One of my favorite songs on that record. Shearing like Cole was a great pianist. Playing from feel as he was blind. He also wrote the wonderful “Lullaby of Birdland”
@@jacquelinepaul9731 It sounds the same arrangement but their own performace. It's expensive, but you can buy the rights to perform the arrangement commercially.
@@jacquelinepaul9731 All of my knowledge comes from choral music, so do I may be wrong on the instrumental side of things, but you buy sheet music for an insanely marked up price, anywhere from 15-100$ normally for a master copy and then 1-10$ for each additional copy. Normally this covers the publishers fee and composers fee. After that it’s a little weird because of the commercial aspect of this. After that there’s normally a performing license, if these guys aren’t making money for the karaoke tracks it could actually be inexpensive because they could technically say that it’s non profit. So if they play their cards right, it could be fairly cheap relatively speaking. But if they don’t then it will cost a heck of a lot of money
Just sang along while dancing with my wife in the kitchen. It’s in key I can just about sing along to.
Is this the original ??..got to be hasn't it..unless someone plays the piano like George Shearing
One of my favorite songs on that record. Shearing like Cole was a great pianist. Playing from feel as he was blind. He also wrote the wonderful “Lullaby of Birdland”
@@jeffdaniel2280
I thought they couldn't use the original on a karaoke track ?? Is this the original
@@jacquelinepaul9731 It sounds the same arrangement but their own performace. It's expensive, but you can buy the rights to perform the arrangement commercially.
@The Crafty Tomato
Interesting..does that cover the composers cut as well..I ask because if you have to pay the 2,it becomes unviable.
@@jacquelinepaul9731 All of my knowledge comes from choral music, so do I may be wrong on the instrumental side of things, but you buy sheet music for an insanely marked up price, anywhere from 15-100$ normally for a master copy and then 1-10$ for each additional copy. Normally this covers the publishers fee and composers fee.
After that it’s a little weird because of the commercial aspect of this. After that there’s normally a performing license, if these guys aren’t making money for the karaoke tracks it could actually be inexpensive because they could technically say that it’s non profit.
So if they play their cards right, it could be fairly cheap relatively speaking. But if they don’t then it will cost a heck of a lot of money