Ronnie Cuber baritone sax, Bill Evans, Randy Brecker.

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  • Опубликовано: 29 окт 2009
  • Wonderful solo of Baritone sax player Ronnie Cuber in the San Sebastian Jazz Festival in Spain in 2003 with SoulBop band(Bill Evans and Randy Brecker).
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 62

  • @thebreathalyzer
    @thebreathalyzer Год назад +2

    Love to you always, Ronnie.

  • @zebra3stripes
    @zebra3stripes 8 лет назад +20

    "Ronnie, I know there's still some trash on the side of the interstate, but we've got to get to the gig."

  • @robingarcia718
    @robingarcia718 9 лет назад +2

    Pop that bad boy! I love bari sax! he just takes to another level. I going to get one!

  • @jsmorrell123
    @jsmorrell123 14 лет назад +1

    amazing bari part

  • @edwincancelii2917
    @edwincancelii2917 5 лет назад +1

    My favorite part is the baritone saxophone introduction and solo.

  • @Fading123
    @Fading123 14 лет назад +1

    wooooooooow i live jazz.

  • @JoEllessTV
    @JoEllessTV 14 лет назад

    so amazing

  • @alessandrocardoso3638
    @alessandrocardoso3638 6 лет назад

    sensacional show

  • @mikehazard4217
    @mikehazard4217 10 лет назад

    Wonderful

  • @geogi_bodies
    @geogi_bodies 12 лет назад +2

    Bill Evans is the tenor sax player on the screen left. His name is the same as the legendary pianist you might think of.

  • @Unidentifying
    @Unidentifying 9 лет назад

    brilliance

  • @don4476
    @don4476 5 лет назад

    Crazy. Good.

  • @pobinr
    @pobinr 14 лет назад

    @pobinr by the ingenious combining, shaping and weaving of voices that constituted his style and which he brought to a refinement far exceeding that of earlier German polyphonists such as Pachelbel and Buxtehude, from whom he had learned the basic elements. No composer after Bach was so thoroughly the ‘learned’ musician that Wolff describes. The works he composed (and very often performed) were so beautifully and so intelligently worked out and elaborated that they exhausted the resources of

  • @luise1000
    @luise1000 12 лет назад

    jej yeah men.... i was looking for that at the time i saw the same name! =P i didn't know there were another famous Bill e.

  • @henrylopez669
    @henrylopez669 8 лет назад

    Santo cielo

  • @Stegy11
    @Stegy11 3 года назад

    Pretty cool

  • @Fooma777
    @Fooma777 14 лет назад +1

    He's got so much soul! and so much tummy!!

  • @Madhatter1781
    @Madhatter1781 13 лет назад

    epic end by ronnie :D

  • @KevinGossJazz
    @KevinGossJazz 14 лет назад

    Naima! DAMN!!!

  • @Madhatter1781
    @Madhatter1781 13 лет назад

    2 years, damn near 30,000 views, and not a single one of those 30,000 disliked. :)

    • @dalb7059
      @dalb7059 2 года назад

      This didn’t age well lol

  • @23546j
    @23546j 14 лет назад +3

    PERSONALY Y PLAY BARI SAX AND I WANT TO PLAY THIS IN THIS LAST YEAR OF MY HIGH SCHOOL IN THE BAND CONCERT IT WILL BE AWSOME HAHAHAHA I WISH TO KNOW WHAT IS THIS SONG...

    • @J-Crash
      @J-Crash 2 месяца назад

      This might be a bit late, but im pretty sure this was entirely improv

  • @Laytz
    @Laytz 13 лет назад +1

    @hydekins2
    It's good for you and it gets easier the more you do it. it helps to train your ear and pick up on some of the style of the players. Plus, then you don't have to rely on sheet music or finding music for songs.

  • @supasthe26991
    @supasthe26991 12 лет назад

    I,ve plated bari sax b4 and it was just amazing i might just bye one for myself and continue playing just like that!!! Go Saxophones!!!!

  • @whirlybird76
    @whirlybird76 13 лет назад

    the tummy is for support, thats what I always say!!

  • @pebblefrog196
    @pebblefrog196 14 лет назад

    0:21 that was CRAZY he needs no flanger or phaser effects! HE IS THE MIGHTY BARI BLOB!!!!

    • @thebreathalyzer
      @thebreathalyzer 2 года назад +2

      Ronnie is wicked good. He was on Live in NY with Frank Zappa with Randy and Mike Brecker. He's one of the many soloists on Purple Lagoon

  • @isabellemontellano4359
    @isabellemontellano4359 7 лет назад

    Does anyone have or know where i can get the transcription for this?

  • @sauliskingbruh4595
    @sauliskingbruh4595 3 месяца назад +1

    1:27

  • @pobinr
    @pobinr 14 лет назад

    @pobinr the resources of tonal sound. In Bach’s counterpoint, the listener is aware of a remarkable complexity but never a laborious or academic one. Its authority is absolute. For both listener and performer, the result is an aesthetic pleasure based equally on immediate accessibility and the greatest technical prowess.

  • @qewtra
    @qewtra 11 лет назад +3

    Moanin brought me hereeee

  • @pobinr
    @pobinr 14 лет назад

    @halo6lord Bach descriptions - Wagner 'The most stupendous miracle in all music' , Beethoven ' The immortal God of harmony.
    Bach had an aural as well as dextral facility that made people gasp. At the keyboard, whether performing a work of his own, sight-reading or improvising, Bach also had a gift for polyphony unequalled before or since. With the striking exception of Berlioz, who refused to allow Bach to impress him, every major composer has been stunned by his musical fertility.

  • @saint.everett
    @saint.everett 5 лет назад

    Anyone know of a transcription for this?

  • @mistuhbear
    @mistuhbear 14 лет назад

    @halo6lord
    ignore my main argument, in that I wasn't speaking of the ability to play or to listen (I do acknowledge that Bach was skilled in these aspects) but rather the ability to compose. I do recognize that Bach is considered one of the greatest composers of all time in classical music. However, were it not for Forkel's biography of Bach's life, Bach would have been lost altogether in the flood of new styles that were emerging. While composing in multiple voices may be difficult, it is

  • @mistuhbear
    @mistuhbear 14 лет назад

    @halo6lord
    generally considered far more difficult to compose in dodecaphonic style. One must consider the need for usage of tetrachords, trichords, and hexachords in derivation, transformation, combinatorality, and invariance. I'll continue to use Webern as my example. His mature works have a textural clarity and emotional coolness, and heavily influenced the post-WWII avant garde, as well as showing a deep understanding of chromatic musicality.

  • @paulburgess4135
    @paulburgess4135 7 лет назад +1

    what's the name of this?

  • @mistuhbear
    @mistuhbear 14 лет назад +1

    @halo6lord
    But let me wrap up this lengthy argument. Why do listeners choose to listen to Bach? Easy accessibility, and of course, pretty harmonies. It's easily understood.
    But on the flip side, why do listeners choose to listen to music from the contemporary period? It's certainly not easily understood. Rather, there is a deep complexity, a clear and dissonant sound that has a cathartic effect on experienced listeners.

  • @gleekflaglue6345789
    @gleekflaglue6345789 11 лет назад +1

    nice bair sax playing - but with the tone?

  • @ThePhunkyPharaoh
    @ThePhunkyPharaoh 13 лет назад

    Is that an actual song that they play at 1:30?

  • @curiousnomad
    @curiousnomad 13 лет назад

    Sounds like something Dreams would have played.

  • @pebblefrog196
    @pebblefrog196 12 лет назад

    Naima at 0:43?

  • @pobinr
    @pobinr 14 лет назад

    @alirzb Checked out that Mingus. Yeah great !
    As Jack Bruce of Cream said 'Bach is the best bass player'

  • @BaritoneSaxKing
    @BaritoneSaxKing 13 лет назад +1

    @hydekins2 start from low A and figure it out yourself, you can tell anytime he plays low A cuz it sounds like hes playing through a tube lol

  • @BaritoneSaxKing
    @BaritoneSaxKing 13 лет назад

    The trumpet sounds like its underwater at 1:40 lol

  • @mistuhbear
    @mistuhbear 14 лет назад

    @pobinr
    After playing and listening to the genre of classical music for nearly 18 years, I can safely say that I, personally, find Bach's music quite insipid, when compared to the fantastic twelve-tone runs, and the rich atonalities that are common to the (I realize I didn't specify, but this was the era of music I was referring to) contemporary period of music. Who could forget Anton Webern's excellent usage of dodecaphony in "Sehr langsam"? What about Hindemith's Sonata for the English Horn

  • @hockeysobie96
    @hockeysobie96 13 лет назад

    hahah no dislikes

  • @luise1000
    @luise1000 12 лет назад

    Bill Evans????????

  • @vanderbiltsax
    @vanderbiltsax 13 лет назад

    Ronnie just got out of jail. Must a practiced a lot there.

  • @pobinr
    @pobinr 14 лет назад

    @alirzb Well you've certainly built a strong argument there in favour of this note excrement Vs Bach LOL

  • @pobinr
    @pobinr 14 лет назад

    @pobinr One of the best things Jaco ever played was Bach's chromatic fantasy.
    You say 'insipid'. You have a lot to learn.
    Bach's music is the least insipid music. it's full of life & beauty

  • @mistuhbear
    @mistuhbear 14 лет назад

    @halo6lord
    and Piano (which wasn't twelve-tone, but was still incredibly dissonant), composed in 1941? By forcing themselves to utilize twelve-tone techniques, composers of the contemporary era were able to create a new style of music that, in my opinion, can best most everything Bach will throw at it. With characteristic dissonances that have greatly shaped music as it is today, Bach pales in comparison.
    When you tell about the "aural as well as dextral facility that made people gasp", you

  • @Laytz
    @Laytz 13 лет назад +1

    @hydekins2
    Gotta learn to transcribe it man.

  • @pobinr
    @pobinr 14 лет назад

    @halo6lord Musical offering theme is highly chromatic. The chromaticism in Unfinished fugue from Art of Fugue reaches as far forward as early schoenberg.
    You are alone amongst real musical people in thinking Bach's music is insipid.
    If you think this is insipid you're missing something !
    Search youtube for - J. S. Bach - Partita n. 5 in G Major BWV 829 - 7. Gigue (7/7)

  • @mistuhbear
    @mistuhbear 14 лет назад

    @halo6lord
    I end with this. Everyone is biased towards one side or the other. While I may not actively seek out Bach's music to listen to it, I by no means think that Bach is a bad composer. I just feel that his works are boring, and lack excitement (my definition of insipid). Dreadfully so. However, I realize that you may feel otherwise, and I understand that, because everyone is entitled to their own opinion.

  • @mistuhbear
    @mistuhbear 14 лет назад +1

    @halo6lord
    And with that, I'm done arguing on this page. Pobinr, thanks for a good chat. I mean it.
    But, please stop flaming Ronnie Cuber. It's just not cool.

  • @mistuhbear
    @mistuhbear 14 лет назад

    @pobinr If you knew anything about classical music at all, you would know that Bach is insipid compared to many other composers. What of Prokofiev, Shostakovich, Respighi, or Dukas? All excellent composers who compose much better than Bach. I hope you realize that Baroque music in general is tasteless repetition of the same tone rows. Second, jazz is not note diarrhea. It's a complex pattern of rhythms and scales that are quite tasteful when exected well, and Ronnie Cuber is one of the best.

  • @AmericanRX
    @AmericanRX 12 лет назад

    1 person doesn't get classical instruments.

  • @pobinr
    @pobinr 14 лет назад

    @alirzb Random tuneless cliched junk in the worst possible taste.
    It's to the public's credit that jazz sales are so low.
    Are trying to be contrapuntal ?
    I think they need to listen to Bach a little more then learn.

  • @pobinr
    @pobinr 14 лет назад

    This is note diarrhoea. I think I'll stick to listening to Bach.