Indeed, it's because he never did much else for years and years that he could play like that. Being merely a moderately competent jazz musician takes a LOT of work, so any of the top players (Miles, Trane, Diz, Lee - anyone) spent a LOT of time and put in massive amounts of work to make it sound effortless. When I perform or people see me with my bass in tow, they often remark: I wish I'd kept playing the __________ (fill in the instrument they stopped playing after junior high school)... And I think: no you don't! If you did, you'd still be playing. What you mean is you wish you could play well and perform in front of people without having put in any work over years and years. It doesn't work that way!
If only the world was good like that and we got to choose to do the things we are good at and enjoy in this life. Bill Evans is an absolute joy to listen to.
The track list is: 0:00 - Very Early 4:56 - Stella By Starlight 9:17 - If You Could See Me Now 13:57 - Autumn Leaves 18:23 - Time Remembered 22:11 - Nardis 27:19 - Five At the Oslo Munch Museum, October 1966. Eddie Gomez, Alex Riel, Bill Evans. 30:35 - Re: Person I Knew 36:25 - Days of Wine and Roses At the Molde Jazz Festival, August 1980. Marc Johnson, Joe La Barbera, Bill Evans.
I used to question Bill Evans playing, the clarity, the crispness, even the harmonics, but I admit to be totally off base. Of course, I was around high school age at the time. Evans is one of the absolute best jazz pianists ever. His music gives me chills.
Judging from the comments of jazz musicians I've known, Bill Evans was the most influential jazz pianist & harmonist of mid- to late-20th century jazz.
Bill evans go far further the concept of jazz he was a great force and a creator in music!His right place in the music history would be among Back Mozart and Chopin!
Eddie Gomez gets my heart in such a state of feeling jazz that the best time to play along with my third leg doing the keyboard is with coffee in my left foot and my eyes indicating thematic indications of what I want Bill and Alex Riel, hard at work on the brushes and you who know the brushes, realize they are too primitivecool because the classical began from my fingertips beginning on the "catfat" strings and going down to where I could get the air vibrato without wood. What great days1DVD
Christoph Neubronner - the 1st tune was a Bill Evans original called Very Early - I've heard that Bill wrote it at about 17 - 18 years. It's one of my favourites so I only play it on special occasions.
Si Eddie no hubiera muerto tan pronto… Bill tardó en volver a tocar por que su pérdida fue muy jodida para él, con él hicieron el nuevo TRÍO, una nueva forma de tocar. De ahí mamaron los que le sucedieron. Eddie dejó una gran herencia a quienes le sucedieron en el trío de Bill y y a muchos otros. Sin quitarles ningún mérito a Scott ni a Marc, si Eddie no hubiera muerto antes que Bill, ¿hubiesen tocado con Bill? Gracias por este rato maravilloso. Bill es mi músico de cabecera (Dr.)
Eddie Gomez in my opinion was the best bassist Bill ever played with. No disrespect to all the others. Marc Johnson was and is a treasure. Just saw him with his partner Elaine Elias last week here in NYC..
Bill Evans man...chills....I don't care if you're a hippy burnout- if you cannot get into this I do not know WHAT you are on.... still Scott LaFaro rules the most
RE: LaFaro and Gomez. Lafaro was only with Evans for a year and one half at a time when the trio was working maybe one to two gigs per two weeks. Gomez worked with Bill for 11 years at a time when the trio was very busy doing long tours lasting as long as a month. Chuck was just a placeholder bassist waiting for someone who could handle Bill's music to the degree established by Scotty.
This 2-part video starts with an early Bill Evans trio, probably recorded around 1970. After 30 minutes that ends and is followed by a much later Evans trio, probably recorded around 1980, that continues through the 2nd file. Listen all the way to the end: both trios' skill and inventiveness are consistently high and there is a 10-minute interview with Bill at the end of the 2nd file as they pack up to leave for the airport. Thanks for sharing these historic performances!
"Catfat" on my fingertips was essential in those days and while playing I felt the classical era sometimes, upon my desire, going to metallic, but I preferred the catgut as it was smoother and most precious in my playing; in my mind - of course, which is the definition of classical to jazz in trio form going from the double upright bass going from the finger tips of my hands going solely from the skin straight to the power of whatever amplification the BASS man, me, got off on together with 2..
An ULTIMATE EXAMPLE OF HAUGHTY on display here with my friendS EDDIE AND BILL, while waiting to play with Alex as a brush man. PRIMITIVECOOL UTIMATE FOR YOU THIS MORNING...
For Bill Evans RUclips Posts For those that are always looking for something new about Bill Evans, I invite you to visit the following: Bill Evans Virtual Museum Project ruclips.net/video/lV3jdOpX7vg/видео.html Let your computer take you on a stroll through a virtual museum featuring Bill’s record covers, awards, and other memorabilia. Bill Evans - Retrospective ruclips.net/video/YqxaggKP2oA/видео.html A documentary presentation lecture where Bill Evans graduated with music, photos, and interviews, and concludes with Bill discussing his life at the university and goals he set for himself. The original lecture was given by Ron Nethercutt, retired professor at Southeastern Louisiana University. Ron recorded Bill’s concert there on November 6th, ten months before Evans’ passing. The lecture has been edited by Rob Rijneke. Rob also has a wonderful website which can be found at: www.billevans.nl
If you would like to learn more about Bill Evans, you may view my 27 minute video: "Bill Evans: Retrospective" ruclips.net/video/YqxaggKP2oA/видео.html
15:22 I just bust loose with showing you how the ultimate of primitivecool doubleuprightbass may set you apart from all others except Bill, the LEADER, and we both thought alike, so I miss him so and don't read books, just listen to the man when studying this genius of what what does it to me. Maybe not you, but yes to me. Goodbye BLUE MONDAY-HELLO to Breakfast of Champions, by Kevin Michael Callihan, Sr. Esq. [Died Jan. 10, 2001] and moved on to philosophy of metafiction primitivecool creativ
To those that still want to discuss racism relative to Jazz, it's a pity we haven't moved forward. It's really time to stop uttering it and not give it any resonance in the air, thoughts or minds. Jazz music is the great equalizer, because all it wants is to be heard, just emotions expressed beautifully, and the only "colors" to ponder is the mood it creates within us.
"White jazz for whites. Sounds white, is white. Has to be Bill Evans!" Everyone of every color plays like Bill Evans now in some way. Don't confuse Jazz with Jazzy...two different things altogether. No jazz musician that I know thinks along racial lines. There are plenty of ways to swing. Today is the anniversary of Bill's death, and I guarantee you musicians all over this world are thinking about him, and what he brought to jazz. There are not too many people who can legitimately claim to have changed the harmonic approach to the music, and Evans certainly could have made that claim. Except he was too focused on playing truthfully to concern himself with self-congratulation. The best artists I know are the most humble, always questioning their value instead of shouting it out.
Peter J. Andros You are talking about the 1960s, though. Coltrane didn't live long enough to experience meaningful racial integration, but he was influenced profoundly by world culture outside the American black experience. "White" bands "integrated" earlier, but the nature of that integration as as much showbiz as unanimity. Cecil Taylor was an integrator by nature, and it would be taking him out of context to project a persona from the '60s forward. He's still living, and he would undoubtedly speak differently now than I have a colleague, Dianne McIntyre, who did dance work in NYC with Taylor, Max Roach, and a whole community of influential musicians during and after the black civil rights movement. Granted, she is a black artist, but the entire point of her work (and theirs) was to break down those barriers and integrate black artistic influences into the overall American artistic canon. Dianne was traveling the opposite direction, too, juxtaposing ballet and modern dance, and integrating African forms. Babatunde Olatunji, for instance, was a part of that circle, and in some ways an artist as literally African as Olatunji was as removed from American black artists as Evans was to Miles or Cecil Taylor. I do get out...I've been an active musician all my life. We mix it up in the jazz world here, and it's enriching all around. I get what you're saying, but my comment was more directed at the comment someone else made that Bill Evans sounds "white." He actually had quite an influence even on Oscar Peterson, and you can isolate some moments in Peterson's performances that could easily be mistaken for Evans...jazz is one of the best examples of the melting pot effect, for sure.
Bruce Richardson Thanks for your reply. My point is that Coltrane and Taylor (who didn't care much for Evans or his playing) have been mischaracterized by jazz pundits like Nat Hentoff and biographers as being enlightened spiritual souls when their behavior demonstrated they were in fact jealous, self-obsessive musicians with strong racial streaks. Bill Evans was a superb improvisational pianist who encompassed a vast musical understanding thanks to his mother and brother, Harry; and, Miles Davis showed incomparable sound judgement, some compositional arguments between the two aside, providing Bill a platform for his considerable talents. Bill's musical accomplishments speak for themselves!
Peter J. Andros Very correct my man. If you start thinking Bill Evans plays white music for white people you are just thinking too much. Responses to music are more elemental and raw than that. Bill's music is a basic Ray Charles, James Brown, Frank Zappa, or Brahms. All it moves the cerebral cortex. Bill just moves it on longer and deeper levels.
I admire the ambience of this music but it is uncomfortable to tap time to. It's very cluttered especially in the bright 'tempos' ; the double bass and drumming is over-complex and disjointed. In other words there is a distinct lack of 'groove', a quality Oscar Peterson's trios had in abundance.
It's too hard for you to understand the intellectuality and the feeling of this music or it's too hard for you to accept that Bill Evans, a white man, was the greatest jazz pianist of all times? Here's my advice for you: don't think too much, just relax and enjoy the music!
greatest jazz pianist of all time. ummmm no not to me. I love his music but not my favorite. there is no such thing as greatest. Thats like saying vanilla ice cream is greater than strawberry lol they are totally different.
i understand that you are jealous cause Bill Evans, a white man, reinvented the jazz. jazz pianists before him became meaningless after he came up with new harmonic concepts, using the extension of the chords, with a trio work and no ego playing, just music. playing a classic jazz repertorie, giving the real feeling to standards and originals. if you want to be racist, i can do it too: most black pianists sounds the same, a lot of ego and no feeling and intellectual play at all. just a lot of meaningless notes and annoying rhythm. you are absolutely wrong about Bill's way of swing. his flow is impecable! he really sounds organic and that's something that just a master of the instrument can do! but Bill went beyond the master, he was a genius, a legend!
most black pianists sounds the same, a lot of ego and no feeling and intellectual play at all. just a lot of meaningless notes and annoying rhythm talk about your ignorant statements. why combat ingnorance with more of it?
Not sure why these WHITE guys need to follow up a racist and ignorant statement from Bill Hicks with their own RACIST and ignorant statements... Pretty pathetic that you people have to steal (aka, reinvent) Jazz, Rock, Rap, etc... But no need to go there... Just sit back and enjoy the beautiful music of Bill Evans. Those of us who are not stupid and racist can enjoy him and Dave Brubeck as much as we enjoy Herbie and Ahmad...
Eddie Gomez on bass is amongst the best. Very underrated
if i could play piano like that id never do anything else
>if i could play piano like that id never do anything else
The inverse is the primary reason that you cannot play piano like that.
Indeed, it's because he never did much else for years and years that he could play like that. Being merely a moderately competent jazz musician takes a LOT of work, so any of the top players (Miles, Trane, Diz, Lee - anyone) spent a LOT of time and put in massive amounts of work to make it sound effortless. When I perform or people see me with my bass in tow, they often remark: I wish I'd kept playing the __________ (fill in the instrument they stopped playing after junior high school)... And I think: no you don't! If you did, you'd still be playing. What you mean is you wish you could play well and perform in front of people without having put in any work over years and years. It doesn't work that way!
If only the world was good like that and we got to choose to do the things we are good at and enjoy in this life. Bill Evans is an absolute joy to listen to.
The track list is:
0:00 - Very Early
4:56 - Stella By Starlight
9:17 - If You Could See Me Now
13:57 - Autumn Leaves
18:23 - Time Remembered
22:11 - Nardis
27:19 - Five
At the Oslo Munch Museum, October 1966. Eddie Gomez, Alex Riel, Bill Evans.
30:35 - Re: Person I Knew
36:25 - Days of Wine and Roses
At the Molde Jazz Festival, August 1980. Marc Johnson, Joe La Barbera, Bill Evans.
inOrdnung1 ゅ
Thank you!
Many thanks.
It’s great seeing the handful of people’s shifting demeanors and physical responses to the intro of “Time Remembered”.
Alex Riel on DRUMS!!!! Yeah!
I used to question Bill Evans playing, the clarity, the crispness, even the harmonics, but I admit to be totally off base. Of course, I was around high school age at the time. Evans is one of the absolute best jazz pianists ever. His music gives me chills.
Onajide Shabaka Amen.
"Blue in green" and "Time remembered" are my Favorites! But after hearing this I'm adding "if you could see me now"!
Judging from the comments of jazz musicians I've known, Bill Evans was the most influential jazz pianist & harmonist of mid- to late-20th century jazz.
pure class, still as fresh as it was, when it was first conceived.
The "autum leaves" version it's amazing!!!
Bill evans go far further the concept of jazz he was a great force and a creator in music!His right place in the music history would be among Back Mozart and Chopin!
Superb . Evans and ?Monk Giants
Que delícia ouvir Bill Evans...para mim o melhor pianista de Jazz!!!
Sei Inarrivabile Bill,il numero uno per me!
Merveille des merveille ,le jazz à son summum ...
27:50, the solo that Bill takes here....swingin' hard!
Eddie Gomez gets my heart in such a state of feeling jazz that the best time to play along with my third leg doing the keyboard is with coffee in my left foot and my eyes indicating thematic indications of what I want Bill and Alex Riel, hard at work on the brushes and you who know the brushes, realize they are too primitivecool because the classical began from my fingertips beginning on the "catfat" strings and going down to where I could get the air vibrato without wood. What great days1DVD
Thanks for the Tracks. Magical, trans-formative music. Takes me places.
Christoph Neubronner - the 1st tune was a Bill Evans original called Very Early - I've heard that Bill wrote it at about 17 - 18 years. It's one of my favourites so I only play it on special occasions.
Bill Evans was a true genius - totally unique.
The greatest...between the greats
I know everyone raves about Scott Lefaro and Marc Johnson, but in my mind, the best interpreter of Bill Evans' music is Eddie Gomez
agreed. he definitely understood Bill's intentions the best. Amazing and so glad that could produce such amazing swing.
Eddie's playing is always genius level.
Si Eddie no hubiera muerto tan pronto…
Bill tardó en volver a tocar por que su pérdida fue muy jodida para él, con él hicieron el nuevo TRÍO, una nueva forma de tocar. De ahí mamaron los que le sucedieron. Eddie dejó una gran herencia a quienes le sucedieron en el trío de Bill y y a muchos otros.
Sin quitarles ningún mérito a Scott ni a Marc, si Eddie no hubiera muerto antes que Bill, ¿hubiesen tocado con Bill?
Gracias por este rato maravilloso. Bill es mi músico de cabecera (Dr.)
Eddie Gomez in my opinion was the best bassist Bill ever played with. No disrespect to all the others. Marc Johnson was and is a treasure. Just saw him with his partner Elaine Elias last week here in NYC..
What awesome tone on Eddie's bass!!
Genius forever.
Bill Evans man...chills....I don't care if you're a hippy burnout- if you cannot get into this I do not know WHAT you are on.... still Scott LaFaro rules the most
RE: LaFaro and Gomez. Lafaro was only with Evans for a year and one half at a time when the trio was working maybe one to two gigs per two weeks. Gomez worked with Bill for 11 years at a time when the trio was very busy doing long tours lasting as long as a month. Chuck was just a placeholder bassist waiting for someone who could handle Bill's music to the degree established by Scotty.
Questo é il massimo pianista jazz mai esistito !
Grazie di essere nato !!!
one of the beast
This 2-part video starts with an early Bill Evans trio, probably recorded around 1970. After 30 minutes that ends and is followed by a much later Evans trio, probably recorded around 1980, that continues through the 2nd file. Listen all the way to the end: both trios' skill and inventiveness are consistently high and there is a 10-minute interview with Bill at the end of the 2nd file as they pack up to leave for the airport. Thanks for sharing these historic performances!
i see George Russell in audience with the tape recorder......he was a big Evans fan and he recommended Bill to Miles.
"Catfat" on my fingertips was essential in those days and while playing I felt the classical era sometimes, upon my desire, going to metallic, but I preferred the catgut as it was smoother and most precious in my playing; in my mind - of course, which is the definition of classical to jazz in trio form going from the double upright bass going from the finger tips of my hands going solely from the skin straight to the power of whatever amplification the BASS man, me, got off on together with 2..
Time Remembered at 18:30. Simply amazing.
straight..no chaser! :)) o so clear, concise, and singin'. mm mm mm. thanx much for uploading this. its a treasure!
An ULTIMATE EXAMPLE OF HAUGHTY on display here with my friendS EDDIE AND BILL, while waiting to play with Alex as a brush man. PRIMITIVECOOL UTIMATE FOR YOU THIS MORNING...
Eddie Gomez, Adams Family?
As usual, Evans killing it.
Gracias muchísimas.
Wow. Never knew about this set. Thank you.
DAT OPENING BASS SOLO THO
Wow, I'm honestly surprised to find someone who thinks that Bill Evans couldn't swing..
lo mismo digo!
Salu2 desde Argentina
encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSLysx0Pb_mhgX6rsEJICY5eoC0h1vkC0gGbWWzFt_kmznQVe1N7ktwr5s
hey bill, how about a black & white cookie? you could swing that in your milk when you take a timeout in the miles davis wing.
yes!!!
Nice!
For Bill Evans RUclips Posts
For those that are always looking for something new about Bill Evans, I invite you to visit the following:
Bill Evans Virtual Museum Project ruclips.net/video/lV3jdOpX7vg/видео.html
Let your computer take you on a stroll through a virtual museum featuring Bill’s record covers, awards, and other memorabilia.
Bill Evans - Retrospective ruclips.net/video/YqxaggKP2oA/видео.html
A documentary presentation lecture where Bill Evans graduated with music, photos, and interviews, and concludes with Bill discussing his life at the university and goals he set for himself. The original lecture was given by Ron Nethercutt, retired professor at Southeastern Louisiana University. Ron recorded Bill’s concert there on November 6th, ten months before Evans’ passing. The lecture has been edited by Rob Rijneke. Rob also has a wonderful website which can be found at: www.billevans.nl
7:10 bill evans fucks up
+Oscar Cramer You should be so lucky.
+Oscar Cramer There's never a wrong note in jazz, nor was his note placement off lol
So fucking hilarious! Is it just me or I saw Maryl Streep on 9:07 - 9:10? hehehe
I'm surprised Bill made it 40 minutes without sparking up
If you would like to learn more about Bill Evans, you may view my 27 minute video: "Bill Evans: Retrospective"
ruclips.net/video/YqxaggKP2oA/видео.html
Let's clarify that the capital of Norway is Oslo ... not Olso ...
3:11 hnggg
Olso or Oslo?
Just listen.
Bill fucking Evans, enough said! Indecipherable comments from hippy acid burnouts don't do justice to the sound of such a genius as Bill.
15:22 I just bust loose with showing you how the ultimate of primitivecool doubleuprightbass may set you apart from all others except Bill, the LEADER, and we both thought alike, so I miss him so and don't read books, just listen to the man when studying this genius of what what does it to me. Maybe not you, but yes to me. Goodbye BLUE MONDAY-HELLO to Breakfast of Champions, by Kevin Michael Callihan, Sr. Esq. [Died Jan. 10, 2001] and moved on to philosophy of metafiction primitivecool creativ
Jazz at its finest…
To those that still want to discuss racism relative to Jazz, it's a pity we haven't moved forward. It's really time to stop uttering it and not give it any resonance in the air, thoughts or minds. Jazz music is the great equalizer, because all it wants is to be heard, just emotions expressed beautifully, and the only "colors" to ponder is the mood it creates within us.
How can there possibly be 7 thumbs down??????
does anyone know the title of the first tune they play?
+Christoph Neubronner
Very Early written by Bill Evans
Evans making that piano sound like it's in tune. Which it is not.
"White jazz for whites. Sounds white, is white. Has to be Bill Evans!"
Everyone of every color plays like Bill Evans now in some way. Don't confuse Jazz with Jazzy...two different things altogether. No jazz musician that I know thinks along racial lines. There are plenty of ways to swing. Today is the anniversary of Bill's death, and I guarantee you musicians all over this world are thinking about him, and what he brought to jazz. There are not too many people who can legitimately claim to have changed the harmonic approach to the music, and Evans certainly could have made that claim. Except he was too focused on playing truthfully to concern himself with self-congratulation. The best artists I know are the most humble, always questioning their value instead of shouting it out.
Well, certain jazz musicians, notably John Coltrane and Cecil Taylor, most definitely thought along racial lines. You need to get out more!
Peter J. Andros You are talking about the 1960s, though. Coltrane didn't live long enough to experience meaningful racial integration, but he was influenced profoundly by world culture outside the American black experience. "White" bands "integrated" earlier, but the nature of that integration as as much showbiz as unanimity. Cecil Taylor was an integrator by nature, and it would be taking him out of context to project a persona from the '60s forward. He's still living, and he would undoubtedly speak differently now than I have a colleague, Dianne McIntyre, who did dance work in NYC with Taylor, Max Roach, and a whole community of influential musicians during and after the black civil rights movement. Granted, she is a black artist, but the entire point of her work (and theirs) was to break down those barriers and integrate black artistic influences into the overall American artistic canon. Dianne was traveling the opposite direction, too, juxtaposing ballet and modern dance, and integrating African forms. Babatunde Olatunji, for instance, was a part of that circle, and in some ways an artist as literally African as Olatunji was as removed from American black artists as Evans was to Miles or Cecil Taylor.
I do get out...I've been an active musician all my life. We mix it up in the jazz world here, and it's enriching all around. I get what you're saying, but my comment was more directed at the comment someone else made that Bill Evans sounds "white." He actually had quite an influence even on Oscar Peterson, and you can isolate some moments in Peterson's performances that could easily be mistaken for Evans...jazz is one of the best examples of the melting pot effect, for sure.
Bruce Richardson
Thanks for your reply. My point is that Coltrane and Taylor (who didn't care much for Evans or his playing) have been mischaracterized by jazz pundits like Nat Hentoff and biographers as being enlightened spiritual souls when their behavior demonstrated they were in fact jealous, self-obsessive musicians with strong racial streaks. Bill Evans was a superb improvisational pianist who encompassed a vast musical understanding thanks to his mother and brother, Harry; and, Miles Davis showed incomparable sound judgement, some compositional arguments between the two aside, providing Bill a platform for his considerable talents. Bill's musical accomplishments speak for themselves!
Peter J. Andros Very correct my man. If you start thinking Bill Evans plays white music for white people you are just thinking too much. Responses to music are more elemental and raw than that. Bill's music is a basic Ray Charles, James Brown, Frank Zappa, or Brahms. All it moves the cerebral cortex. Bill just moves it on longer and deeper levels.
what it showed was there were human beings.
I admire the ambience of this music but it is uncomfortable to tap time to. It's very cluttered especially in the bright 'tempos' ; the double bass and drumming is over-complex and disjointed. In other words there is a distinct lack of 'groove', a quality Oscar Peterson's trios had in abundance.
White jazz for whites. Sounds white, is white. Has to be Bill Evans!
It's too hard for you to understand the intellectuality and the feeling of this music or it's too hard for you to accept that Bill Evans, a white man, was the greatest jazz pianist of all times? Here's my advice for you: don't think too much, just relax and enjoy the music!
greatest jazz pianist of all time. ummmm no not to me. I love his music but not my favorite. there is no such thing as greatest. Thats like saying vanilla ice cream is greater than strawberry lol they are totally different.
Music has no race or nationality.
Evans couldn't swing at all. So white.
i understand that you are jealous cause Bill Evans, a white man, reinvented the jazz. jazz pianists before him became meaningless after he came up with new harmonic concepts, using the extension of the chords, with a trio work and no ego playing, just music. playing a classic jazz repertorie, giving the real feeling to standards and originals. if you want to be racist, i can do it too: most black pianists sounds the same, a lot of ego and no feeling and intellectual play at all. just a lot of meaningless notes and annoying rhythm. you are absolutely wrong about Bill's way of swing. his flow is impecable! he really sounds organic and that's something that just a master of the instrument can do! but Bill went beyond the master, he was a genius, a legend!
most black pianists sounds the same, a lot of ego and no feeling and intellectual play at all. just a lot of meaningless notes and annoying rhythm
talk about your ignorant statements. why combat ingnorance with more of it?
Not sure why these WHITE guys need to follow up a racist and ignorant statement from Bill Hicks with their own RACIST and ignorant statements... Pretty pathetic that you people have to steal (aka, reinvent) Jazz, Rock, Rap, etc... But no need to go there...
Just sit back and enjoy the beautiful music of Bill Evans. Those of us who are not stupid and racist can enjoy him and Dave Brubeck as much as we enjoy Herbie and Ahmad...
@rene diaz Love your "yo!"