So cool how you can hear Peterson singing the melody to himself as he plays. It's straight brain-to-keys transmission. That's incredible musicianship on display.
@@user__214 I can take a straight Net York to Los Angeles flight while also eating a meal and having a drink. Why can't Peterson have brain to keys transmission and also involve other aspects of his musicality? My original point was that this demonstrates that what he hears in his mind is exactly what he plays when improvising. I simply don't see how those things are mutually exclusive. Care to elaborate on your comment so I can better understand?
@@lambdaman3228 Hmm, I think I agree with your point ("what he hears in his mind is what he plays"). I don't know if the original way you *expressed* that point makes sense to me. Giving an example of "brain to mouth" transmission while calling it "brain to keys" just doesn't work all that well, IMO. It's not important though, nor is it a hill I want to die on.
@@user__214 > Giving an example of "brain to mouth" transmission while calling it "brain to keys" just doesn't work all that well, IMO. This video is called "Oscar Peterson - C Jam Blues" and he's playing keys all the way through the video so it's a given that he is playing the keys - no need to mention this explicitly. More importantly, if you're improvising on the keys but not singing your improvisation as you play, it's not possible for a listener to know if you're playing an improvised melody that's in your head or simply playing notes that "make sense" given chord-scale theory. The former is much more impressive than the latter. That impressive ability is precisely what I was commenting on.
The idea is if it's hummable then it's more memorable for the listener. Even if we can't sing or carry a tune, we can still DISCERN hummable music in our heads. OTOH if something is just plain scales it just sounds like notes. It may make musical sense, but it's just not as CATCHY. Recall every favorite song you've ever had. It's almost always HUMMABLE. Or at least you can easily hear the melody in your head. So singing through a chord progression & trying to play along with it keeps your solos more on the catchy side, as opposed to just mindlessly playing scales.
I'm a Montrealer born and raised. I live 15 min walk away from the Petite Bourgogne where Oscar Peterson was born. There is now painted murals of him in the neighborhood and he is one of the greatest pride of the people who live there.
David may i ask, what is it that is “jazz” to you? How can you regconise “its jazz” instantly? Im studying into Jazz! And your opinion would be a treasure to me !😊
@@sajateacher Not really. Not in those days. Racism was the normal way in Montréal and Canada, for any non-white. Born in St-Henri's 'hood, high school was a tough thing to go through. For both whites and blacks. My dad was raised there too, beeing the same age as Oscar. He was a strong boxer and A local 'Defender' in that 'hood, for his brothers and friends, including Oscar.
@@jimvalko6044 While bus segregation may have ended before 1964, black artists still continued to face everyday, institutional racism in the US, and still do to this day. I can't imagine you're unaware of that, but it's best to keep that in mind when you discuss Oscar Peterson's life in the US. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 had only just been passed the year this performance took place.
How to become a jazz piano player: (for us mortals) Lesson one: Master all the chords in all voicings in left and right hand separately and together, combine with all know varieties of scales. Start learning a few standards. Come back in 20 years for lesson two.
@@ditrixaa your comment had me watching this track again, thank you! This time I noticed, in one long camera shot, Ed Thigpen's left hand, how he uses it for those fills that keep the music going. What a subtle drummer!
I've been a pianist since I was 12 and unfortunately I've only had the pleasure of listening to Oscar on RUclips, but he's changed my life. I WISH I could've met him just to shake his hand and say thank you. There has never been anyone better. I missed an era.
In the last 10-15 years I’ve grown to love and a passion for jazz/blues music my appreciation to all the greats is immeasurable. Thank you Oscar Peterson and band for expanding my musical journey. Absolutely stunning!!
It’s in him after 10,000 hours of practice. No magic. Hard work. You can have a gift. But without work it’s nothing. How do you get to Carnegie Hall? Practice, practice, practice.
@@barracuda7018 Are you nuts? He was Canadian end of! Jazz is not American. I believe it came from black people themselves. We have delivered many of the world's great musicians. Where do I start? Leonard Cohen,Joni Mitchell,Neil Young,Gordie Lightfoot, etc,etc!
American blacks of the South not Canadian, you must be an idiot. Canada is a country without birth certificate and national identity, Jazz, blues boogie all came from the South. İts American culture, don’t embarrass yourself..Shut the fcuk up..There is nothing in the world that is Canadian except ice hockey.. Oscar played American music. There is no such thing as Canadian music..
Quite an interesting comparison considering both pianists' flair for staccato voicings and both possessing a technical wizardry on a whole other level.
my grandfather was a jazz drummer for much of his life. you know what they say about hindsight; I was too young to appreciate his skill and his passion for it, and now I wish I had talked with him about it more. got emotional listening to this and hearing those cymbals. I miss you, Papa. brilliant work by Peterson, Brown, and Thigpen. I'm going to end up listening to a lot of C Jam Blues for the next little while.
" you know what they say about hindsight". Tell me about it. I grew up in Montreal where he lived, and yeah, am old enough that I could have gone to see him if I wished.
Wow! Thanks to your comment, I discovered your music. You certainly belonged up on that stage with these guys. ruclips.net/video/x78kz3HR9yI/видео.html
A lot of other pianists, when packing a lot of fast notes into a phrase, have a little trouble getting it all in perfectly and often come in just a tiny bit late for the next. Oscar Peterson always got everything done on time and never came in late for the next phrase. That's just one little example of how great he was.
+Steve Wright > Nobody has his inventiveness, playfulness, class , shear chops! Well, there was a nobody... a blind pianist from Toledo Ohio, named Art Tatum. OP spent years and countless hours emulating Tatum. When OP was in his teens, his father brought home some Tatum records to put the young man in his musical place. OP said that when he realized that it was *not two guys playing the piano but just one*, then he became discouraged and nearly gave up playing for a month or so. In a TV interview (elsewhere on youtube) OP quoted Tatum as telling him, "The only way to get over me is you'll just have to learn to hate me." OP and Tatum later became friends, and OP remarked, "He calls me son."
No one could compare to this trio. Not ever. Oscar had the fastest top 3 right hand fingers ever. NO ONE did better. Talk about pure complete articulation. (This from an old piano man.) Watch. Ray and Thig? Consummate downthud. Completely in sync. Funny thing about Eddie.... he wasn't even trying. Watch him. Total understanding. Accuracy. Dang but this is good. C-Jam was the first true jazz music I ever heard. That was it for me. Now to see it. What a joy. Thank you.
As a pianist myself, I always find it interesting to watch the hands as well, and I wish the cameras had indulged us more in that area. Outside of that, this is musicianship at its finest, from 3 guys just having a good ol' time, doing what they do best, and we are all the better for it.
August 15th is Oscar Peterson's birthday - Happy Birthday Oscar - hope you're looking down from heaven and smiling knowing how much love you brought us with your music!
What a great pleasure to listen to Oscar, Ed and Ray'! He has been the sunshine of my life. All my life and now I am 80 and still enjoy every second of his magic hands. Thank you my beloved Oscar and Rest In Peace.
I have been deeply into jazz for over 60 years. There are very few people in the world about whom you can say that they are the best ever at what they do, but you certainly can say that about Oscar P and Ray B. Ed Thigpen is no slouch either. He fits right in here. When Oscar and Ray died I said "if God was not a jazz fan, he is now!" How in the world could 113 people go thumbs down on this. I feel sorry for them.
One of my favourite Jazz Pianists, with an encyclopedic knowledge of the music and styles he built his language upon. I love listening to him play with Joe Pass.
How could anyone in their right mind not like this? I put this one on and I'm at risk of falling out my window from dancing and jumping around like a fool. Y'all need more Oscar in your life.
I'm 75, just listened to this for the first time in my life!!! Grew up in the 60's Beatles, rock, always loved good music and singing. Frank Sinatra was a firm favourite... intend putting more Oscar on in my car ... ❤
The communication and interplay between the drummer and bassist is so cool to see. I’d kill to have that ride cymbal, this recording quality is also off the charts.
Been a pro musician for over 4 decades and I have never seen or heard a better musician than Oscar Pederson. This guy is the real rock star. I am blown away by his feel and phrasing. No one can touch this beautiful man in terms of sheer musicality. Wow!
I got to hear him at the 1975 Montreux Jazz Festival; I was 19 then, coming form an extensive training of rock and country music and no jazz whatsoever. From that moment on, nothing has ever been the same in my musical taste, nor in my record collection. RIP, Mr. Peterson !
I have the CD of his performance at that festival. I bought the LP when it came out in the 70's too. It's called 'Oscar Peterson's Big 6 Live at Montreux 1975'. He was playing so beautifully at that festival. He also played in a quartet with Milt Jackson at the same festival and I like that record even more. It's called 's 'Milt Jackson's Big 4 at the Montreux Jazz Festival 1975'. Great records, both.
This is absolutely ridiculous, i am quite new to jazz. The skill the main man Peterson has is absolutely mind blowing, but what i am learning in jazz is every great record is made up up of mind blowing talent. Ive not heard a bad record where the bass player was R.Brown,
If you like this, check out Phineas Newborn Jr.. Some have said that Oscar didn't want to hear his name mentioned. Also check out Clark Terry with Mumbles.
Transcribe this and slow it down and learn to phrase like Oscar paying attention to his note durations and space in between the notes. It is quite possible to develop this technique and sound with a lot of careful listening and writing it down and lea ring it slowly.
Ray Brown was one of two guys I ever saw playing with Oscar. The other guy a Swedish guy. Lights out top drawer players. I love this trio!! Add Joe Pass and you got one hell of a quartet.
Listening to Oscar play the Blues is amazing, but watching Ray Brown on the bass is fantastic; that man was on every major recording throughout the entire Be-Bop era.
Ray Brown was one of the finest if not the finest bass player to ever live. I am not sure I would call him underrated. Anyone who was the bass player for Peterson and Ella is clearly a master at his craft.
I just love how the drums & bass play so tasteful and still modest to put Oscar Peterson in the spotlight he deserves. All 3 of them are undeniably some of the best jazz musicians of all time!
Peterson's band brought a little light, wonder and humor into a period of obscurity and weariness in my life. Listening to it many years later, my sensitivity and admiration I felt for it grew. A difficult listening at first, he lends the orchestral direction of his flayed intelligence, until he draws you inevitably into his universe. Each listening reveals a little more of its mystery, its magic, so this work becomes ineluctably timeless "Imperial”
Oscar's 1959 portrait of Sinatra Trio album with Ray Brown & Ed Thigpen is an early vivid example of such... I was 9 yrs old when my dad bought that LP & played it on our Magnavox HiFi at the time & I've gone back to that LP album countless times throughout my adult audiophile life, Literally!
John Brown oscar's death really hurt! What a great artist, and loved by the world. Canada was privileged to have had him. Our loss here in the U.S. Can't believe I could write this while my feet and legs were moving to the beat! Fantastic.
I've known this Oscar tune on the album Night Train for years and years.... But I only stumbled across this version last week. And jeez!....it's absolutely brilliant!! *3 jazz 'dudes' at the absolute top of their game.* Just listen to Oscar (brilliant as ever) and Ed on drums tipping the ride cymbal and hardly ever repeating himself on the Snare drum, and Ray Brown on bass giving his usual great performance. My feet haven't stopped tapping along to this song since hearing it. *Bravo....Oscar, Ray & Ed!*
@@Sh0n0 I know that Ray Brown married Ella Fitzgerald and together they adopted a son who they called Ray Brown Jr. And he went on to have a carreer as a drummer & a singer and is still performing. He has kids....but there's no mention of a 'Chris' amongst them. Thanks.
One of the highlights of my life was meeting the great Ed Thigpen back in around 2007 with his quintet at The Sands Jazz venue in Gainsborough, Lincs, UK. What a chat we had and such a lovely guy. He played this amazing jazz drum solo at 78 years old!
I met Ed Thigpen at Tower Records in Mountain View, CA back in 1991. I didn't know who he was, but we were both browsing through the jazz albums and I picked up an LP by Carmen McRae and he said, "That's a good one." We struck up a conversation and he gave me his number and told me if I was ever in Denmark to give him a call. That would've been the end of it with me still not knowing who Ed Thigpen was if I hadn't been at the store with my Dad who was also browsing in the jazz section. My Dad walked up and said, "Hey! You're Ed Thigpen!" My Dad gave me this incredulous look and said, "Did you know you've been over here chatting it up with Ed Thigpen?" I stared at the ground and quietly said, "No." My Dad never let me forget it and we laughed about it for years.
@@dDoOyYoOuUtTuUbBeE Applauding and cheering during jazz is common and appreciated, although that sometimes depends on the type. I wouldn't applaud until the end for a Bill Evans performance but for Oscar Peterson sometimes he just plays the most amazing lick and you can't help it.
I'm not sure music gets any better than this, regardless of the genre. This is so pure, sincere and soulful, I cannot think of anything much better than these three guys doing their thing. This trio......DAMN!
j'ai écouté ce magnifique Trio en 1974 à Aix-en-Provence (France) qui accompagnait Coleman Hawkins : l'émotion est toujours là, intacte ; il est, pour moi, le plus grand pianiste de Jazz.R.I.P Mr. Peterson.
Yea there is, the media doesn’t praise this stuff as much as before. There’s still people who can play very well. People like Bram Wijnands (give him a search) dont have as much attention that they deserve
My parents used to see the Oscar Peterson Trio live at the London House in Chicago on a regular basis. I can imagine them sitting just as close to Oscar and his incredibly talented sidemen, drummer Ed Thigpen and Bassist Ray Brown. What a privilege for them to see this live!
+zaidbassist it's incredible, isn't it? It's all predetermined, and beautifully articulated. As a mediocre musician, I can only say that any solo I attempt is governed by what I can reach in what time from where I am, rather than the work of an artist as displayed here...
Singing the notes as you play them, with a little practice, is magical. It unlocks something in your brain to finger connection. You will very soon learn that you can play anything you can sing. Once you get past the phase of basic finger training on your instrument.
Been listening to Oscar for >20 years...never get tired of hearing him. I’ve watched this specific video at least 50 times. The swing is soooooooo good on this!
The aperitif like intros are amazing palate cleansers then he spreads the jam. I have loved this man for most of my 87 years. I listen to this track as often as I can
These are expert musicians at their finest. All those eyes staring right at them, never losing time for a second throughout playing all of those different notes. Ultimate respect from this worldly dweller.
When my dad used to see O play live in the 60's and 70's...he'd come home and glow for days. Too bad I was so young back then....those would have been perfect times to have asked my dad to buy me a car or something. Man...Oscar Peterson...the best of the best of the best. Forever! Thank you, Oscar Peterson for being you! And thank you DG for this great jam!
One of my Grandad’s favourites, he and my Dad saw him live a few times and my Grandad was often to be found sat at his piano trying to emulate his jazz & blues heroes, it was a house of beautiful music, sometimes not played so well but the love was there. Now that love for Oscar has been passed onto me, all I’ve got to do is hand the baton onto my daughter 😳
kilbo98 I do this on guitar, with my eyes closed. its just a thing like you hear music in your head and its just part of it, even if you'll notice its out of tune. Paul Kossoff from Free was pretty known for it as well as a lot of other blues and jazz players.
From a hospital bed, this is the stuff that keeps me alive, I couldn’t ask for better medicine! Bill D
Wt
Get well soon.
Best of luck, get well soon!!
Get well soon!
Get well soon mate.
So cool how you can hear Peterson singing the melody to himself as he plays. It's straight brain-to-keys transmission. That's incredible musicianship on display.
Straight brain-to-keys transmission wouldn't involve the diaphragm, intercostals, vocal chords, tongue, mouth.
@@user__214 I can take a straight Net York to Los Angeles flight while also eating a meal and having a drink. Why can't Peterson have brain to keys transmission and also involve other aspects of his musicality? My original point was that this demonstrates that what he hears in his mind is exactly what he plays when improvising. I simply don't see how those things are mutually exclusive. Care to elaborate on your comment so I can better understand?
@@lambdaman3228 Hmm, I think I agree with your point ("what he hears in his mind is what he plays"). I don't know if the original way you *expressed* that point makes sense to me. Giving an example of "brain to mouth" transmission while calling it "brain to keys" just doesn't work all that well, IMO. It's not important though, nor is it a hill I want to die on.
@@user__214 > Giving an example of "brain to mouth" transmission while calling it "brain to keys" just doesn't work all that well, IMO.
This video is called "Oscar Peterson - C Jam Blues" and he's playing keys all the way through the video so it's a given that he is playing the keys - no need to mention this explicitly. More importantly, if you're improvising on the keys but not singing your improvisation as you play, it's not possible for a listener to know if you're playing an improvised melody that's in your head or simply playing notes that "make sense" given chord-scale theory. The former is much more impressive than the latter. That impressive ability is precisely what I was commenting on.
The idea is if it's hummable then it's more memorable for the listener. Even if we can't sing or carry a tune, we can still DISCERN hummable music in our heads. OTOH if something is just plain scales it just sounds like notes. It may make musical sense, but it's just not as CATCHY. Recall every favorite song you've ever had. It's almost always HUMMABLE. Or at least you can easily hear the melody in your head.
So singing through a chord progression & trying to play along with it keeps your solos more on the catchy side, as opposed to just mindlessly playing scales.
Let's take a moment to thank Ray Brown (bass) and Ed Thigpen (drums) for their solid performances.
Amen
Absolutely Donna. Oscar had a really good pair with those guys in that Trio. They could have played anywhere!
Indeed
also knowing when to stop because oscar was straight blasting off into the stratosphere. that kind of bond is difficult to find!
dem boys got LAID all the time
I'm a Montrealer born and raised. I live 15 min walk away from the Petite Bourgogne where Oscar Peterson was born. There is now painted murals of him in the neighborhood and he is one of the greatest pride of the people who live there.
The piano professor in my university (who is an amazing piano master) said that he listens to Oscar Peterson to humble himself.
: |}
When Oscar humbles himself he listens to Hiromi ... :)
@@adhanda2017 Or Basie.... seriously there is a recording out there of him describing a joint concert with Basie...
@@adhanda2017 Tatum.
Try Art Tatum! ruclips.net/video/GLYT3cPA5T8/видео.html
And God came down to earth and said “Let there be Oscar...”. And there was Oscar. And on the seventh day, God grooved.
Sh-Boing!
And you sir, broke the mold. Well said my good man
And GOD tapped his foot and all of Florida went underwater.
Mike Martin Why o Why is this only in the past? What happened to creative people, where have they gone ?
Malcolm Macleod It’s a mystery
Just the best. Absolutely amazing! I’ve loved this music since I was 16. I’m now 82 and it is still some of the best jazz of all time.
Prime music, finest musicians.
I'm sixteen and I'm happy to say I'm also in love with Oscar's playing
David may i ask, what is it that is “jazz” to you? How can you regconise “its jazz” instantly?
Im studying into Jazz! And your opinion would be a treasure to me !😊
@@liammcelroy2265 I just turned 17 on may 7 and I'm also happy so say I love oscar peterson's playing more than art tatum overall.
Hi boomer
The best thing about living now, rather than at any other historical period, is that we can hear and see Oscar Peterson whenever we want.
One consolation of this over tec age!
Non piano players: Wow, I should totally start playing the piano!
Piano players: I should just stop playing the piano...
no cap tho 🥺
Ahahaha true
ikr
I thought Joey Alexander had that honor.
I was thinking that at first. Damn i wanna play like that, then lisening more i was loke awe mane....ill never feel that way to play that well lol
In 1964 in Denmark (and the rest of Europe) these guys were treated like royalty. The came back to the US, and had to sit in the back of the bus.
Hope he was treated better in his hometown of Montreal.
A U.S. cop pulled a gun on him and manager, because they were using a White Only taxi...
@@sajateacher Not really. Not in those days. Racism was the normal way in Montréal and Canada, for any non-white.
Born in St-Henri's 'hood, high school was a tough thing to go through. For both whites and blacks. My dad was raised there too, beeing the same age as Oscar. He was a strong boxer and A local 'Defender' in that 'hood, for his brothers and friends, including Oscar.
Very sad.
@@jimvalko6044 While bus segregation may have ended before 1964, black artists still continued to face everyday, institutional racism in the US, and still do to this day. I can't imagine you're unaware of that, but it's best to keep that in mind when you discuss Oscar Peterson's life in the US. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 had only just been passed the year this performance took place.
How to become a jazz piano player: (for us mortals)
Lesson one: Master all the chords in all voicings in left and right hand separately and together, combine with all know varieties of scales. Start learning a few standards. Come back in 20 years for lesson two.
For real! Keep the woodshed unlocked.
@Gabriel Micheal Yeah everyone else only has to focus on one note at a time. Not fair!
30 years at least...
@@noahmay7708 cough guitar
It'd take me 100 lifetimes to play piano like that..........OR MORE!
To me this was the best Trio. Ray Brown and Ed Thigpen so cool and understated but on top of their game.
Yes. I could not agree more. The real golden era of the Oscar Peterson Trio. Tight as anything! And each a virtuoso...wow. The very best.
@@williambremner9022100%!
I love how understated Thigpen's drums are. Sign of a master.
It’s actually scary how good Oscar Peterson was on the piano
one of the best no doubt
and from Canada :D
Why scary? I sort of get that, but kindly explain. Thanks
@@ellenmaccarrone4936 like fighting Mike Tyson
@@ellenmaccarrone4936Scary as in try and replicate the precision and style 😊
It's disturbing to be honest.
That's the most creative extended solo I've ever heard from Oscar Peterson. Ray Brown's walking bass is so melodic, too. He even smiles at one point!
😂
@@ditrixaa your comment had me watching this track again, thank you! This time I noticed, in one long camera shot, Ed Thigpen's left hand, how he uses it for those fills that keep the music going. What a subtle drummer!
WATCH IT AGAIN!
I've been a pianist since I was 12 and unfortunately I've only had the pleasure of listening to Oscar on RUclips, but he's changed my life. I WISH I could've met him just to shake his hand and say thank you. There has never been anyone better. I missed an era.
Are you as good as him now that 4 months has past since your coment?
Let’s give Ed and Ray some love for their work here. Absolutely amazing stuff
Indeed!
No kidding!,
Seriously awesome drumming right here. 🥁
the pulse they felt was almost psychic! like they were 100% committed to the split second at whatever level Oscar went to!
I agree. Both had amazing careers.
The groove is unreal.
Winston Smith j
Humming to himself while absolutely killing it. What a legend.
It’s like he is composing an extemporaneous song, an ode of poetry, and we are gathered to listen so we can tell the story to our children.
It's called scatting just thought you'd like to know
@@Michele49quàndo e venuto milàno grazie oscarpeterson grazie😅
In the last 10-15 years I’ve grown to love and a passion for jazz/blues music my appreciation to all the greats is immeasurable. Thank you Oscar Peterson and band for expanding my musical journey. Absolutely stunning!!
He had complete mastery of that instrument. No need to think, just feel and then play.
Did not need to look either. It is why many blind pianists are so good..
So true. It is just "in" him.
Absolutely. The piano is an extension of his soul.
And....that's why we practice, practice,....and practice some more.!!!
It’s in him after 10,000 hours of practice. No magic. Hard work. You can have a gift. But without work it’s nothing. How do you get to Carnegie Hall? Practice, practice, practice.
Anyone else wish they filmed his hands occasionally?
Yea that's were the magic is freaking tv..
I'm just glad I get to listen to this.
at 3:41
yes and counted the fingers too I think he has at least 20
Yes, I wish they had shown more of his hands on the keys
I've watched this clip about once a month for the last year... 3 dudes with groove, feel and love. It's therapy for the soul.
amen brother
yeah bro
You still here?
@@davidferrara1105 Yep.
Same here. It's like an addiction. They are really at the top of their game.
This is Peterson giving his whole heart to the world.
Whenever you think you have mastered a skill, watch this and you will realize there is still more to learn.
Feel the same and all the work I've put looks so worthless.
Considered by many to be the greatest pianist ever. A great Canadian.
You bet! Best ever! From a fellow Canadian and so proud of Oscar!
Barring Art Tatum, even Oscar acknowledged this, besides his music has nothing to do with Canada, its American !!!
Oscar was great, but its always a question of taste, my favorite was always Erroll Garner..
@@barracuda7018 Are you nuts? He was Canadian end of! Jazz is not American. I believe it came from black people themselves. We have delivered many of the world's great musicians. Where do I start? Leonard Cohen,Joni Mitchell,Neil Young,Gordie Lightfoot, etc,etc!
American blacks of the South not Canadian, you must be an idiot. Canada is a country without birth certificate and national identity, Jazz, blues boogie all came from the South. İts American culture, don’t embarrass yourself..Shut the fcuk up..There is nothing in the world that is Canadian except ice hockey.. Oscar played American music. There is no such thing as Canadian music..
Oscar Peterson for 2 hours, Solo at Severance Hall in Cleveland 1986. Was the best concert I've ever seen.
Man, that trio were tight. Brilliant musicianship. Love the way Peterson was humming along like a jazz Glenn Gould.
He won the Glenn Gould award in 1993
Must be a Canadian thing.
Those two cats are my favorite pianists of their genres. Heads and shoulders above just about everybody else.
Quite an interesting comparison considering both pianists' flair for staccato voicings and both possessing a technical wizardry on a whole other level.
🎨
He did not need the “Oscar”. He was the Oscar himself.
THE Oscar.
That's right.
In addition to Oscar Peterson, this is Ray Brown on the bass. He's another great musician. What a fabulous trio!
Not just a bass player - a whole fleet of bass players, rollin’ in………
my grandfather was a jazz drummer for much of his life. you know what they say about hindsight; I was too young to appreciate his skill and his passion for it, and now I wish I had talked with him about it more. got emotional listening to this and hearing those cymbals. I miss you, Papa.
brilliant work by Peterson, Brown, and Thigpen. I'm going to end up listening to a lot of C Jam Blues for the next little while.
" you know what they say about hindsight". Tell me about it. I grew up in Montreal where he lived, and yeah, am old enough that I could have gone to see him if I wished.
And to think I opened for THIS trio for two weeks in August, 1964 at The Village Vanguard. How lucky can you get?
Damn, you old
that's awesome. a great achievement to be proud of!!
Wow! Thanks to your comment, I discovered your music. You certainly belonged up on that stage with these guys.
ruclips.net/video/x78kz3HR9yI/видео.html
@@ly776 She does indeed. And thank YOU for following up her recordings to discover this track!
@@AryanMarlboro well, first things first, she has more brain cells than you'll ever have so... lol
A lot of other pianists, when packing a lot of fast notes into a phrase, have a little trouble getting it all in perfectly and often come in just a tiny bit late for the next. Oscar Peterson always got everything done on time and never came in late for the next phrase. That's just one little example of how great he was.
His timing was ridiculous. I have listened to this many times and will always love it going forward.
My ABSOLUTE favorite piano player. Nobody has his inventiveness, playfulness, class , shear chops!
beedoe51 A true master of the instrument! My other favourite is Bill Evans.
Steve Wright The only person i Know to play with such energy is ray Charles! Lol He's Great!
+Steve Wright nothing compare to monk
+Jaroslav At Amsterdam , that's not a "strange capacity" at all ... why do you say it's strange?
+Steve Wright
> Nobody has his inventiveness, playfulness, class , shear chops!
Well, there was a nobody... a blind pianist from Toledo Ohio, named Art Tatum.
OP spent years and countless hours emulating Tatum. When OP was in his teens, his father brought home some Tatum records to put the young man in his musical place. OP said that when he realized that it was *not two guys playing the piano but just one*, then he became discouraged and nearly gave up playing for a month or so.
In a TV interview (elsewhere on youtube) OP quoted Tatum as telling him, "The only way to get over me is you'll just have to learn to hate me."
OP and Tatum later became friends, and OP remarked, "He calls me son."
No one could compare to this trio. Not ever. Oscar had the fastest top 3 right hand fingers ever. NO ONE did better. Talk about pure complete articulation. (This from an old piano man.) Watch. Ray and Thig? Consummate downthud. Completely in sync. Funny thing about Eddie.... he wasn't even trying. Watch him. Total understanding. Accuracy. Dang but this is good. C-Jam was the first true jazz music I ever heard. That was it for me. Now to see it. What a joy. Thank you.
One of the best versions of C Jam Blues I’ve ever heard! Oscar Peterson was a true gift to mankind!
As a pianist myself, I always find it interesting to watch the hands as well, and I wish the cameras had indulged us more in that area. Outside of that, this is musicianship at its finest, from 3 guys just having a good ol' time, doing what they do best, and we are all the better for it.
Agee. That's the only thing that I didn't like about this. I would have liked to see this genius play those keys. Otherwise excellent.
Ya, as interesting as the view of OP’s face is 😂, woulda been way cooler to see his hands too
There is indeed beauty in the movement of the hands. Love that in guitar players as well.
As a pianist sometimes I am actually grateful I don't get to see his hands, cause I may give up piano altogether
Anyone else impressed with the crowd's clapping? Any idea how hard it is to get an audience to clap in-time even thrice?
true
Tbf, copenhagen in the 60s was packed with Jazz-enthusiasts. I bet you most of these ppl are musically enclined.
The phenomenon happens more often than you’d think
@@rile7648 Perhaps I need to attend more live shows with clapping... in my experience, an audience like that is rare.
And on the after-beats too! I'd've gone nuts if they were clapping on 1 & 3.
I cry with joy, EVERTIME I hear this.
I am so proud of Oscar. MY Canadian.
/Ray and Ed - I have your back, brothers. Big love.
August 15th is Oscar Peterson's birthday - Happy Birthday Oscar - hope you're looking down from heaven and smiling knowing how much love you brought us with your music!
What a great pleasure to listen to Oscar, Ed and Ray'! He has been the sunshine of my life. All my life and now I am 80 and still enjoy every second of his magic hands. Thank you my beloved Oscar and Rest In Peace.
He really was one of those humans whose time on earth was spent making A LOT of people VERY HAPPY, even in the future
I have been deeply into jazz for over 60 years. There are very few people in the world about whom you can say that they are the best ever at what they do, but you certainly can say that about Oscar P and Ray B. Ed Thigpen is no slouch either. He fits right in here. When Oscar and Ray died I said "if God was not a jazz fan, he is now!"
How in the world could 113 people go thumbs down on this. I feel sorry for them.
No s3x or violence.
Those 113people are mentally slow.
One of my favourite Jazz Pianists, with an encyclopedic knowledge of the music and styles he built his language upon. I love listening to him play with Joe Pass.
How could anyone in their right mind not like this? I put this one on and I'm at risk of falling out my window from dancing and jumping around like a fool. Y'all need more Oscar in your life.
I'm 75, just listened to this for the first time in my life!!! Grew up in the 60's Beatles, rock, always loved good music and singing. Frank Sinatra was a firm favourite... intend putting more Oscar on in my car ... ❤
The communication and interplay between the drummer and bassist is so cool to see. I’d kill to have that ride cymbal, this recording quality is also off the charts.
And those hi-hats!
Peterson is obviously amazing.. But props to the drummer he's super clean
+Jim Bob y drums and bass are good...
+Jim Bob: Bassist no slouch either?
+John Reid Of course the bassist is no slouch. The great Ray Brown!!
+Jim Bob Yep, a flawless band all round makes it particularly awesome.
+Don MacQuarrie Ed Thigpen! Great drummer, but there's only one Buddy Rich!
Oscar Peterson didn't pass away. He just returned to his planet.
Been a pro musician for over 4 decades and I have never seen or heard a better musician than Oscar Pederson. This guy is the real rock star. I am blown away by his feel and phrasing. No one can touch this beautiful man in terms of sheer musicality. Wow!
FABULOUS JAZZ. I was priviledged to meet Ed Thigpen about 8 years ago with his Scandanavian quintet. He signed my Night Train CD! Great guy.
It was a great gig and he even did a drum solo at 78 years old!
Too jealous!
I got to hear him at the 1975 Montreux Jazz Festival; I was 19 then, coming form an extensive training of rock and country music and no jazz whatsoever. From that moment on, nothing has ever been the same in my musical taste, nor in my record collection. RIP, Mr. Peterson !
lucky you! this is a way superior form of art!
I have the CD of his performance at that festival. I bought the LP when it came out in the 70's too. It's called 'Oscar Peterson's Big 6 Live at Montreux 1975'. He was playing so beautifully at that festival. He also played in a quartet with Milt Jackson at the same festival and I like that record even more. It's called 's 'Milt Jackson's Big 4 at the Montreux Jazz Festival 1975'. Great records, both.
Ts Rs I was too with my father and I was 13 years old
Thanks God and until today is in my heart
Great and superb Oscar Peterson
This is absolutely ridiculous, i am quite new to jazz. The skill the main man Peterson has is absolutely mind blowing, but what i am learning in jazz is every great record is made up up of mind blowing talent. Ive not heard a bad record where the bass player was R.Brown,
If you like this, check out Phineas Newborn Jr.. Some have said that Oscar didn't want to hear his name mentioned. Also check out Clark Terry with Mumbles.
@@RobertWilliams-mk8pl Thanks, will check them out now!
Transcribe this and slow it down and learn to phrase like Oscar paying attention to his note durations and space in between the notes. It is quite possible to develop this technique and sound with a lot of careful listening and writing it down and lea ring it slowly.
Who tf dislikes these videos??
Ray Brown was one of two guys I ever saw playing with Oscar. The other guy a Swedish guy. Lights out top drawer players. I love this trio!! Add Joe Pass and you got one hell of a quartet.
He is one of the most talented living history jazz, this music will live forever
i heard someone screaming and shouting with delight during this and then realised it was me lol Absolute genius from an incredible trio. Wow!!!!
Listening to Oscar play the Blues is amazing, but watching Ray Brown on the bass is fantastic; that man was on every major recording throughout the entire Be-Bop era.
Yea man, you can say that again. So underrated as a bass player.
Ray Brown was one of the finest if not the finest bass player to ever live. I am not sure I would call him underrated. Anyone who was the bass player for Peterson and Ella is clearly a master at his craft.
a jam so magnificent that the whole crowd syncs their appreciation in applaud, wow.
I was lucky enough to see him in concert about twenty years ago. I’m very lucky! A truly great musician and a lovely man.
this music automatically makes you tap your feet with happiness
+dougie hamilton so right...Heavy swing...cannot resist
+dougie hamilton Realised as I was reading that my feet was taping by its own like a dog's tail haha thumbs up!
+dougie hamilton I'm a blues pianist too. You can find some good stuff on my channel :)
i didn't even notice dude holy shit
Oscar is the best.
And this it's all.
He's one of the greatest jazz pianist ever.
I just love how the drums & bass play so tasteful and still modest to put Oscar Peterson in the spotlight he deserves.
All 3 of them are undeniably some of the best jazz musicians of all time!
It literally doesn’t get better than this
legends, love it.
Peterson's band brought a little light, wonder and humor into a period of obscurity and weariness in my life. Listening to it many years later, my sensitivity and admiration I felt for it grew. A difficult listening at first, he lends the orchestral direction of his flayed intelligence, until he draws you inevitably into his universe. Each listening reveals a little more of its mystery, its magic, so this work becomes ineluctably timeless "Imperial”
Oscar's 1959 portrait of Sinatra Trio album with Ray Brown & Ed Thigpen is an early vivid example of such... I was 9 yrs old when my dad bought that LP & played it on our Magnavox HiFi at the time & I've gone back to that LP album countless times throughout my adult audiophile life, Literally!
Saw Oscar approx 40 years ago / once with Ella. Still the best trio in the world. Thanks U Tube
+John Brown Was the trio tour With Oz Ella & Joe Pass? Or am I eariler still? Stil top drawer,,,. by any standard.
thats rigth,magic sounds.
John Brown oscar's death really hurt! What a great artist, and loved by the world. Canada was privileged to have had him. Our loss here in the U.S. Can't believe I could write this while my feet and legs were moving to the beat! Fantastic.
This trio were pure magic & I wish I could have seen them play in person.
Hello 😊my name is Alex how are you where are you commenting from?
i could listen to it every day, it's simply a masterpiece!
I do!
hans müller me too
+hans müller
Hans - I DO listen to it every day!!
I've known this Oscar tune on the album Night Train for years and years.... But I only stumbled across this version last week. And jeez!....it's absolutely brilliant!! *3 jazz 'dudes' at the absolute top of their game.* Just listen to Oscar (brilliant as ever) and Ed on drums tipping the ride cymbal and hardly ever repeating himself on the Snare drum, and Ray Brown on bass giving his usual great performance. My feet haven't stopped tapping along to this song since hearing it. *Bravo....Oscar, Ray & Ed!*
Crazy to thing ray brown is chris browns grandfather. The musical talent in that family is immense
@@Sh0n0 I know that Ray Brown married Ella Fitzgerald and together they adopted a son who they called Ray Brown Jr. And he went on to have a carreer as a drummer & a singer and is still performing. He has kids....but there's no mention of a 'Chris' amongst them. Thanks.
never repeating... you are not listening well..
@@morbidmanmusic Clean out your ears morbid...
I've been listening to this for years and it just blows my mind how amazing this performance is. I'll be watching this until I'm dead.
The three are so tight and so in synch with each other. It's like a musical mind meld, a single musical super organisim.
I'm a regular watcher of this piece . This trio is amazing . Oscar P. is amazing !
I love how at 2:51 the drummer closely observes the others and 'musically responds' to them.
Michael Harwood I like how that time stamp is ii-V-I
Real musicians
to play with Oscar means you are the best at your craft
Whose jazz professor are you lol I swear this was a concept we legit had to learn and embrace for like 2 months and still trying to get down!
No disrespect all jokes lol
The whole 20 fingered intro is another work then the C gets the jam, what a man
I just love how he took the tempo of the clapping and went off that. His perfect time as well is just amazing to listen to.
to be clear.. no human has perfect time.
One of the highlights of my life was meeting the great Ed Thigpen back in around 2007 with his quintet at The Sands Jazz venue in Gainsborough, Lincs, UK. What a chat we had and such a lovely guy. He played this amazing jazz drum solo at 78 years old!
Roy Haynes is still playing amazing drum solos at 95.
I met Ed Thigpen at Tower Records in Mountain View, CA back in 1991. I didn't know who he was, but we were both browsing through the jazz albums and I picked up an LP by Carmen McRae and he said, "That's a good one." We struck up a conversation and he gave me his number and told me if I was ever in Denmark to give him a call. That would've been the end of it with me still not knowing who Ed Thigpen was if I hadn't been at the store with my Dad who was also browsing in the jazz section. My Dad walked up and said, "Hey! You're Ed Thigpen!" My Dad gave me this incredulous look and said, "Did you know you've been over here chatting it up with Ed Thigpen?" I stared at the ground and quietly said, "No." My Dad never let me forget it and we laughed about it for years.
You know is good when even the applause is on tune with the jam.
Mansur
@@quogir1 qué?
@@mansurbotellafraga1817 Well observed :-) .
WOW!
SMART AUDIENCE!
That absolutely blew me away! Their awareness of not interrupting the stage rhythm!
I believe jazz was/is more popular in Europe than U.S.
Rude audience. I would have been here to here the music, not their noises or shouts.
@@dDoOyYoOuUtTuUbBeE Applauding and cheering during jazz is common and appreciated, although that sometimes depends on the type. I wouldn't applaud until the end for a Bill Evans performance but for Oscar Peterson sometimes he just plays the most amazing lick and you can't help it.
An amazing pianist and an even more amazing improvisator. I'm proud to be Canadian like this piano legend 🍁
music has no nationality =)
I'm not sure music gets any better than this, regardless of the genre. This is so pure, sincere and soulful, I cannot think of anything much better than these three guys doing their thing. This trio......DAMN!
j'ai écouté ce magnifique Trio en 1974 à Aix-en-Provence (France) qui accompagnait Coleman Hawkins : l'émotion est toujours là, intacte ; il est, pour moi, le plus grand pianiste de Jazz.R.I.P Mr. Peterson.
Oh un français !
Still there’s not a single person who can play like this and it’s been almost 100 years
55 yrs .. let's not push it ... 1964 was my birth year... lol
Hazel Scott?
Yea there is, the media doesn’t praise this stuff as much as before. There’s still people who can play very well. People like Bram Wijnands (give him a search) dont have as much attention that they deserve
This is a badass recording!!!!
i was one year old in 64,didnt know about Peterson then,learned of him later,and love his style now
My parents used to see the Oscar Peterson Trio live at the London House in Chicago on a regular basis.
I can imagine them sitting just as close to Oscar and his incredibly talented sidemen, drummer Ed Thigpen and Bassist Ray Brown.
What a privilege for them to see this live!
he sings all that he plays, all the notes are in his brain and slowly descends through his hand
+zaidbassist it's incredible, isn't it? It's all predetermined, and beautifully articulated. As a mediocre musician, I can only say that any solo I attempt is governed by what I can reach in what time from where I am, rather than the work of an artist as displayed here...
...(face to palm)
not that slowly though! :)
His music is processed by his brain but the armony comes out from his heart.
What do you mean he sings the notes he plays?
Singing the notes as you play them, with a little practice, is magical. It unlocks something in your brain to finger connection. You will very soon learn that you can play anything you can sing. Once you get past the phase of basic finger training on your instrument.
Been listening to Oscar for >20 years...never get tired of hearing him. I’ve watched this specific video at least 50 times. The swing is soooooooo good on this!
The aperitif like intros are amazing palate cleansers then he spreads the jam. I have loved this man for most of my 87 years. I listen to this track as often as I can
Any other music you might’ve run across as compelling as this is
@@Thebb123 few and far between as my comment indicates, A stream of musical consciousness
@@Thebb123 The addition of the ubiquitous Ray Brown is a special bonus
These are expert musicians at their finest. All those eyes staring right at them, never losing time for a second throughout playing all of those different notes. Ultimate respect from this worldly dweller.
Whoa... off the hook! These three are "all in" on this; mind blown. This is so fun!
I can't seem to get enough of this performance. I keep coming back for more!
imagine how fast he could type an email
. . . only if it was on a piano.
Piano has nothing to do with emails, I liked your comment thouh
in that vid where he played the synths, he typed with 2 fingers :D
When my dad used to see O play live in the 60's and 70's...he'd come home and glow for days. Too bad I was so young back then....those would have been perfect times to have asked my dad to buy me a car or something. Man...Oscar Peterson...the best of the best of the best. Forever! Thank you, Oscar Peterson for being you! And thank you DG for this great jam!
I've had this piece stuck in my head for the past... ten years.
This will never get old.
velmi dobré vystúpenie
Somebody may have already commented this, but I like how he took the beat from the crowd and started the tune. Just a kind and very smooth gesture!
One of my Grandad’s favourites, he and my Dad saw him live a few times and my Grandad was often to be found sat at his piano trying to emulate his jazz & blues heroes, it was a house of beautiful music, sometimes not played so well but the love was there. Now that love for Oscar has been passed onto me, all I’ve got to do is hand the baton onto my daughter 😳
the best. the benchmark. the bar. the goat
Pretty impressive that he knows exactly what notes he is going to play, what they sound like, and that he can sing along to it.
WITH HIS EYES CLOSED TOO
Tons of Jazz piano players do that. You hear them humming along all the time. Mose Allison is notorious for it.
Yes, ok.
kilbo98 I do this on guitar, with my eyes closed. its just a thing like you hear music in your head and its just part of it, even if you'll notice its out of tune. Paul Kossoff from Free was pretty known for it as well as a lot of other blues and jazz players.
Hendrix940 Yeah i getcha inernalizing pitch and stuff like that
I've heard many jazz blues tunes , but this tops them all, Oscar is a genius.
For some reason Oscar’s playing always makes me happy. What a great performer!
Me too !
I think, such joy in his music, hard not to smile.
This piece started so „nicely mellow“ and turned out to become a tornado. WHAT a performance. No wonder the crowd went crazy. ❤️❤️