mr thunder ... caught him 100+ times, coast-to-coast ... if he was in town, i was there every set of the engagement ... hard to imagine any other music being so satisfying ... i miss him so much!
I sat side of stage in the early 70s at ronnies, night after night, year after year when he visited, had to walk miles home in the early hours, with the sound of his band ringing in my ears.....
he came from a large family of utmost musical excellence....7 bros & sis's......makes the Jacksons look a little lame..which is no easy task!!!!!.......or the Osmonds.......Elvin had a twin bro and they were the youngest of the clan.....
What matters? genius or not, pioneer or not to Elvin? He has no concern for such notions. Elvin is the Author and Architect or Drum Set Rhythm for every generation to follow him. His is the correct model and the superior to all others. The rhythms and combinations Elvin has shown us are now the correct and superior fundamentals for Modern Drum Set.
I'm thinking, based upon other tours at that time, personnel is: Elvin Jones - drums Eric Lewis - piano Steve Kirby - bass Darren Barrett - trumpet Antoine Roney - tenor saxophone
@@Catastrophe9726 I have been checking him out! He’s fantastic, totally on RUclips (even answered a few of my comments) and such a great player. Peep out him doing My Favorite Things on the New Jazz Underground channel, playing with some young cats. It’s so tasty.
@@kevincssmith Sean LeRoy addressed that in his post; along with Elvin Jones - drums theres, Eric Lewis - piano Steve Kirby - bass Darren Barrett - trumpet Antoine Roney - tenor saxophone
I studied w/ a drummer from St Louis named Joe Charles who knew Elvin and Trane. He was a source drummer like Jones and first time I heard him his concept struck me as producing totally elastic 3D 'rhythmic bubbles' as the only way I could describe it. That may account for what you're noticing.
Thanks so much for posting this, discovered my love for jazz in 2016 and the more I dig the more gold I find! Elvin Jones influenced rock and roll drummers and I can see why.
We should know the fact that Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, John Coltrane and so many Jazz musicians are so special for the progress of modern music. Especially Coltrane quartet’s aim seems to be far beyond other musician’s of that. I think they are saints.
Actually if they had played together, they couldn't have both their own bands with them. I am sure if they were there on the same day, they hung out for a visit.
The Remarkable thing for me ,,,besides the excellence of the younger guys with him,,is , Elvin,,,now ,,plays these intricate polyrythmic lines ,,somehow making it sound like Childsplay,,,in a smooth sort of way. fantastic.
Saw Jazz Machine at the Blackstone in Chicago a couple times. They had some single chairs in rows off to stage left which side he set up on. I got front row maybe 5' off and a little behind Elvin's sock cymbal. Was a 4" stage platform so I was right IN every bit of his stuff. He was an absolute source force-of-nature drummer. Dug so hard into his snare w/ his brush sweep on a ballad he literally GROWLED in'and'out as he breathed deep into it. One of the strangest most raw powerful, moving and sublime amazing musical events I've ever experience.
The first tune, "Hanayome Ningyo" (Bride Doll), an old Japanese song is a surprise choice. Elvin may have learned it from his former wife, who was Japanese. Anyway, thanks for uploading the rare video!
Thanks for sharing! I recognize the tune from another opener Elvin played about a decade earlier. There's a great video of it ruclips.net/video/4PaNW2qHQ7E/видео.html
@@thoughtsforthebuilders Thanks! Once again, this song performed by Elvin Jones is surreal to me, but Elvin's drum solo is so engaging. BTW in case you didn't know, he played a gang boss in a "psychedelic western" film called Zachariah which features his drum solo in one scene. It was the first time I saw him in action but I found it was disappointing for the legendary drummer. Later, learned that the sound was recorded by a session drummer who played while watching the screen. You can find the scene somewhere on RUclips.
It was nice surprise to listen the show starting the base player playing Japanese Song so called "Hanayome Ningyo (bride doll)". It was a grate performance what so ever.
The Grove Angel At his best.... The pocket Placed on 2 & 4 on the Hi-Hat and the Downbeat On the 1 Elvin Jones ... It's Hard to miss when the bomb falls.
Great stuff .... its just a shame you couldn't see the forest for the trees . The shots are so close , you cant see the whole band at once . Still nice concert .
What a stellar solo of Eric Lewis on the first song (Doll of the bride). His stratospheric talent make me shout and cry. Wonderful and original use of pentatonics over a modal song. Listen Fumio Karashima over same song with Elvin Jazz Machine, if you can get it.
I thought it was but after a few other angles I think it's an 18. I know he did use a 16 though. Its because his Tom's are so high it makes it look smaller. I may be wrong
Sorry Folks that's an 18" bass drum he's playing but he did play a16" at times who needs a 22 or 24" bass drum takes too much space in the trunk of the car anyway
I find that 18 and 16" kick drums have a little more impact in the audible range. they don't have the sub bass of the 20+ but for jazz and groove music i would rather hear a clear kick attack than feel a sub bass thud.
wasn't expecting to dig on steve kirby so much. you could tell Elvin was really grooving to his solo! but then kirby does this face at the end like... eh, whatever....
J'ai assisté à ce concert ! C'était aux arènes de Cimiez (Nice, France), le vendredi 28 juillet 2000 avec, au programme : Al Jarreau, Elvin Jones Jazz Machine, McCoy Tyner, Captain Mercier et quelques autres que j'ai oubliés...
Elvin let's each player get their thing happening. He is so supportive and the music is so free flowing.
No doubt he learned that from John
The brotha's doing his job as a drummer
mr thunder ... caught him 100+ times, coast-to-coast ... if he was in town, i was there every set of the engagement ... hard to imagine any other music being so satisfying ... i miss him so much!
I sat side of stage in the early 70s at ronnies, night after night, year after year when he visited, had to walk miles home in the early hours, with the sound of his band ringing in my ears.....
What a genius! Elvin is one of a kind and an original pioneer of jazz drumming! one of kind!!
he came from a large family of utmost musical excellence....7 bros & sis's......makes the Jacksons look a little lame..which is no easy task!!!!!.......or the Osmonds.......Elvin had a twin bro and they were the youngest of the clan.....
What matters? genius or not, pioneer or not to Elvin? He has no concern for such notions. Elvin is the Author and Architect or Drum Set Rhythm for every generation to follow him. His is the correct model and the superior to all others. The rhythms and combinations Elvin has shown us are now the correct and superior fundamentals for Modern Drum Set.
I'm thinking, based upon other tours at that time, personnel is:
Elvin Jones - drums
Eric Lewis - piano
Steve Kirby - bass
Darren Barrett - trumpet
Antoine Roney - tenor saxophone
GRACIAS POR DESAZNARLOS PUES NO CONOCÍA A NINGUNO ES UN GRUPO Q' HACE UN JAZZ FUSIÓN DE TREMENDOS TENORES....APLAUSOS!!!!
thanks for that.
Thank you. I need more Eric Lewis in my life. That dude is SMOKING in this show.
Saw this band live at Jazz Alley in Seattle, Lewis was unreal
@@Catastrophe9726 I have been checking him out! He’s fantastic, totally on RUclips (even answered a few of my comments) and such a great player. Peep out him doing My Favorite Things on the New Jazz Underground channel, playing with some young cats. It’s so tasty.
Lately something that amazes me, is how Elvin could be so in the background, yet be so up front at the same time!
Good drummers do that
Who are the musicians ?
@@kevincssmith Sean LeRoy addressed that in his post; along with Elvin Jones - drums theres,
Eric Lewis - piano
Steve Kirby - bass
Darren Barrett - trumpet
Antoine Roney - tenor saxophone
@@robd2650 Thank you!
I studied w/ a drummer from St Louis named Joe Charles who knew Elvin and Trane. He was a source drummer like Jones and first time I heard him his concept struck me as producing totally elastic 3D 'rhythmic bubbles' as the only way I could describe it. That may account for what you're noticing.
i never missed a departed musician like he was a family member or a close friend.
except for ELVIN!
His spirit will always be with us! He is playing music in the next world right now!!!
That's right!!!
Awesome performances that I constantly visit without fail ❤👍🏿👍🏿
Thanks so much for posting this, discovered my love for jazz in 2016 and the more I dig the more gold I find! Elvin Jones influenced rock and roll drummers and I can see why.
We should know the fact that Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, John Coltrane and so many Jazz musicians are so special for the progress of modern music. Especially Coltrane quartet’s aim seems to be far beyond other musician’s of that. I think they are saints.
@@RikkiCat09❤❤,,
Mc coy Tyner and Elvin jones were at the same festival but didn't play together, how ironic
Actually if they had played together, they couldn't have both their own bands with them. I am sure if they were there on the same day, they hung out for a visit.
The Remarkable thing for me ,,,besides the excellence of the younger guys with him,,is , Elvin,,,now ,,plays these intricate polyrythmic lines ,,somehow making it sound like Childsplay,,,in a smooth sort of way. fantastic.
What sense of rythm on those keyboards!
I SAW ELVIN JONES IN W PALM BEACH AND HE AND HIS GROUP PUT ON A SHOW THAT I WILL NEVER FORGET. AROUND 2000.
The audience says it all these people know what is great what is pure class world 🌎 class Jazz is still alive 🎉❤
Holy smokes. The fluidity of that second song after the solo. Wow.
This was a nice jazz festival
You saw elvin??
This is driving me to another planet! My Man Elvin Jones with some of the finest musicians on Planet Earth! Ohhh MY!!! This is rated Jazz Finest!
37:00 Fixing the mic on the tom...in the middle of his solo. Professional beyond compare.
Serves them right for close miking Elvin's Tom's. The way that he Tunes the kit suits overheads much more
What great time of jazz Rip Mr elvin Jones truely nice music
See where Steve Gadd got the "Late In The Evening" beat from, Elvin used the Mozambique rhythm quite a lot
Saw Jazz Machine at the Blackstone in Chicago a couple times. They had some single chairs in rows off to stage left which side he set up on. I got front row maybe 5' off and a little behind Elvin's sock cymbal. Was a 4" stage platform so I was right IN every bit of his stuff. He was an absolute source force-of-nature drummer. Dug so hard into his snare w/ his brush sweep on a ballad he literally GROWLED in'and'out as he breathed deep into it. One of the strangest most raw powerful, moving and sublime amazing musical events I've ever experience.
The first tune, "Hanayome Ningyo" (Bride Doll), an old Japanese song is a surprise choice. Elvin may have learned it from his former wife, who was Japanese. Anyway, thanks for uploading the rare video!
Thanks for sharing! I recognize the tune from another opener Elvin played about a decade earlier. There's a great video of it
ruclips.net/video/4PaNW2qHQ7E/видео.html
@@thoughtsforthebuilders Thanks! Once again, this song performed by Elvin Jones is surreal to me, but Elvin's drum solo is so engaging. BTW in case you didn't know, he played a gang boss in a "psychedelic western" film called Zachariah which features his drum solo in one scene. It was the first time I saw him in action but I found it was disappointing for the legendary drummer. Later, learned that the sound was recorded by a session drummer who played while watching the screen. You can find the scene somewhere on RUclips.
Magnifique!! Merci à Zicopolis TV de mettre en ligne ce concert!! J'étais allé à Vienne pour les voir cette année là...! Trop bon!!
my goodness!! Mr Elvin and the entire band is just so damn smashing
It was nice surprise to listen the show starting the base player playing Japanese Song so called "Hanayome Ningyo (bride doll)". It was a grate performance what so ever.
Love the way the toms are panned on this spread, across the channels.
Elvin à tout bouleversé ! magnifique !
Mr. Elvin Jones! thank you!
I love elvin jones simple hihat playing around 34:10. He's digging it so much.
My favorite Jazz concert
Awesome bass.
I like that he has a white shirt on and his band is wearing Yamaha and Zildjian shirts
Thank you much love
2022 and still listening 🙏AJ
Happy New Year 🎊🎊ruclips.net/video/ImDJINNuqyA/видео.html
The Grove Angel At his best.... The pocket Placed on 2 & 4 on the Hi-Hat and the Downbeat On the 1 Elvin Jones ... It's Hard to miss when the bomb falls.
haha Elvin at 73 could smoke me any day.
Great stuff .... its just a shame you couldn't see the forest for the trees . The shots are so close , you cant see the whole band at once . Still nice concert .
Please list all of the artists. We want to get to know them too.
are you related?
@@familytreemusic This is Elvin's son!! if you are still curious
@@simhendra2377 thanks
@@simhendra2377 what an honor to have such a legend as a father the stories I could only imagine did you ever pick up an instrument?
Darren Barrett on trumpet
Eric Lewis on piano.
Elvin Ray Jones (September 9, 1927 - May 18, 2004) ... He's 73 here. Does he look like he enjoyed his work?
Really nice,Zycopolis TV thanks.
Band: What is the dress code?
Elvin: I give you my endorsement shirts and I'm gonna shine in white
One of a kind
🤣🤣
What a stellar solo of Eric Lewis on the first song (Doll of the bride). His stratospheric talent make me shout and cry. Wonderful and original use of pentatonics over a modal song. Listen Fumio Karashima over same song with Elvin Jazz Machine, if you can get it.
Who's the pianist ? He's incredible !
Eric Lewis. He's doing way different stuff now.
Not so much anymore. Listen to And To the Republic, his new recording.
Thank you !
Amazing. He also fixed the microphone all by him self. Interesting sound came of it.
Siempre cosas muy buenas de ZYCOLPOLIS....AMAZING ON THE BETTER MUSICIANS...;)))
Anyone know the name of the second tune? (17:15)
73 years old? Sounds like that's been 73 years of practice!
Elvin laying it down at age 73.
legend
The crowd cut the bass solo off i think lol. 36:16
I didn't know KRS ONE was a bass player
16" bass drum MAN yes I agree no one like Elvin listen to A Love Supreme
I thought it was but after a few other angles I think it's an 18. I know he did use a 16 though. Its because his Tom's are so high it makes it look smaller. I may be wrong
...toques precisos...
le pianiste est chiant comme la pluie
Eric Lévy Hahahhahhahahahahhahav
YESSSSSS!!!!
Sorry Folks that's an 18" bass drum he's playing but he did play a16" at times who needs a 22 or 24" bass drum takes too much space in the trunk of the car anyway
I find that 18 and 16" kick drums have a little more impact in the audible range. they don't have the sub bass of the 20+ but for jazz and groove music i would rather hear a clear kick attack than feel a sub bass thud.
A real master of his art - btw he played a 16" Bass Drum here.
But I liked the earthier sound of his formerly Gretsch drums much better.
Elvin looks like a conduit for music itself when he plays.
Maaan Eric Lewis is relentless on this too.
thx
Does anyone know what ride cymbal Elvin is using for his main right-hand? 20" constantinople?
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Bravo on this video 5*****
No one like Elvin....
absolutely!
The piano player plays Zildjian cymbals
That’d be Eric Lewis, he’s a bad ass, he probably can play the shit out of some Zildjians
Maybe you have to be really, really, really stoned to enjoy this.
credits ?
❤
genius
How about those brass lugs?
Nice music...
does anybody know what kind size of bass drum is he using?
18”
16
Please list whose in the band please in the videos you are putting up !
who is the pianist ?
good
wasn't expecting to dig on steve kirby so much. you could tell Elvin was really grooving to his solo! but then kirby does this face at the end like... eh, whatever....
J'ai assisté à ce concert ! C'était aux arènes de Cimiez (Nice, France), le vendredi 28 juillet 2000 avec, au programme :
Al Jarreau, Elvin Jones Jazz Machine, McCoy Tyner, Captain Mercier et quelques autres que j'ai oubliés...
on the sax?
Name of the second tune after the drum solo?
Who is the piano player?
Shit my fingers killing me now shit .............
what's the tune taht starts at 17.15minutes?
antoine roney?
What size is that bass drum? It looks tiny
Elvis )
Bass player needed a clean shirt that day! 😂
懐かしい Nice !!!...ニース ですね...
Miisseeee )))
Set list?
His bassdrum
What tunes are they playing?
16" bass drum?
Eric Lewis!!
Я могу такое играть я услышал Басс в начале можно импровизировать но Elvin старается держать грув чтобы не выделяться ♥️я барабанщик
The old school jazz cats had the decency to dress. You’d never catch them looking like this!
What's the first tune?
+fcmilsweeper9 , I think it's called "Doll of the Bride".
A japanese song called Hanayome Ningyo. Jean Pierre Rampal recorded it flute&harp.
🌈💐🌹💐🌹💐🌹❤️❤️❤️🌈
Steve Kirby? on bass...
花嫁人形かよ……