Dolphy bass clarinet

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • Uma das ultimas apresentações do Dolphy gravado em Oslo em Março de 1964
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 190

  • @micaofboca
    @micaofboca 11 лет назад +71

    What a tone he gets out of a bass clarinet! From honks to squeaks to wails to sweet bliss. And with that groove of rhythmic bop & swing going from top to bottom through all the possible lyrical resonances. He's the wildest cat that ever blew into a reed. He's Bird, Ornette, Albert Ayler & Archie Shepp rolled into one. If only he'd have lived to give us more. And to hear him with bassists like Mingus & Richard Davis. He's the Monk of single note instruments. Give him a manzello stritch.

    • @accordionSWE
      @accordionSWE 3 месяца назад

      Always thought about what would have happened if Eric Dolphy and John Coltrane had been able to live and move their music into what later became Jazz Fusion. How would they have sound during the 1970s and 1980s? But what these two giants gave us still is incredible to listen to these days.

  • @Modes9
    @Modes9 15 лет назад +21

    I can't believe the intervals and rapid jumps in register. He really went where no one had gone before and very few have gone since.

  • @bandfreak103
    @bandfreak103 13 лет назад +16

    I am taking up Bass clarinet at my school and my band director told me to look up Eric Dolphy.... wow I didnt even think that a bass clarinet could play like that is amazing wow Dr.Cannon was right

  • @sallemjazz1
    @sallemjazz1 9 лет назад +54

    Geniuses on all counts. The nearly impossible to describe greatness of Eric Dolphy. The unbelievable timekeeping of Charles Mingus. The beautifully swinging Dannie Richmond. The smile on Clifford Jordan and Johnny Coles' faces. The sheer luck that the Norwegians taped this concert.... Well that gave me a huge smile today. Thanks for posting this most incredible moment in jazz and film.

    • @Tomatohater64
      @Tomatohater64 2 года назад +1

      Dolphy was f***ing amazing. Love all this guy's work. Gazzeloni from his "Out to Lunch" album is a masterpiece. Anybody know what year this little ditty live performance was done?

    • @sharonbodea7677
      @sharonbodea7677 2 года назад +1

      @@Tomatohater64
      April 1964

    • @Tomatohater64
      @Tomatohater64 2 года назад +1

      @@sharonbodea7677 Wow, he died shortly afterward.

    • @mananaadamia1657
      @mananaadamia1657 Год назад +1

      And Jaki Biard

  • @7sshare
    @7sshare 13 лет назад +8

    If the caption is correct , this is from the year he died. Just think what this guy could have done...he would be a towering giant of American music, one of the greatest musicians of our time.

  • @grandpasun
    @grandpasun 14 лет назад +8

    This dude had the most original sound in the history of music. I could listen to the amazing sounds all day!

  • @bassclarinetquartet
    @bassclarinetquartet 17 лет назад +22

    Yes!! Dolphy always puts me in the best mood, great to see this clip. He really is the Godfather of modern bass clarinet: He is to us (creative bass clarinetists) what Sabbath is to Heavy Metal bands. Broke new ground, sent everything soaring to a new level while incorporating all the solid foundational elements of what came before.

    • @michellesveinson4550
      @michellesveinson4550 4 года назад +2

      You know, I play bass clarinet and I love it. Favourite instrument. The other night I was out to dinner with a friend and I noticed that at the table beside us a woman had mentioned Bass Clarinet and I tuned in, SO excited. Only to hear she was complaining about being paired up for one with a tenor saxophonist. Seems about right for the first time I hear one mentioned outside of a music room setting.

    • @videotra
      @videotra 10 месяцев назад

      @@michellesveinson4550 @bassclarinetquartet Is there a whole album of Dolphy playing the bass clarinet? Other full albums of jazz musicians doing it? I really love the sound of the clarinet, and especially the bass clarinet.

  • @joegargiulo7070
    @joegargiulo7070 2 года назад +6

    My fav jazz soloist of all time - "Charlie Parker meets Eddie Van Halen" on bass clarinet, alto or flute. Love all the comments in this thread

  • @wstr9963
    @wstr9963 Год назад +2

    One of the best solo's I've ever heard. What a sound, what a player!

  • @Modes9
    @Modes9 15 лет назад +6

    Those register jumps are totally insane! I guess the reason he isn't more influential is that that stuff is extremely difficult...on any instrument. The only three guys I can think of who attempt this are Woody Shaw, Joe Diorio, and Aydin Esen.

  • @hazelman
    @hazelman 15 лет назад +5

    My FAVORITE jazz instrumentalist!!!

  • @accordionSWE
    @accordionSWE 3 месяца назад

    In this video he is playing with a great band. But what I remember is there are many recordings when Eric Dolphy is playing with jazz club house bands while touring in Europe. The recordings from Copenhagen is what comes first to my mind, and there are a track in which he and the house band band are trying three takes on a song in different rythms. Would a thing like that happen today? Would three takes on a song be recorded and placed on a record? Do people today go to jazz clubs and listen to a soloist meeting a band for the first time?
    It is a great joy today experiencing the discoveries of music that were made back then.

  • @Helenflute
    @Helenflute 13 лет назад +5

    I love Dolphy's playing & yey how his playing, Bass Clari - Flute is so different... love the flute playing on Gazzelloni, Out to Lunch Album.. I play Flutes/alto & Bass & Bass Clari & could never tire of listening to Dolphy great video too....

  • @paulawelsh7805
    @paulawelsh7805 9 лет назад +5

    What can I say but his greatness was understated! Maurice

  • @iNerdiCia
    @iNerdiCia 14 лет назад +3

    He makes the bass clarinet seem like the most magnificent instrument ever! The sounds that come out of the bc is amazing!
    I play bass clarinet and I'm not NEARLY and talented as Dolphy.

  • @051963mf
    @051963mf 7 лет назад +5

    This man was a genius, that is the best way to describe Eric Dolphy.

  • @accordionSWE
    @accordionSWE 3 месяца назад

    It is so good that it almost hard to believe. The rythm from the band and the intriguing playing from Eric Dolphy. Can not get any better.

  • @jimraw1
    @jimraw1 14 лет назад +5

    @Julz796 That's typical Dolphy - improvisation using lot of wide intervals (he loved twelve-tone). Dolphy is in the Ornette Coleman school (although I think he's actually more musical in his approach). There is a song there (Mingus' take on Take the A Train perhaps?), but other than fitting in the basic chord structure Dolphy is creating his own flights of fancy on a bass clarinet. As far as finding a bass clarinetist, you're best bet is either a classical orchestra or a sax player who doubles.

  • @free_jazz
    @free_jazz Год назад +3

    Insane groove

  • @britteach
    @britteach 13 лет назад +3

    Dolphy at his finest.

  • @mukmuklabuguen
    @mukmuklabuguen 16 лет назад +3

    When listening to this strata of jazz for the first time, you're right, listening to other material for the underlying structure is helpful; also listening to other, older artists, to hear the progression that jazz has evolved to help the listener anticipate the alternative voicings that would be coming from a Dolphy or Coltrain (or later on, a Cecil Taylor)

  • @Helenflute
    @Helenflute 13 лет назад +1

    I love Dolphy's playing & yey how his playing, Bass Clari - Flute is so different... love the flute playing on Gazzelloni, Out to Lunch Album.. I play Flutes/alto & Bass & Bass Clari & could never tire of listening to Dolphy

  • @tarantism
    @tarantism 12 лет назад +2

    eric dolphy has to be my favorite jazz musician. his playing is wild ... it sounds like strangling a goose.

  • @realmusic97
    @realmusic97 12 лет назад +2

    The best concert (next to the Thelonious monk concert) Oslo have ever experienced!!

  • @BrokenBonesStudios
    @BrokenBonesStudios 15 лет назад +2

    such a beautiful instrumet. i wonder why more people don't play it.

  • @samuelkorg1
    @samuelkorg1 3 года назад +4

    Sensacional.

  • @SmeeUncleJoe
    @SmeeUncleJoe 15 лет назад +2

    Just discovered this diamond via Coltrane's live at the Village Vanguard. If you want to hear this genius at his best, check out any of the 4 versions of Spiritual on that 2 CD set. I actually admired his playing more than Coltrane's on that recording and that's saying a lot.

    • @accordionSWE
      @accordionSWE 3 месяца назад +1

      That box my sister bought me for Christmas almost twenty years ago. A great gift. Can recommend anyone to get the hands on one of the boxes.

  • @RonCarterBassist
    @RonCarterBassist Год назад +1

    This is classic.

  • @kreemdust6685
    @kreemdust6685 Год назад +2

    ONE HELL OF A SOLO, DAMN!!!

  • @MARKLINMAN1
    @MARKLINMAN1 3 года назад +2

    Who says you need a low C Bass clarinet? Dolphy proves it right here!

    • @jeanhodgson8623
      @jeanhodgson8623 2 года назад

      His is a slightly unusual model that goes down to its D (C in concert pitch). I heard a solo in which he played the low D.

  • @maciek_d
    @maciek_d 14 лет назад +2

    Mingus keeps it cool. What a groove!

  • @supineny
    @supineny 15 лет назад +2

    at 3:50? i'd guess he's creating the slurry shake between two notes with his embouchure. he's got most of the pads closed, and he's getting overtones to sound without moving his fingers. Making the clarinet behave a bit like a bugle.

    • @accordionSWE
      @accordionSWE 3 месяца назад

      What happens there and two seconds later is magnificient. In a few seconds it is like a time machine from New Orleans to the future. The grit, the dist and the pulsating rythm. When Take The A Train once were written who could imagine how it would be played in a way breaking musical conventions?

  • @BoredAtHome44
    @BoredAtHome44 15 лет назад +2

    I didnt know a bass clarinet could do that. lol. this is awesome

  • @killingnatalie
    @killingnatalie 16 лет назад +4

    Wow, this is just....amazing. I'm going to get my jazz band director to let me just play my bass instead of sounding bad on tenor sax xD

  • @doubleredsx3
    @doubleredsx3 16 лет назад +1

    oh god, this is amazing!
    beautiful! so this is what heaven sounds like!

  • @LuLibbyLu
    @LuLibbyLu 12 лет назад +2

    Bass Clarinet Forever!!

  • @OLI-ODDITORIUM
    @OLI-ODDITORIUM 15 лет назад +1

    holy crap!!!!!!
    this man is soooo cool i wanna sound like him one day on my b.c......im in love

  • @jeanhodgson8623
    @jeanhodgson8623 2 года назад

    I played Eric playing bass clarinet on the "Last Date" album for my Dad. He said it sounds like a turkey cock being chased around a farmyard. He used to say "Have they caught that turkey yet?".

  • @ktwheels44
    @ktwheels44 14 лет назад +6

    Dolphy went into diabetic shock on his last gig--sadly Mingus was not there to help his best friend.
    Dolphy=genius!

    • @accordionSWE
      @accordionSWE 3 месяца назад

      Think I read somewhere the he got some wrong medication in Germany. Do not know if it is true.

    • @ktwheels44
      @ktwheels44 2 месяца назад

      @@accordionSWE it's actually way more disturbing and heartbreaking. It was a mystery for years but the truth finally came out. I can't tell the story...too much to handle.

  • @RyaZila
    @RyaZila 18 лет назад +1

    WOW!!! simply amazine

  • @jazzzak
    @jazzzak 17 лет назад

    Bob Mintzer is probably the best jazz bass clarinetist now

  • @jazzsaxophone
    @jazzsaxophone 18 лет назад +1

    perfect...bass clarinet as it was meant to beeeee!!!

  • @jackbanpk
    @jackbanpk 14 лет назад

    i've got my music exam tomorrow
    but i find this more worth my while

  • @hazelman
    @hazelman 17 лет назад +1

    We "Big Clarinet" players are the heart and soul of the band!!! Alto, Bassett Horn, Bass, Contra Alto, AND Contrabass. WE ROCK!!!!!!

  • @HupFlupper
    @HupFlupper 12 лет назад +3

    that bassist's name is Charles Mingus

  • @JohnBrow
    @JohnBrow 4 года назад +6

    Welcome to Vertical Chromaticism, enjoy the ride! +1

  • @mananaadamia1657
    @mananaadamia1657 3 года назад

    I love Charlie Mingus and Eric Dolphy

  • @233kid
    @233kid 13 лет назад +1

    @jbs4em me 2!!! he sounds amazing on sax, bass clarinet and flute. His playing is seamless between the instruments!

  • @mananaadamia1657
    @mananaadamia1657 2 года назад

    Danny is amazing

  • @TallFastLoud
    @TallFastLoud 15 лет назад

    Such a cool sound, besides the great playing.

  • @cccustard
    @cccustard 15 лет назад +2

    Dolphy. The most underrated sax player of his generation. Had Coltrane not existed, he would have been a god.

  • @gotham61
    @gotham61 15 лет назад

    Johnny Coles trumpet, Clifford Jordan tenor, Jaki Byard piano, Dannie Richmond drums.

  • @iiirhd
    @iiirhd 16 лет назад

    amazing mr dolphy

  • @Galactu5
    @Galactu5 15 лет назад +1

    this is killin me it's so good!

  • @7sshare
    @7sshare 13 лет назад

    @swuzzups I'm glad you feel that way. Most people have never heard of him.

  • @jazzsaxophone
    @jazzsaxophone 17 лет назад

    Listen to Stravinsky, Bartok, John Cage, Rollins and Parker.....Dophly has all this in there and more...he an underappreciated genious.

  • @donnscottshetler
    @donnscottshetler 12 лет назад

    He is so young I figured it out later and that is Danny Richmond on drums I believe the rmor on him is he was a sax player originally

  • @luckymeaaa
    @luckymeaaa 15 лет назад

    WONDERFUL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @angelservin20
    @angelservin20 15 лет назад

    he is the best

  • @DLuebbert
    @DLuebbert 15 лет назад

    Do a Google search using the search term "Dolphy Mingus notice Oslo". Gene Santoro's Mingus biography "Myself When I Am Real: The Life And Music of Charles Mingus" reports "In Oslo on April 13, 1964, Dolphy finalized his leaving. He would stay in Europe after the tour."
    You can back up now and ask Santoro your question, but presumably one of the other musicians that he interviewed remembered how and when it happened.
    The answer for a question like this is usually: a book.

  • @mukmuklabuguen
    @mukmuklabuguen 16 лет назад

    I played for 9 years, and yeah, do it quick and you can squeak, not matter how hard you try not to

  • @DYNODRUM
    @DYNODRUM 14 лет назад

    If ,you Listen to Joshua Redmen ,I feel He stylizes ,Dolphy alot in His solo's and Playing .Another Immense Player....

  • @organatron
    @organatron Год назад

    Grande Márcio

  • @PhiloKingNando
    @PhiloKingNando 14 лет назад +1

    i felt speechless when dolphy plays that bass clarinet you rock!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @jpapare
    @jpapare 14 лет назад +1

    Thanks for this post. I never knew of Eric Dolphy, and now that he has been gone for 32 years, I am just learning about him. I would think that in the 60's he would not have had a large American audience. I am not a musician (can you tell?). But, I think if I had heard him then I would have liked his work. I am going to seek out more videos of his music.

    • @mambojazz1
      @mambojazz1 2 года назад

      Not quite true. Dolphy was touring musician constantly on the road and he even joined John Coltrane's quartet which in the early 60's was the absolute most famous group in all of jazz. As far as avant garde playing it isn't any more popular now than it was in the 60's

  • @fiddlercrab3
    @fiddlercrab3 15 лет назад +1

    Right on. He finished, and then they gave him.... another four bar intro? Yep.

  • @warsd4
    @warsd4 12 лет назад

    @donnscottshetler It's Charles Mingus. This was actually his band.

  • @ZeldafanRai
    @ZeldafanRai 14 лет назад +1

    I never thought jazz bass clarinet was a possibility.
    I have now been proven wrong.

  • @jwh88
    @jwh88 16 лет назад

    Johnny Coles (tpt); Eric Dolphy (as,fl,bcl); Clifford Jordan (ts); Jaki Byard (pno); Charles Mingus (bass,comp,arr); Dannie Richmond (dr).

  • @vedicardi
    @vedicardi 4 года назад

    the greatest

  • @robert101455
    @robert101455 13 лет назад

    @jesusisaklingon "The bassist" is Charles Mingus.

  • @TwinkieAndCrazy
    @TwinkieAndCrazy 16 лет назад

    He is absolutely amazing I wish I could play bass clarinet like that. I play Bass Clarinet, Tenor Saxophone, Clarinet and Flute but I am no where near 1/4 as amazing like him. The way he goes from high to low without squeaking is amazing.

  • @DYNODRUM
    @DYNODRUM 13 лет назад

    "How Great Thou Art" !! --"Dolphy Trailblazed His Own Path ", and even though J. Redman Is Great [.He plays alot like This at Times].. Its, been done . Mr. Funn Mingus, plays Bass Drum on Floor ,count In.. "These Masters are a Painting in Progress" .Danny Richmond, Jakie Byard, etc. Unreal,, 64' ON THE FLOOR...

  • @extremesushirolling
    @extremesushirolling 15 лет назад

    eric dolphy is my 2nd favorite jazz musician (coltrane is 1st)
    this video is awesome
    too bad the tenor solo was cut short

    • @brandonborn9540
      @brandonborn9540 4 года назад

      extremesushirolling full video is posted

  • @Carus0e
    @Carus0e 16 лет назад

    Similar , but there are more cross fingerings at the bottom of the registers

  • @donnscottshetler
    @donnscottshetler 12 лет назад

    Amen brother

  • @liamwatson5125
    @liamwatson5125 5 лет назад +2

    Eric Dolphy sure was a good bass clarinet player.

    • @ethanw7943
      @ethanw7943 4 года назад

      He is fucking terrible.

    • @liamwatson5125
      @liamwatson5125 4 года назад

      Wild Raved I wouldn’t say he was terrible, but he did play the instrument like nobody else could.

  • @benjamineastwood5616
    @benjamineastwood5616 5 лет назад +1

    4:35 when you’re solo goes on to long so the bass player has to intervene

  • @talhavai
    @talhavai 14 лет назад

    i can park a truck in between his intervals. what grace...

  • @alansouzacruz970
    @alansouzacruz970 5 лет назад

    Great

  • @LunaMilkyWay29
    @LunaMilkyWay29 14 лет назад

    @Everlast237 Nopie. You just have to adjust your embouchure, since it requires a bigger mouthpiece. You'd have to take a bigger 'bite.'
    Yes, the reed is bigger, and you're maybe better off with a 2 and a half, or a 3.
    New fingering chart, yes, but it's not very different from the clarinet, honestly. You don't have to relearn everything. It's very similar, yet different.

  • @kefirmsk
    @kefirmsk 14 лет назад

    @William864 I'm pretty shure that there is the Charles Mingus Sixtet on this video.

  • @millymille1
    @millymille1 14 лет назад

    Amzing

  • @theCount1968
    @theCount1968 11 лет назад

    genius, and thanks for the post!

  • @PabloJuncosaLopez
    @PabloJuncosaLopez 14 лет назад +2

    3:02 Rhythm section enters on the 3rd beat of the bar? Eric Dolphy is a little piss off moving the head and his hand.
    Am I right? Did you guys count when I plays alone?

  • @shakuhachi
    @shakuhachi 16 лет назад

    dolphy is on fire, here!!!!

  • @frubafreak17
    @frubafreak17 16 лет назад

    YAY! BASS CLARINET!!

  • @ezeroh1
    @ezeroh1 14 лет назад

    haacho hacho hacho hachoo etc. dolphys the man

  • @jude4312
    @jude4312 15 лет назад

    take A train by billy strayhorn. p398 in realbook :)

  • @startygwint
    @startygwint 12 лет назад +1

    I bet he was practicing 24/7

  • @233kid
    @233kid 13 лет назад

    @taariqtaariq is!! Him and Coltrane!!!

  • @Carus0e
    @Carus0e 16 лет назад

    You are supposed to use a peg, like on a bass violin. Look at the bottom of the bend in the bell, there is a receptacle for the peg. Now go get one.

  • @raulagarcia4744
    @raulagarcia4744 2 года назад

    Shaman!

  • @jiyujizai
    @jiyujizai 2 года назад

    💙🌱🌾🙄

  • @sound2fury
    @sound2fury 15 лет назад

    it's common for other players to step away from their instruments while one of them is soloing. It doesn't imply anything.

  • @hudsoncampos5976
    @hudsoncampos5976 3 года назад

    👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

  • @peekabookity
    @peekabookity 16 лет назад

    that's true, but they do sound different and you can't really compare the sound of the two

  • @mexicotaco0913
    @mexicotaco0913 11 лет назад

    he actually did.

  • @infantiltinferno
    @infantiltinferno 17 лет назад

    hear, hear!

  • @jude4312
    @jude4312 15 лет назад

    think he is. he was in downbeat jazz hall of fame before coltrane.