most viewed video, but I would LOVE to see you look over the live performance of “Hungry Ghost” by the two of them. It’s just an awesome bit of 7/8 craziness that is incredibly impressive.
Thanks for a great analysis of my favorite jazz pianist! I try to hear him whenever he comes to SF. First time hearing/watching this performance. More please!
Brad Meldau is definitely one of my favorite pianists. Also, I have no idea how someone transcribes something this fast. The notes go by faster than I process them, let alone figure out the intervalic relationships between them.
one of the best solos of all time. That fast line he goes back to a few times (with the #11 & #9 towards the end) is all over his music, he drops it almost once an album and never fails to sound insane! Amazing video brother was great to explore the solo in depth
Brad Mehldau is fire! I can only ever hope to sound half as good as him and the other pianists I listen to often. On the transcription tip, I feel like I always get the phrasing wrong even when the notes are identical. My ability to hear and write rhythm just doesn't match my ability to transcribe pitches. Like ever. That's the value of singing to the track for me 😅 it'll either clean up the rhythm or figure out where it actually lands.
The first time I heard Brad was his cover of Knives Out . I didn’t even realize it was a Radiohead song at the time, but his playing just absolutely blew me away.
Been really getting into jazz lately and it's awesome videos like this exist to introduce me to the more recent jazz greats that aren't as well-known as the "classics." Would be awesome to see/hear you dissect a Hiromi solo like this!
Just saw Moodswing in Paris this fall. It was incredible, but I can’t help but thinking seeing them in the 90s would have been even more 🔥 thanks for this breakdown!
When I was freshman at Hartt in CT my girlfriend’s ex showed up to play us a demo tape he just did with a hired gun “older” bassist and a 10th grade high school piano buddy who attended the local (and legendary for jazz) Hall High. The song was Seven Steps to Heaven and I braced myself to be “polite” when hearing what I assumed would no doubt be some rudimentary scuffling from the “teen buddy” on piano. Well, I nearly walked out of the dorm and resigned from the program to start a lemonade stand business when I heard a solo that rivaled Herbie’s. It was of course, Brad, and his eventual legendary status somewhat appeased my ego in that I wasn’t undone mentally by just ANYONE.😂😂So I am oddly proud to be one of the first to “quit” piano upon hearing Brad, in 1987.
Played a little gig in a small town pizzeria in CT. Sat down with an appreciative patron. Perhaps, you know my son? He asked. "Maybe, who's your son?" Have you heard of Brad Mehldau? 🤯🤯
I'm sure it doesn't pay as well, but damn this is sooooo much more valuable to the collective musician world than you breaking down the latest pop song (not that there's anything wrong with pop music, but there's just so much less variety in creativity to draw from per piece on average).
Great Video about Brad. Saw him this year with Joshua Redman, Christian McBride and Brian Blade playing Round Again and other of their own compositions. Erverything spot on for 2 hours. Absolutly breathwaking. i wish a Video about Michel Camilo
Thanks! (Yeah, and a fun fact is Brad says that he mostly focuses on his left hand when practising... I don't wanna hear when his left beast is unleashed.)
I'm glad you're going to do more videos like this because they are really fun. It's cool to get more insight into these great players and jazz improvisation in general. I'm more of a blues fan than a jazz fan, so I don't have a lot of straight jazz recommendations, but one pianist I'd definitely recommend checking out is Bruce Katz, who is equally great at jazz and blues playing. I've been listening to his song Praise House from his album Solo Ride on repeat recently.
there are few voicings that brad mehldau popularly uses to interpret some chords or as "outside perspective" .. and there are not too many :) one of the most popular is 4793 that he uses for dominant chords - slides half tone up or down or goes straight on the root :)
Speaking of players to make you wanna quit, I'd love to see you do a video on the Bayou Maharaja himself, James Booker. As Dr. John says "The best Black, gay, one-eyed, junkie piano genius New Orleans has ever produced."
To me the solo actually starts in time with the "squeak" of the sax on the very end of beat 4 of the previous bar to the "one" or "two" you are talking about - it comes in EARLY. It's (about) the fifth or sixth note of the piano solo hits "one" of the next bar to my ear (but isn't all this the whole point of bending time in jazz)? Great video, really good fun to have it taken apart - and then even better to just hear it through start to finish, on the live recording, having thought about it in a new way.
I haven't listened that much to Brad, but this shit is ridiculous. The best thing I've heard him play that I keep coming back to is "Unrequited". That solo is mindblowing too.
You talked about it once before in 2021, but it might be fun to go deep into Dolphin Shoals Sax Solo! Original video focused more on the synergy of music and technology in the the context of the game itself. It would be interesting to see a video revisiting this track, focusing on it from a purely musical standpoint, as if it were simply another Jazz track.
Glad to see I’m not the only person who makes outbursts while some heavy is blowing his face off !👍🇨🇦 Would love to see you break down San Lorenzo (Mays/Methenet)
As a guitarist I just get the complexity of pianists like Brad Mehldau though you explaining it to me - although I play Jazz for a long time - I gotto have my co-musicians explain more stuff to me
A breakdown of some of the dark souls boss themes would be pretty cool. Those games have some amazing songs, Vordt’s theme, Ornstein and Smough, Gwyn, Abyss Watchers
Only a couple days left to get 70% off our entire course library!! cornellmusicacademy.com/holidaysale
Can you do Super mario odyssey OST please
If you can extend the bundle until New Year’s Day I’ll buy it now. Unfortunately, I watched this awesome video after Christmas. Thanks for your incredible work to promote the appreciation of jazz and encouraging the study of a great American art form.
Also the dude's playing is always so fire, and he never has to be a showman either. He's the most anti-Instagram musician, and yet, to me, is still the most interesting living musician today.
I totally agree with you, not knocking it. However, I also love the showmanship because it further entertains and sometimes the person just can’t sit still like how others can to great rhymical music and it’s good for the soul. It's like you are not just hearing it, you are also hearing it in your bones, your blood is dancing and to sit still would cause more stress than to dance. Those that dance and sing more are less likely to be depressed than those that sit stiff to wow music cos they only feel it in their head and not their body. I guess it's hard if you can't relate just as much the same those that dance can't imagine how one can sit still - both parties can empathise though! I had a friend once and he said the reason he doesn't dance to music is that he doesn't know how and feels to embarrassed. In that moment I felt so sorry for him and I thought to myself, what do you do to free your soul that can be very en-caging. Also, that type of stiff upper feeling must translate in bed with your woman or man. What it means is you move your body very little and therefore unable to feel satisfaction or give satisfaction suffice enough you don't feel frustrated. I've always thought to myself never go out with someone that can only move their body one way let alone a person who generally doesn't move their body. These countries where they move their body or ethnicities what do you think is going to happen in bed. They are going to dance their body and soul with the other person. As for two stiff upper - that will lead to someone always being frustrated. Certain ways in cultures can do more harm than good and the same with food in cultures. Look at the Western diet, it kills you and causes disease whilst other diets keep you healthy. The body is more that just a vessel for keeping you up-right!
Is difficult to be a showman playing that many notes 😅
@@11kwright Charlie Parker barely moved when he played. So, uhhh...
@@11kwright no way ur gatekeeping how people can play music that’s WILD
Based description
Brad Mehldau is one of the people that introduced me to just how great piano can be, so I'm thrilled to see him featured here!
Brad Mehldau single-handedly got me into jazz, I was a teenager really into Radiohead and he recorded a bunch of Radiohead songs and a pop/jazz album with Jon Brion which I really liked. Then I branched into his trio stuff which I only half-understood but was intrigued by and slowly I followed those roots into jazz generally.
Yep! Me too, exact same path. It was Mehldau and Avishai Cohen for me
Exit music (for a film) is pure bliss
These are the kind of breakdowns I adore. I learn so much every time. Especially things like grouping the solo by shapes and chord outlines. It makes it seem so much more accessible! Thank you!
i absolutely love the person editing these videos because the zooms on accidental key hits get me every. single. time. thank you
I was just thinking the same thing. Tried so hard not to laugh while I was settling my baby to sleep 😂
As much as many of us here in the comments who might be blown away by some of Charles' playing in our context. It's amazing to see Charles just floored by another jazz musician! Love this!!
Brad Meldau's finger independence, dynamics and improv are all top tier, and he plays so many genres!! Give his solo and trio versions of Blackbird a listen 😁
I had not heard these before, but as a huge Beatles fan I thank you immensely! Wonderful arrangements.
@@brendenschatz1748 Beatles?
So glad you didn't really quit! Absolutely LOVE Brad's playing - but it's exhausting listening because there's always so much to unpack. Endlessly fascinating.
Love how you're on a first name basis with Brad.
LMFAO
Brad doesn’t move anything other than his nimble fingers. I’m surprised there is no smoke. 🎄
Mehldau is one of the GOATs of modern jazz. Thank you for introducing his music to casuals and even dissecting the solo for us jazz musicians. Now if someone could explain how Mehldau does his arrangements that sound like he has 3 hands lmao.
Mehldau is far and away one of my favorite pianists of the modern era. He’s got the sensibility of Bill Evans and the flare of Keith Jarrett
Brad Mehldau’s collaboration with Mark Guiliana is absolutely incredible. I know it might not be your most viewed video, but I would LOVE to see you look over the live performance of “Hungry Ghost” by the two of them. It’s just an awesome bit of 7/8 craziness that is incredibly impressive.
Thanks for a great analysis of my favorite jazz pianist! I try to hear him whenever he comes to SF. First time hearing/watching this performance. More please!
I love these. I would love to watch more jazz solo breakdowns.
Mehldau always untouchable. His playing with that quartet is some of his best 🧯🧯
Love this format! A bit more advanced than some of your other stuff, which is really nice imo. Looking foward to learning more with this series!
Brad Meldau is definitely one of my favorite pianists. Also, I have no idea how someone transcribes something this fast. The notes go by faster than I process them, let alone figure out the intervalic relationships between them.
They use software to slow it down
In the old days people would play the record or tape slower. Today we can slow it down directly here on youtube.
5:03 was FIREEEEEE - sometimes I'm just as in awe of your playing as the greats you analyze!
Brad graduated from my high school, many years before I went there. So amazing to have found that out when I was a young guy!
parody by mccoy tyner is another one that melts the brain
This is SUCH a great channel. Music nerds unite.
Petition to have a dedicated video of Charles playing A Night In Tunisia
Signed
one of the best solos of all time. That fast line he goes back to a few times (with the #11 & #9 towards the end) is all over his music, he drops it almost once an album and never fails to sound insane! Amazing video brother was great to explore the solo in depth
Like the title track of the album "Ademuz" , that same line is there, I call it the Brad Mehldau lick lol
Brad Mehldau is fire! I can only ever hope to sound half as good as him and the other pianists I listen to often.
On the transcription tip, I feel like I always get the phrasing wrong even when the notes are identical. My ability to hear and write rhythm just doesn't match my ability to transcribe pitches. Like ever. That's the value of singing to the track for me 😅 it'll either clean up the rhythm or figure out where it actually lands.
The first time I heard Brad was his cover of Knives Out . I didn’t even realize it was a Radiohead song at the time, but his playing just absolutely blew me away.
Thank you for doing this, Brad Mehldau is one of my favorite musicians of all time glad to see him getting more recognition!
Been really getting into jazz lately and it's awesome videos like this exist to introduce me to the more recent jazz greats that aren't as well-known as the "classics." Would be awesome to see/hear you dissect a Hiromi solo like this!
Just saw Moodswing in Paris this fall. It was incredible, but I can’t help but thinking seeing them in the 90s would have been even more 🔥 thanks for this breakdown!
3:36 I was gonna say something about how relaxed brad mehldau's hands looked even moving so fast
One of my favorites as well! This whole gig was insane! Similarly great performance is Live at Parc Floral of brad's trio
When I was freshman at Hartt in CT my girlfriend’s ex showed up to play us a demo tape he just did with a hired gun “older” bassist and a 10th grade high school piano buddy who attended the local (and legendary for jazz) Hall High. The song was Seven Steps to Heaven and I braced myself to be “polite” when hearing what I assumed would no doubt be some rudimentary scuffling from the “teen buddy” on piano. Well, I nearly walked out of the dorm and resigned from the program to start a lemonade stand business when I heard a solo that rivaled Herbie’s. It was of course, Brad, and his eventual legendary status somewhat appeased my ego in that I wasn’t undone mentally by just ANYONE.😂😂So I am oddly proud to be one of the first to “quit” piano upon hearing Brad, in 1987.
Played a little gig in a small town pizzeria in CT. Sat down with an appreciative patron. Perhaps, you know my son? He asked. "Maybe, who's your son?"
Have you heard of Brad Mehldau?
🤯🤯
Yo no sé si lo que mas me gustó de este video es la habilidad del tipo que toca el piano o la risa de Charles. Jajaja, fué muy simpático.
You should do a deep dive on the Professor Layton soundtrack! I think you'd really enjoy it!
If you love Prof Layton you might like The Consouls - ruclips.net/video/tenhVVh9ah4/видео.html
A fever dream in Tunisia.
That whole band ... their rendition of "St. Thomas". What Mehldau does there is literally rocket science cause he effin launches one!
I'm sure it doesn't pay as well, but damn this is sooooo much more valuable to the collective musician world than you breaking down the latest pop song (not that there's anything wrong with pop music, but there's just so much less variety in creativity to draw from per piece on average).
Great Video about Brad. Saw him this year with Joshua Redman, Christian McBride and Brian Blade playing Round Again and other of their own compositions. Erverything spot on for 2 hours. Absolutly breathwaking. i wish a Video about Michel Camilo
Thanks! (Yeah, and a fun fact is Brad says that he mostly focuses on his left hand when practising... I don't wanna hear when his left beast is unleashed.)
Big fan of these in-depth videos on great players, thank you for sharing your insight
I'm glad you're going to do more videos like this because they are really fun. It's cool to get more insight into these great players and jazz improvisation in general. I'm more of a blues fan than a jazz fan, so I don't have a lot of straight jazz recommendations, but one pianist I'd definitely recommend checking out is Bruce Katz, who is equally great at jazz and blues playing. I've been listening to his song Praise House from his album Solo Ride on repeat recently.
One of my favorite Jaz piano pieces is autumn leaves by the Kieth Jarett trio.
Mehldau is SO good. He can do all the classic jazz moves but then releases an album like Finding Gabriel haha.
hes my favoourite pianist, and when i heard one of is all the things you are intros i was like gawdamm hes so good
there are few voicings that brad mehldau popularly uses to interpret some chords or as "outside perspective" .. and there are not too many :) one of the most popular is 4793 that he uses for dominant chords - slides half tone up or down or goes straight on the root :)
Oh yes ! More Brad Mehldau please 🤩❤️👏🏼
The piano solo in StrasbourgSt. Denis at the 2007 New Morning Club always blows my mind - would love to see you dive deep!
Every solo in that performace is insane
Speaking of players to make you wanna quit, I'd love to see you do a video on the Bayou Maharaja himself, James Booker. As Dr. John says "The best Black, gay, one-eyed, junkie piano genius New Orleans has ever produced."
I'll second this request!
Yeah dude! This solo reminds me of the synth lead from the final Bowser fight in Super Mario World for the SNES.
The solos that make us want to quit make us better.
Excellent video topic! Love Brad Mehldau
I would love love LOVE for you to break down some of Brad Mehldau’s other work but especially ‘Dream Brother’ and ‘And I Love Her’!!
Look how delicate his hands are playing it too.
Perhaps this is the video that showcase your ability to run a super high caliber channel. excellent.
To me the solo actually starts in time with the "squeak" of the sax on the very end of beat 4 of the previous bar to the "one" or "two" you are talking about - it comes in EARLY. It's (about) the fifth or sixth note of the piano solo hits "one" of the next bar to my ear (but isn't all this the whole point of bending time in jazz)? Great video, really good fun to have it taken apart - and then even better to just hear it through start to finish, on the live recording, having thought about it in a new way.
Huge chops, obvs, but what really appeals to me in Mehldau’s playing is his lyrical and melodic feeling.
Well, I'm glad you kept it up.
Lyle's solo on First Circle - really any version. Talk about a master class of solo construction...
Someone else actually mentioning Lyle! I hope Charles will take a look at his piano playing too
I second this - big fan of Lyle Mays (and much of PMG)!
I haven't listened that much to Brad, but this shit is ridiculous. The best thing I've heard him play that I keep coming back to is "Unrequited". That solo is mindblowing too.
@meofficial_corridorcrew Sorry, what adress?
That was pretty cool! 🎼🎵🎶🎹😎 Tysm, Charles! 🙏🏼😇
Thank you. For slowing down and explaining
Charles plays so well...
You talked about it once before in 2021, but it might be fun to go deep into Dolphin Shoals Sax Solo!
Original video focused more on the synergy of music and technology in the the context of the game itself.
It would be interesting to see a video revisiting this track, focusing on it from a purely musical standpoint, as if it were simply another Jazz track.
And get Pat Bartley to guest and play it
Great playing Charles! 😮💨SMOKIN'!!!!!💨🔥‼️
God tier stuff. Plus your noises are INCREDIBLE!
Great analysis, you look so passionate! The chosen song are always amazing:)
can you do kneebody? maybe penguin dentist, that song is so confusing
Echoes... Even better. Newport. Maybe one of the best piano solos of all time.
I WISH you were teaching on my jazz course of old - you're answering questions I didn't even know I had!!
thats so cool! I know his son, he is in jazz school with me
Glad to see I’m not the only person who makes outbursts while some heavy is blowing his face off !👍🇨🇦
Would love to see you break down San Lorenzo (Mays/Methenet)
Brad M. worked our boii s brain and muscles out!
Great analysis. Will be stealing some of these licks! I also really like your latest set/background. Very nice! Thanks.
Definitely on the end of 1 😇
Jump to 9:53 for the exact moment Charles completes his transformation into a Looney Tune.
Charles you have to do a video on the early 2000’s hit “Unwritten” by Natasha Bedingfield! It’s surprisingly interesting.
it’s never too late for over the garden wall
Wealth of information aside, I audibly cackled on that zoom in at 8:14
Yeah, Brad Mehldau is next level
This is great, thanks man !
BM is on a different solar system ❤ Super vid btw dude , kudos
Incredible video as always , had heard a lot of him but not this one, mind blown
Holy moly this was great!!
He's playing these insane lines and he doesn't even look like he's trying.
Also, I think I heard The Licc in one of those early lines.
He's COOOMING!
Loved this
Would love to see you do a tribute/analysis on some of Joey DeFrancesco's music. Jazz recently lost one of its greats.
As a guitarist I just get the complexity of pianists like Brad Mehldau though you explaining it to me - although I play Jazz for a long time - I gotto have my co-musicians explain more stuff to me
He may have posted the original somewhere? But I can’t see it, so see below for the original solo...
ruclips.net/video/66l0Zhhpl94/видео.html
Amadeus “So,what did he think?”Translator “Ahh, too many notes.”
A breakdown of some of the dark souls boss themes would be pretty cool. Those games have some amazing songs, Vordt’s theme, Ornstein and Smough, Gwyn, Abyss Watchers
Could you look at the soloing of Michel Petrucciani please? My favourite player. He was always incredible.
Brad Mehldau, Sullivan Fortner, and Makoto Ozone explode my brian
Love these videos!! Youre a beast!!!
Brilliant video. Well done. Loved it.
And he does it so calmly too...
He was probably high on heroin
I'd love to see you deconstruct the music from Only Murders in the Building. It's so simple yet so effective.
What I love is: (charles) And now we come back to: (brad) :[in the stratosphere]