Big Sciota - Sierra Hull and Portland Chamber Orchestra

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  • Опубликовано: 22 авг 2024
  • "Big Sciota" is an American Old Time tune named after a river in Ohio.
    Sierra Hull, mandolin
    Portland Chamber Orchestra
    Yaacov Bergman
    artistic director/conductor
    portlandchambe...
    Performed at Agnes Flanagan Chapel 3/31/2019.
    Recorded and produced by Alan Niven.

Комментарии • 119

  • @DM-cp4uk
    @DM-cp4uk Год назад +21

    I love that any musician who was not playing appeared enthralled by the banjo!

    • @brunovanhoek96
      @brunovanhoek96 Год назад +5

      And rightfully so.
      Too bad though that, while the banjo was playing back up to the mandolin it stayed too loud in the mix.
      Sierra's mandolin breaks were no where near loud enough.
      This happens when you're letting people, not familiar with Bluegrass, making decisions about amplification and mix.
      That was applicable in 1960 and it stil is....

  • @dlagrua
    @dlagrua Год назад +30

    Sierra Hull is one of the greatest talents to come out of Nashville in quite a while. She can play all styles and does it perfectly.

    • @robertfox499
      @robertfox499 Год назад +2

      She is an American treasure! So is her husband Justin and the whole circle of musicians she is associated with.

    • @JustFiddler
      @JustFiddler Год назад

      indeed!

    • @anthonysalvati5868
      @anthonysalvati5868 Год назад

      Was lucky enough to see her perform tonight in an acoustically perfect 400 seat(sold out) theater in Connecticut. It was literally a mind blowing performance, what stood out to me is how effortlessly she plays. Just a fantastic night of music.

    • @katnisseverdeen-ic7rt
      @katnisseverdeen-ic7rt Год назад

      I agree she is very talented I love how she plays first slow then she gets faster and I can't help but dance.

    • @rnv71950
      @rnv71950 Год назад

      She’s an absolute gifted artist. Sensational

  • @jordimacia188
    @jordimacia188 2 месяца назад +1

    Nice to see Sierra in other world …

  • @RichardT9
    @RichardT9 Год назад +3

    Everything she touches with those hands or shines upon with her smile becomes magical!

  • @zymelin21
    @zymelin21 Год назад +3

    the beginning took me to the russian steppes. Then hop, skip, jump to the Sciota river. Super!!!

  • @stephaneg9591
    @stephaneg9591 5 месяцев назад

    Not only Sierra's beautiful mandolin, but the banjo's great tone is pleasant.

  • @rstarace52
    @rstarace52 Год назад +2

    Reminds me of some of the stuff Mark O'Connor did for Ken Burns PBS specials on the Civil War.

    • @TheBabashee
      @TheBabashee 6 месяцев назад

      I made a similar comment before I read yours. Exactly!

  • @randywhitebanjo
    @randywhitebanjo Год назад +9

    Nice stuff! Not usually a fan of orchestra and bluegrass together but they pulled it off.

    • @SuperBillstanley
      @SuperBillstanley Год назад +2

      Big Sciota is not technically a bluegrass piece, but rather from a style of music called Old Time. It was very popular in Appalachia and the midwest back in the 1800s and early 1900s. In time it gave birth to a new genre that was called bluegrass (1940s or so), but this is an Old Time fiddle tune.

    • @randywhitebanjo
      @randywhitebanjo Год назад

      @@SuperBillstanley good to know...I guess?

  • @cafiend
    @cafiend 11 месяцев назад +6

    Orchestral arrangements of these tunes always sound a bit constipated. Like the massed power just isn’t quite nimble enough. It’s fun, but can’t have the edge of a smaller ensemble steeped in the traditions of the genre.

    • @BolioSati
      @BolioSati 9 месяцев назад

      Adjust the playback speed to 1.25x. It sounds pretty solid.

    • @peterreno4203
      @peterreno4203 8 месяцев назад

      I tend to agree. They might’ve changed the arrangement to suit orchestral instrumentation, but they didn't.

    • @banjopete
      @banjopete 6 месяцев назад +1

      I agree completely ,sounds constipated but still great.

    • @jeffsimard8846
      @jeffsimard8846 3 месяца назад +1

      I love Sierra Hull but I couldn't help hear how out of sync this was, and no sense of drive

  • @alanmralphsralphs7434
    @alanmralphsralphs7434 Год назад +2

    Magnifique ... unstoppable smiles and dancing feet 🎈🌻🎈

  • @martinparmer
    @martinparmer Год назад +6

    Great example of blending bluegrass with the symphony. I've seen it several times and it's always wonderful. You can hear the differences between classically trained violinist vs the old time fiddle style. They are both wonderful and I love them both. The old boy playing the banjo did a great job, but he did have a bit of the "deer in the headlights" look, LOL.

    • @TerryTerryTerry
      @TerryTerryTerry Год назад

      He was super cool!

    • @keithchilvers7434
      @keithchilvers7434 Год назад +1

      Likewise with classically trained and jazz players, such as when Yehudi Menuhin used to jam with Stefan Grappelli, both brilliant but very different.

  • @timothycollins3829
    @timothycollins3829 Год назад +6

    Her opening had an interesting flamenco feel at times. Not something usually associated with the mandolin.

    • @ResophonicRebop
      @ResophonicRebop 4 месяца назад

      Check out Mike Marshall doing Choro tunes

  • @adamczech6261
    @adamczech6261 10 месяцев назад +3

    Oh, that's actually the weirdest intro to Big Sciota ever played

    • @TheBabashee
      @TheBabashee 6 месяцев назад

      Spaghetti Western version

  • @hansguenter6263
    @hansguenter6263 Год назад

    Fantastic; !!!

  • @mattjohnson2526
    @mattjohnson2526 Год назад +3

    I'm okay with this. The beginning didn't seem to match, but it had an Aaron Copeland vibe once they started playing Big Sciota.

  • @arthurj2520
    @arthurj2520 11 месяцев назад

    Bravo! Fortissimo!

  • @jimandmarypowell9783
    @jimandmarypowell9783 Год назад +3

    A wonderful take on bluegrass

    • @fretfix1
      @fretfix1 Год назад +1

      Technically this is not a Bluegrass tune. It is a fiddle 'reel' in the Irish style, from a fiddler in West Virginia. But unfortunately there were no fiddlers in the orchestra...just violinists:) Sierra does an excellent rendition on mandolin. Those outside the South would deem this Bluegrass. But in the South we understand the delineations...

    • @brunovanhoek96
      @brunovanhoek96 Год назад

      @@fretfix1 Technically, you are right, but adding a banjo, 3 finger style makes anything into Bluegrass. No origin of any tune can't take away from that.

  • @kennethpack1963
    @kennethpack1963 Год назад

    Now she is a very talented young lady...

  • @ricknix6785
    @ricknix6785 Год назад

    FANTASIC!!!

  • @Rdavis6593
    @Rdavis6593 День назад

    The banjo added much to the music. The banjo player should have been recognized = named.

  • @benyatrock
    @benyatrock Год назад

    I freakin liked that.

  • @mandojimmy
    @mandojimmy Год назад +1

    Loved the tone of Sierra's mandolin but I echo other comments. The banjo makes it happen for me. Don;t know who he is but brilliant and hat's off to keeping his hat on !!

    • @doconc
      @doconc 6 месяцев назад

      Keith Reed. Great guy, used to take lessons from him. He's the director of the bluegrass ensemble at Colorado College in Colorado Springs.

  • @Lloyd-mo
    @Lloyd-mo Год назад +5

    Can we tell the banjo players name? Maybe i missed it.

  • @DavidHaile_profile
    @DavidHaile_profile 2 года назад +1

    I love it! That venue looks like a church.

  • @robertlord1582
    @robertlord1582 Год назад +7

    Perhaps I missed it. Who is the banjo player? He added so much. It would have been nice to see his name in the credits.

    • @bricetucker2117
      @bricetucker2117 Год назад +3

      Keith Reed

    • @robertlord1582
      @robertlord1582 Год назад +1

      @@bricetucker2117 Thank you! I hoped someone would come up with his name.

  • @basilbabaa1628
    @basilbabaa1628 Год назад

    Beautiful

  • @billquailes7882
    @billquailes7882 Год назад

    WOW

  • @peterwhite7428
    @peterwhite7428 Год назад +1

    Chances are she got the opening from the great mandolin player Peter Ostroushko

  • @magmoreoakblaze1959
    @magmoreoakblaze1959 Год назад +4

    What a wonderful performance. Every musician is totally there in the moment.
    Sierra Hull is the Jimi Hendrix of mandolin?

    • @brunovanhoek96
      @brunovanhoek96 Год назад +4

      No, that would be Chris Thile

    • @isaiah95786
      @isaiah95786 Год назад +1

      ​@brunovanhoek96 agreed, she'd have to be a later guitarist's analog

  • @dbadagna
    @dbadagna Год назад

    Portland, Oregon, USA

  • @robertshorthill6836
    @robertshorthill6836 Год назад +4

    After half of this post didn't need to be presented, we finally get to hear this venerable, great old fiddle tune. There could have been a medley of Sandy River Belle, or any other "river" type tune along with Big Sciota, in my opinion. She is a treasure, tho.

  • @dumena
    @dumena Год назад +5

    The closest thing to a Gary-Larson-cartoon come to live I've seen so far.

    • @Radionut
      @Radionut Год назад

      Huh? Explain

    • @dumena
      @dumena Год назад

      @@Radionut Hi there Radionut. A Banjoplayer in a sandcoloured suit with a huge Stetson hat looking like a polar bear surrounded by a classical orchestra, all dressed like penguins. Misplaced Banjoplayers. Polar bears. Penguins. Trademarks of beloved Gary Larson. No disrespect intended at all. I love Big Sciota, Sierra Hull and Gary Larson. The Bluegrassbanjo I love when played by John Hartford RIP, Noam Pikelny or Bela Fleck, the Clawhammerbanjo when played by just about anyone. It's a sour thing to explain a joke, but since you've been asking. Happy now?

  • @beatseed8278
    @beatseed8278 Год назад +4

    Are there any other recordings of sierra with the orchestra together? I would love to see more!

  • @deanapostol3963
    @deanapostol3963 Год назад

    That's some toe tappin chamber music.

  • @JacobHeadMusic
    @JacobHeadMusic Год назад +2

    I just want to know how the mandolin was recorded to get this kind of tone. I thought at first that it was just the SM58, but in another video where she’s singing into the 58, the mandolin tone feels the same. Regardless, it’s about as impressive as I’ve ever heard her mandolin sound.

  • @kdubatx1
    @kdubatx1 11 месяцев назад

    Well how cool was that

  • @JoeBanjo88
    @JoeBanjo88 Год назад +3

    SIerra always great! Who is the banjoist? He did a real fine job!

    • @doconc
      @doconc 6 месяцев назад

      Keith Reed, director of the Bluegrass Ensemble at Colorado College

  • @weaktea4252
    @weaktea4252 Год назад +2

    I wanted the harpist to take a solo.

  • @ldklinux
    @ldklinux 10 месяцев назад

    This is a wonderful performance. I wonder why the banjo player looked so nervous (maybe just focused?). Great playing though.

  • @TheBabashee
    @TheBabashee 6 месяцев назад +1

    Resembles a movie soundtrack, or music to accompany a Ken Burns documentary. I constantly get the impression that the classical music ensemble is looking down on the bluegrass performers, much as they would off-camera. Prefer Sierra in her own space.

  • @richardcicciarelli9440
    @richardcicciarelli9440 Год назад

    I sort of feel everyone was using this as a warmup. I think the beat could have been picked up a bit. Cool to see the chamber orchestra playing this though.

  • @bustedfender
    @bustedfender 5 месяцев назад

    Well that swung like a dead man.

  • @fractuss
    @fractuss Год назад

    I cross the mighty Scioto (it's actual spelling) every month or so.

  • @ProfRybczyk
    @ProfRybczyk Год назад +8

    Sierra was great, but my god, that was a souless version from the orchestra.

  • @jimoday2078
    @jimoday2078 Год назад

    Details, details. I've seen the song spelled "Big Scioty," and now, "Big Sciota." The river is spelled "Scioto." Ain't English great!?

    • @WaywardCars
      @WaywardCars Год назад +1

      Yep, it comes in several names...

    • @brunovanhoek96
      @brunovanhoek96 Год назад

      Probably wasn't an English word to begin with....

  • @rstarace52
    @rstarace52 Год назад

    My bad the documentary/sound track was on the Revolutionary War

    • @keithchilvers7434
      @keithchilvers7434 11 месяцев назад

      On that soundtrack Mark O'Connor did Flowers of Edinburgh, a tune which has the same chord sequence as Big Sciota, - I seguey the two tunes, they go really well together.

    • @rstarace52
      @rstarace52 11 месяцев назад

      Thanks, I'll be sure to play them both back to back!

  • @austenrobinson2747
    @austenrobinson2747 2 месяца назад

    Bach would have been a better choice

  • @Radionut
    @Radionut Год назад

    On a scale of one to 10 that was a 12

  • @brianscott7013
    @brianscott7013 Год назад

    to get the sound right does not take a genius

  • @bill-465
    @bill-465 3 месяца назад

    Yikes.

  • @bernieross1241
    @bernieross1241 Год назад

    Of course, the mandolin and banjo were great, but played against a background that was stifled and un-free. Classical musicians just can't play bluegrass. They read dots on lines. This so missed the slides, the surges, and the expression and feel of a proper bluegrass fiddler.

    • @masonwelty8058
      @masonwelty8058 Год назад +2

      Most exceptional folk players can also read dots on lines ;)

  • @lonzo61
    @lonzo61 Год назад +2

    Well, now....I could not help noticing that this orchestra is all WHITE. Isn't that special? Again, whites excluding blacks and LatinX and Asians.
    Aw f*ck it, this was awesome! I dig some classical and blue grass, but I have not seen a mashup like this. Well done! And for the record, I am not WOKE. I was just acting like one of those @ssholes. It's just a matter of time, I suppose, before some social justice worrier does say something nasty. The WOKEsters are everywhere.

    • @stixx3969
      @stixx3969 Год назад +2

      That's a pretty bold statement. Do you have any proof to backup your claim that they have excluded anyone? Or, could it be those were they only folks interested in joining?

    • @lonzo61
      @lonzo61 Год назад

      @@stixx3969 Well, I had hoped by my comments following my initial comment that I was being ironic--for a chuckle and to poke at the WOKE. As I wrote, I am not WOKE, but what I initially wrote is precisely what the WOKE mob would have written. I'm taking shots at the WOKE everyday. I hate them, and what they are doing to every part of society--here and in other western countries.
      Go back and read my comments again, and I think I make it clear that I am acting like one of them in the first comment, and then quickly follow up by stating my feelings about them. Personally, I don't give a sh*t about what color an orchestra is. I care whether they are playing competently and what type of music they are performing.

    • @stixx3969
      @stixx3969 Год назад

      @@lonzo61 wow....you really sound triggered. While we're at it....define "woke." I would add that you sound like a dyed in the wool Trump supporter. Would I be wrong in that assessment?

    • @lonzo61
      @lonzo61 Год назад +1

      I am not a Trump supporter. And I don't know why I sound "triggered" by virtue of having simply replied to your comment.

    • @stixx3969
      @stixx3969 Год назад +2

      @@lonzo61 Really? You sure sound like one...