Это видео недоступно.
Сожалеем об этом.

Dexter Gordon Quartet Live At The North Sea Jazz Festival • 15-07-1979 • World of Jazz

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 30 авг 2018
  • Raw material from the performance of the Dexter Gordon Quartet during the North Sea Jazz Festival 1979, held in the
    Congress building in The Hague.
    Performance of the Dexter Gordon Quartet consisting of Dexter Gordon tenor saxophone, Eddie Gladden percussion, Rufus Reid bass
    and Kirk Lightsey piano.
    Watch more World of Jazz videos ► goo.gl/Z28cxv
    Join us. Subscribe now! ► goo.gl/n2FHaL
    Thanks for all your support, rating the video and leaving a comment is always appreciated!
    Please: respect each other in the comments.
    This is the official RUclips channel of World of Jazz.

Комментарии • 105

  • @SaxmanJones-sr1il
    @SaxmanJones-sr1il 3 года назад +38

    I have saxophonic multiple personality disorder: all my life, I wanted to sound like Paul Desmond on alto, Gerry Mulligan on bari and Stan Getz on tenor. Then I bought Montreux Summit back in '77 and heard Dexter Gordon and didn't want to play tenor ever again! How can anybody play that many choruses and not repeat a single lick? The man was and will always be the most awesome tenor player I ever heard; a once in a generation talent and super cool!

    • @FCntertainr
      @FCntertainr 2 года назад +4

      Dexter was acknowledged as the one who transferred the bebop language from Charlie Parker alto to tenor! Along with Don Byas who never strayed from his swing roots. Coltrane, Getz, Allan Eager, Rollins, Coltrane all listened to Coleman Hawkins, ben Webster and Lester Young but liked Dexter 👌 as the intermediary bop tenor. I seen an interview of Rollins asked if he liked Dexter? He exclaimed of course I liked Dexter!

    • @jamesadams8022
      @jamesadams8022 2 года назад +4

      Agree with you but I don’t think he necessarily stood above some other players of his generation- only need to look at his contemporaries on the West Coast- eg Wardell Gray, Harold Land, Teddy Edwards, (who is also credited with first be-bop solo on record) I think there’s a lot of underrated guys too who were so talented but for one reason or another never get mentioned in the same light- Dexter led classic sessions for sure and deserves his accolades. Not taking anything away from Dexter of course nor critiquing your post in a negative way just want to give a shout out to the other talent of Dexter’s generation 👍

    • @markhiggins8315
      @markhiggins8315 6 месяцев назад

      C​@@FCntertainr The first complete, no transitional be bop tenor I've heard was Sonny Stitt. His recordings with Bud Powell are the earliest outstanding recordings of great bop tenor. Some of the very best examples put down in a studio.

  • @rozenaxsax5133
    @rozenaxsax5133 3 года назад +25

    Rufus Reid is a monster of a bassist. Incredible playing on every song. I could listen to him soloing all day long.

  • @normanlove3919
    @normanlove3919 Месяц назад

    Mastery from all involved,!!!

  • @rachelstarritt481
    @rachelstarritt481 3 года назад +21

    I really, really love Gladden, Lightsey and Reid as just a trio, they compliment each other so well, I’d have loved to hear a whole trio a album of just these three together, they’re so dynamic!!!

    • @rozenaxsax5133
      @rozenaxsax5133 3 года назад

      I agree fully.

    • @FCntertainr
      @FCntertainr 2 года назад +2

      I saw this band in 1982 with David Eubanks on bass and tbey were awesome but Eddie stole the show!

    • @bradg4562
      @bradg4562 2 года назад +3

      @@FCntertainr true dat. Talk about unheralded/underappreciated drummers. Eddie Gladden is right up there with any of his contemporaries. The man is a powerhouse. 110% all the time. Add Rufus and Kirk and you have one of the best trios ever. 🥁

    • @Hank-ip8rl
      @Hank-ip8rl 5 месяцев назад

      They released an album under Reid's name a year after this called Perpetual Stroll and it's a beautiful record.

    • @normanlove3919
      @normanlove3919 Месяц назад

      Incredible!!!

  • @andrewcharley1893
    @andrewcharley1893 6 месяцев назад +3

    Every thing about Dexter is BIG!!!!!!!

  • @piotrsalamon6212
    @piotrsalamon6212 10 месяцев назад +3

    SUUUper!!! Tolle Besetzung und Konzert! Fantastisch!!!

  • @skimanization
    @skimanization 6 месяцев назад +1

    Wow, what a show of talent. dexter Gordon is always my mentor on saxophone. I also all the guys on rhythm section, they are all brilliant players. The drummer, Eddie gladden reminds me of Philly Jo Jones. Well done!!!

  • @patsirianni7984
    @patsirianni7984 3 года назад +8

    Dexter puts the mellow in his notes that touches my soul

  • @PhrygianPhrog
    @PhrygianPhrog 6 месяцев назад +1

    Wow this is so beautiful I'm weeping. Full human expression in this music.

  • @giuseppefabris1874
    @giuseppefabris1874 Год назад +4

    JAZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ JAZZ WILL NEVER DEAD. GRANDE DEXTER

  • @olavbe3134
    @olavbe3134 3 года назад +11

    dex took the bop down to his own level and made himself the greatest tenor player so far . the pianoplayer here is great and the rest of the band as well lovely olav bøe norway

  • @martinlehfeldt6916
    @martinlehfeldt6916 Год назад +4

    My favorite jazz trio. Dex is my favorite tenor. Love all the live playing on these guys.

  • @raymondkarlsson9794
    @raymondkarlsson9794 8 месяцев назад +2

    Wow, Dexter’s cadences!!!

  • @maureenbowerman5300
    @maureenbowerman5300 7 месяцев назад +1

    It's likely my dad knew about Dexter Gordon, being just six years older and playing the same instrument and genre. I've just recently started listening to his music, its really good, and shows the same influence I recognize from the 40's and 50's.

  • @olebirgerpedersen
    @olebirgerpedersen 9 месяцев назад +2

    Dexter was a good friend of mine and I miss him, his play and his wonderful sence of humor. I still regard him as one of the greatest ever.

    • @PhrygianPhrog
      @PhrygianPhrog 6 месяцев назад

      What kind of things did you use to talk about with Dexter? I always wondered his thought about music, the musical approach he took, his ideas :)

    • @normanlove3919
      @normanlove3919 Месяц назад

      Ever meet his buddy and fan tenor man Red Higgins out of Omaha here? He took me to hear Dex when I was 18

  • @user-qd2zt3hf9r
    @user-qd2zt3hf9r 5 месяцев назад

    When I was in highschool learning how to play the saxophone, I used to go to one of my uncle's house and pull out a lot of his albums to pick up some licks from cats like Coltrane, Turrentine, Jug and one day he turned me on to Dexter and I've been a fan ever since and that was back in 1965.

  • @raymondkarlsson9794
    @raymondkarlsson9794 9 месяцев назад +1

    The trio in the piano solo in It’s you or no one...

  • @tonartification
    @tonartification 6 лет назад +9

    Dex - the man!! The band is on fire - deep jazz!! Great memories - I was there ;)

  • @martinlehfeldt6916
    @martinlehfeldt6916 Год назад +2

    For me nobody could comp better than kirk lightsey.

  • @gunnarkarlsson3391
    @gunnarkarlsson3391 2 года назад +3

    Still totally outstanding

  • @reinaldocaruso3772
    @reinaldocaruso3772 5 лет назад +5

    My favorite tenor player... A very unique voice in jazz.

  • @anthonywinkler6666
    @anthonywinkler6666 2 года назад +3

    Wonderful!

  • @mikeos1
    @mikeos1 5 лет назад +5

    I was there that year.

  • @matteopiazza1301
    @matteopiazza1301 6 лет назад +10

    Thanks very very much once again dear World Of Jazz for those real gems!!!
    The beautiful songs with Dexter - "It's You Or No One" - "More Than You Know" and "Backstairs" had already been published a few years ago both on DVD and CD but, the songs that perform the rhythm section at the concert opening "In Your Own Sweet Way" and "Freedom Jazz Dance" are a beautiful gift !!!!!

  • @pegrueneis
    @pegrueneis Год назад +4

    Gladden wow

  • @raymondkarlsson9794
    @raymondkarlsson9794 3 года назад +4

    This is really an important documentation of Dexter and some of his most beloved accompanists. I had the previligue to hear a later version of this setting in Stockholm, Sweden at the Skeppsholmen Jazz & Blues Festival in 1981. The late great David Eubanks had replaced Rufus Reid.
    As I remember (Fond memory!) they played Tangerine, Tanya, one of Dexter’s classic ballads and Gingerbread Boy. Despite the chilly early summer night they really raised the temperature!

    • @kpoudavoff
      @kpoudavoff Год назад

      Dexter never liked Rufus too much though, he’d always tell him “man, you’re not the soloist, you play too many notes”. And his time wasn’t that great. Definitely prefer Eubanks brothers over any bassist Dexter has played with.

  • @raymondkarlsson9794
    @raymondkarlsson9794 9 месяцев назад

    What a force Eddie Gladden was! He never forgot the pulse no matter how dense the playing was.

  • @jostak2726
    @jostak2726 5 лет назад +5

    I was there, Congresgebouw, The Hague : ) Thanx!!!

  • @thebritandtheyank3821
    @thebritandtheyank3821 3 года назад +4

    In response to Mark Schultz; I'm a 65 year old NYC educated musician who has spent 40 years at total immersion in Jazz, having come previously from a classical background. From this perspective - and as a teacher, I've found that it is simply important enough to speak to the shortcomings of the public around me without simultaneously alienating that audience whom might just remain willfully ignorant otherwise, and this is my motivation with all things. My education was deepened and given context in 1978 when I heard Dexter at the Village Vanguard. It was an epiphany beyond my abilities to describe it even now.
    Perhaps those of us for whom these things have meaning and consequence should band together in our obvious advocacy so that we CAN change things.

  • @thebritandtheyank3821
    @thebritandtheyank3821 5 лет назад +6

    I've felt Dexter Gordon to be spectacularly overlooked for some time now, but perhaps maybe it's just me. His power and authority added to the unique tonal palate he uses had been a hallmark of his playing for his whole life, and like Ben Webster (for example), they both beautifully add to the tenor saxophone lineage with riches beyond that of mere mortals.

    • @jalebjaba1487
      @jalebjaba1487 4 года назад +1

      Dexter gained fame on the screen lived abroad,and was famous there,Inspired Trane ,Rollins .I wouldn’t say he was overlooked . Long Tall Dexter’s last book written by his wife Maxine is A great read.

    • @MsMojoworks
      @MsMojoworks 3 года назад

      He won an Oscar for heaven’s sake! Overlooked!?!

    • @sulaimanbeyah3308
      @sulaimanbeyah3308 2 года назад +1

      @@MsMojoworks He was nominated for an Oscar, PAUL NEWMAN won the Oscar, his FIRST & ONLY Oscar!!!

  • @user-qd2zt3hf9r
    @user-qd2zt3hf9r 4 месяца назад

    Dexter Gordon with the Kirk Lightsey trio. Wow,what a trip!!!!

  • @raymondkarlsson9794
    @raymondkarlsson9794 5 лет назад +3

    Yeah! So good to see and hear these gentlemen! The top of the crop at this time.

  • @ricardoleon6142
    @ricardoleon6142 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you for posting this document. Mr. Gordon was an acoustic jazz giant amongst tenor sax players. Very nice and clean sound + vision. Our man in Paris.

  • @gilbertobellino
    @gilbertobellino 3 года назад +3

    Assisti este show em São Paulo! Beautiful!

  • @patsirianni3025
    @patsirianni3025 3 года назад +3

    Played cool and mellow tall man

  • @raymondkarlsson9794
    @raymondkarlsson9794 4 года назад +3

    Jazz at it`s best!

  • @wernerdahnz3863
    @wernerdahnz3863 6 лет назад +2

    My man, Dexter. Thanks a lot.

  • @gunnarkarlsson3391
    @gunnarkarlsson3391 4 года назад +5

    Gött att höra Dexter i toppform

  • @jpa1214
    @jpa1214 2 года назад +2

    This is great

  • @juliosajevicas4719
    @juliosajevicas4719 6 лет назад +2

    amazing !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @jalebjaba1487
    @jalebjaba1487 Год назад +6

    Dexter influenced Trane ,and many other Tenor players , Lester influenced them all,but Dex made it Cool ,Sophisticated Giant ❤️

  • @martinbreukelen
    @martinbreukelen 5 лет назад +2

    Been there.... memories ....

  • @A.ChristopherJohnson
    @A.ChristopherJohnson 2 года назад

    Beauty !!!

  • @previtalle
    @previtalle 6 лет назад +1

    Excelente!

  • @kpoudavoff
    @kpoudavoff 5 лет назад +7

    33:38 Dex attacks the tune , that’s amazing.

  • @raymondkarlsson9794
    @raymondkarlsson9794 2 года назад +1

    If you don’t get it, this is as good as it gets

  • @MyFlare123
    @MyFlare123 4 года назад +10

    Set list: 1. i didn't know what time it was. 2. freedom jazz dance. 3. it's you or no one. 4. more than you know. 5. backstairs.

    • @katella12
      @katella12 4 года назад +8

      The first tune isn't "I Didn't Know What Time is Was". It's Dave Brubeck's composition "In Your Own Sweet Way."

    • @MyFlare123
      @MyFlare123 4 года назад +3

      @@katella12 you're quite right

    • @reedoutloud
      @reedoutloud 4 года назад +3

      Isn't 1. In your own sweet way (Brubeck)???

    • @kurinakornel1
      @kurinakornel1 3 года назад

      @@reedoutloud Yes! :)

    • @ricardoamadeusmusic
      @ricardoamadeusmusic 2 года назад

      Can you guys tell me who’s the piano player. I just recognized Rufus Reid

  • @couchphotography8861
    @couchphotography8861 6 месяцев назад

    Dexter had a part in the Awakenings film with Robin Williams...he looked so cool and elegant and also played piano in the movie. He's missed!

  • @paulzauner
    @paulzauner 11 месяцев назад

    ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @raymondkarlsson9794
    @raymondkarlsson9794 9 месяцев назад +1

    Hard to match the performance of Gladden here! 🙏🏻

  • @jamesmcrawford
    @jamesmcrawford 5 лет назад +1

    A play list would be very helpful !!!!

    • @MyFlare123
      @MyFlare123 4 года назад +4

      1. i didn't know what time it was. 2. freedom jazz dance. 3. it's you or no one. 4. more than you know. 5. backstairs.

    • @katella12
      @katella12 4 года назад +6

      @@MyFlare123 The first tune isn't "I Didn't Know What Time is Was". It's Dave Brubeck's composition "In Your Own Sweet Way."

    • @RickBrowntrombonist
      @RickBrowntrombonist 3 года назад

      It's You Or No One, More Than You Know, Backstairs.

  • @erginyilmaztenor
    @erginyilmaztenor 8 месяцев назад

    at 1:26:30 came the Moment Notice motif.

  • @raymondkarlsson9794
    @raymondkarlsson9794 9 месяцев назад

    Clear 1-3 on the bass drum in the uptempo numbers. Guess that’s what was needed (along with Eddie’s Big cymbal beat) to keep the tempo 😊

  • @thebritandtheyank3821
    @thebritandtheyank3821 3 года назад +2

    My sincere apologies for monopolizing space here, but some seemingly highly self-regarding soul admonished me for not realizing that Dexter could not have been overlooked because he had won an Oscar!
    No he had not (although I vividly remember praying that he would), although he was nominated that year.
    It's more than disconcerting that those so proud of their willful ignorance see fit to parade it more easily than ever in our digital age, pomposity serves no purpose.

  • @jeffmill
    @jeffmill 6 лет назад +5

    Dex's first tune: 27:24

  • @raymondkarlsson9794
    @raymondkarlsson9794 7 месяцев назад +1

    Seems like nylon tips on Gladden’s sticks. He changed from a 20” ride (old A?) to an A 22” Light. Sorry , not at this time but a few years later.

  • @rinahall
    @rinahall 6 лет назад +3

    Dex comes only at min 29

  • @klausfalter4692
    @klausfalter4692 3 года назад +4

    Super....so klingt nur ein Selmer Sax- Mark 6...

  • @henriknielsen8305
    @henriknielsen8305 3 года назад

    32:43

  • @bassofone1
    @bassofone1 Год назад

    Any one know why Dexter would hold his horn up like that? Was there a story behind that? I can imagine what it means but was wondering if there's a history/story behind that gesture.

  • @camuy4142
    @camuy4142 10 месяцев назад +1

    Bill Evans influence...

    • @normanlove3919
      @normanlove3919 Месяц назад

      More white hot creative fire than dull Bill though

  • @JosephWilliams-ih9np
    @JosephWilliams-ih9np 4 месяца назад

    i😊😊😅😊😊

  • @denniswatts2880
    @denniswatts2880 6 лет назад +4

    Too bad Lightsey didn't do more recording with DeX. He was one of few pianists who could keep up and still be interesting to listen to after a Gordon solo.
    Is it just me or is Gladden struggling a little on the first quartet tune?

    • @rachelstarritt481
      @rachelstarritt481 3 года назад

      @Mark Schultz also Ronnie Matthews when Dexter and Woodie Shaw were in the group, and Irv Rochlan with a sensitive touch, both underrated 😊

  • @cryptowalls
    @cryptowalls 4 года назад

    as of 8/11/2020, 12 dislikes.....pff - probably some rock sculpting "artist"....pssssh

  • @shakydave
    @shakydave 5 лет назад +1

    Dexter looks like he was wasted. Was he still battling his addiction in 1979?

    • @brucesmith3740
      @brucesmith3740 5 лет назад +2

      i saw in person about 1976. i talked with him between a break. he seemed mentally sharp and physically strong. i think soon after he had medical issues. just my observation.

    • @jalebjaba1487
      @jalebjaba1487 4 года назад +3

      Dexter drank heavy in his older years ,his playing was still superb.

    • @stevenvc135
      @stevenvc135 4 года назад +1

      I would have thought the same .. and still be able to make beautiful music!

    • @MsMojoworks
      @MsMojoworks 3 года назад

      @@jalebjaba1487 was not a drinker but a pothead!

    • @mikeos1
      @mikeos1 3 месяца назад

      @@MsMojoworks Well, I saw Dexter late at night in Nice town after a gig at the jazz festival at Cimiez. He was sitting all alone at an outdoor bar with more that one bottle of red wine on the table.He looked frankly rather sad..

  • @vova47
    @vova47 5 лет назад +3

    So sorry George Cables was no longer in the band. He was WAY better pianist for Dexter.

    • @johnvalentine3456
      @johnvalentine3456 4 года назад +1

      WAY? You sure?

    • @67lobe
      @67lobe 4 года назад +4

      i like Cables as as composer/pianist but also think Lightsey had more of the energy neccessary to follow Dex.

    • @LorenzoDeLeon
      @LorenzoDeLeon 3 года назад +4

      You must be kidding. I saw - and hanged out with - Kirk Lightsey in France in the eighties and he was pure fire. One of the most underrated pianists in my opinion. And a super cool cat too !

    • @martinstonely2636
      @martinstonely2636 3 года назад +1

      @@LorenzoDeLeon Thank you brother . I couldn't agree more . Kirk was always incredible !