❤ My favorite jazz song. My godfather used to play all types of jazz. When he first played this song it moved me. I was only 3. It's a beautiful melody. Reminds you of a beautiful autumn day. Great song!!! The musicians playing, Cannonball, Miles, Hank,Sam, Art plays this song beautifully.❤
yeah, Cannonball in not unsung, by any means at all. Read Miles's autobiography, he talks about Julian and Nat arriving in New York and blowing everyone away.
This kind of Jazz just takes me away from everything stressful. It's not like any other music. Almost like meditation, clearing the head of any thoughts. 😌
The piano outro at 08:38 invokes a feeling I cannot describe, it's as if everything I hold dear is summarized by that solo. I hate how much I love it, for I never managed to find the meaning of this yearning seemingly emanating from my soul's absolute core.
I'm not necessarily old by any means, I'm just 27, but this recording was such an integral part of my childhood. I discovered jazz on the internet at about 14 yrs old, and this immediately takes me back to riding the bus to highschool with my headphones in and playing guitar with my old buddy who was a big metal head, but learned this song with me because we didn't have anyone else to play with and he was just a cool dude.
Now being a huge miles Davis fan I would have to say he was a little jealous of that solo! Canonbal was extremely good! But didn't get the recognition because of miles and I love them both.
Julian is tonally sound, clear, smooth, relaxed and comfortable as he tells his story from the heart in a classical manner. He epitomizes the every kernel of "Organic Real Jazz" expressiveness - true and pure Jazz. Miles demonstrates his pleasant "cool-school" nature without any encumbrances; for as always, to him less in practice produces more to the inner sensibilities. Miles never impeded the developmental growth of his players by dissuading them from creating or experimenting. Hence, he helped to bring out the best in all his members whilst he took it "lightly" but poignantly with the trumpet and concentrated on being the best band leader he could. Ask it of: Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, Kenny Garett, Wallace Roney; and, if you could have, of: John Coltrane, Cannonball Adderley, Tony Williams ... [RIP] All of the above- mentioned alumni of Miles Davis became great performers and leaders in their own right. Thanks for posting!
+Vince Harrison, Sr Even many great alto players will agree with you! Julian "Cannonball" Adderley adored and admired Charlie Parker, Sonny Stitt, John Coltrane and Yusef Lateef - amongst others such as Benny and Johnny of yore. Great comment! He was a university, well-schooled USA Floridian of wonderful insights and creativity. Julian loved delicious gourmets which he consumed with epicurean delight.
Spencer Jacobs I realize that thank you... I’ve been reminded of that for years..... I was trying to combine two things I love (at the time anyway)... but.... it’s MUSIC... so, no need to watch the screen while the music plays. Cheers and thanks for stopping by!
My father passed when I was a five year old kid. This song brings out a daydream in me of him strolling to the baseline in an autumn park. A constructed fantasy of a saint that lives on only in my mind
Jeff Bunn I’m sorry my comment got posted on your feed. The comment is for whoever put the ad on the video. This is a music to be respected and that ad stuff has its place. I do not think here is that place.
John Southern I think everyone has their own taste on what the "greatest" is and too each his or her own. Personally Cannonball is my favorite jazz musician and sax player and I enjoy this solo but I love all of his work so I couldn't say this is his best at least for me. Either way the song and solos with it are killer.
😅😊😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅 il 🤣 💕 🤣 🤣 io in 💞 in 💘 io io II di iiii è iiiiii io io 🤣 II a Roma 💕 🤟 💕 iiiiii a Roma io 🤣 😅 🤣 🤣 🤣 😊 in il in ❤️ il io 😂 in inglese per 🍐 🍐 🍐 🍐 🍐 🍐 🍐 🍐 🍐 🍐 il i io io io 🤣 💞 😊💞 io 😅 in 💖 💖 in 💞 io 😂 io il 😹 😹 in 🤣 🤣 🤣 💞 🤣 🤣 🤣 in italiano per 🍐 🍐 😅 🍐 🍐 🍐 😅 😅
That part is absolutely amazing. In one phrase he goes for the kill and makes you melt instantly, I usually get instant tears. Then all the rest is just an act of politeness to let you descend peacefully from there.
Art Blakey's brush work is nothing short of inimitable. Sam Jones on bass anchors the group while the soloists fly fly fly. Hank Jones free form expression over the last sixteen bars is the essence of extemporaneous genius. The BEST OF ALL TIME!!!
One of my favorite things about this rendition of "Autumn Leaves" is how Miles just 'touches' the high notes when he plays the head. You can hear it at 0:52 to 0:53 as he climbs up the scale, and again at 1:09 to 1:11 It's so subtle, but the way he just lightly hits the note and immediately cuts of is just so crisp and adds so much personality to the piece. And of course the solos and performances of the entire band are absolutely remarkable. I love this rendition!
This music expresses that sultry peace we experience every now and again and wish it wouldn't disappear so subtlety as it came whispering in our souls. This rendition of this composition couldn't be embraced by any musicians with such dedication to their craft any better than this. This is a dream come true for anyone who appreciates music with the loving heart.
I remember an Autumn day at 9 years old, adventurously exploring my uncles house in San Diego. In one room, marbled tile floors led to a two tiered record player...with this album on it. I pressed play, and the piano interlude at 8:38 began. My life began at that moment. I didn't know what the instrument or sound was, but I knew I wanted to do that the rest of my life. O wanted to feel that, the rest of my life. Here I am now, 20 years later, doing exactly that. Music, truly is everything.
God what a masterpiece! Reminds me of one of my favorite bars in college. They had this on the jukebox. I played it at least once every time I went in. That was looong ago.
This is the first jazz song in which I understood it, for the subtle haunting tone of miles to the sharp highs, this song taught me space and the value of your own style. Thank Orpheus this exists.
The Cannonball out front, with Miles handling sideman duties? The earth must have shifted apocalyptically at the completion of this session. Miles was the bandleader from hell to many musicians and producers who worked with him. Kudos to the Cannonball for getting the very best out of him on this recording. The rest, as they say is history.👑🎸🎶🎷🎺
I’ve heard from so many musicians who played with Miles and credit him with bringing out their best, pushing for freshness and uniqueness in the music, someone with great insight and intuition, who probably also had an edge and rough moments (we have heard his comments about women, sometimes pretty rough and misogynistic in themselves). I don’t know what cannonball had to say about miles, but I certainly know what Herbie Hancock John Coltrane Ron Carter Wayne shorter John McLaughlin, Tony Williams ( Who also had his issues with Miles, granted), Dave Holland Chick Corea, Keith Jarrett etc, Who speaks so highly of him as a band leader, and as someone who just taught them so much. So I’m not surprised cannonball played great here, and that miles in a sense took a backseat to other peoples’ virtuosity in this tune. Seems to me he was always encouraging that…
@@markcollins1497 I've never heard any musician who played with difficult, egocentric bandleaders, and they are legion, publicly badmouth them. That doesn't mean they weren't hard to work with. Or, that often times musicians just left, simply because they had had enough. Miles is known as much for his vitriolic, curmudgeonly, "my way or the highway" attitude towards his ensemble mates, as he is for the landmark Kind of Blue sessions. He wanted Ron Carter to concentrate more on electric rather than upright bass, during the mid 60s. Ron played some electric early on, as Miles was moving his music into the psychedelic genre of the times. However, he realized his talent was best served, and he preferred playing double bass. According to Ron, Miles persisted in some very domineering exchanges, and Ron left. His interviews tell you a lot about the man, and his view of a world that he believed revolved around him. It was nothing for him to go off on an interviewer, and send the entire interview into journalistic purgatory. Or, just simply answering the question with a question, and then glaring at the interviewer, who usually blinked first. Archie Shepp wanted to play with him. All he got in return for his admiration was called an M F, and told he wasn't good enough. So much for the theory that Miles lent himself towards bringing out the best in musicians. Look, Miles is legendary for his music, we all get that. I have followed him and his body of work for well over fifty years. But for whatever reason, his personality flaws were always manifested up front in his dealings with others, both on and off the bandstand. By his own volition, Miles was a very antagonistic person. He would do and say nasty things to his band mates and other people just to see if he could upset them. Add to that a penchant for taking full writing credit for music his musicians brought to the group for development and recording (Blue In Green immediately comes to mind), and it's clear that it didn't take long for his band mates to get a huge dose of what it really meant to be in the band with Miles.
@@bustabass9025 :O) 'trane on Miles after being berated & fired (from a biography that came out about 20 years ago when I had a driving job, heard excerpts on the radio, & didn't write down who/what the book was): "He wasn't very nice to me." He could have been far less polite, but didn't, as you noted. 'trane was apparently very cautious with the spoken word, but spoke freely on instruments.
Reminds me of growing up a really young child. My Dad would play this jazz music all the time. Which is why I love Jazz today. What a Beautiful memoir of lengends he left to us.Role modeling by example is real. Thank you Dad 🎶💕🥰🎺
I can't say enough how Miles masterminds this session by letting Cannonball "off the leash" and then comes back in and shows everyone why he is the most successful jazz musician of all time! He has that magical mysticism for eternity. Long live Miles Davis...Bad!
El sonido de cada instrumento surfea en tus oídos sanbuyendose en tu cerebro y tu imaginación nada como si volaras entre nubes.🎼❤🎶 adoró a estos tipos.
What a great album all around solid playing, iconic album cover and this was recorded well. I have streamed this album for the past four years and said its time to get this on vinyl, so i ordered the Analogue Productions 45 RPM record. Jazz is best heard on a vinyl record in my opinion. I cannot afford an original copy of this album, Kind of Blue or Blue Train since they are very expensive but the next best thing is well done audiophile remasters on vinyl.
That ending was in a dream I had many many years ago I'll never in my life forget it.
The most beautiful piece of music I've ever heard in my life.
The perfect jazz record-and a perfect performance of a great song by five great musicians.
❤ My favorite jazz song.
My godfather used to play all types of jazz. When he first played this song it moved me. I was only 3. It's a beautiful melody. Reminds you of a beautiful autumn day. Great song!!! The musicians playing, Cannonball, Miles, Hank,Sam, Art plays this song beautifully.❤
No one's music quite gets in my bones like Miles.
For me it's Miles and Ambrose.
We often speak of John Coltrane as a pioneer and greatest sax player but Cannonball Adderly is unsung but was amazing
Dude Cannonball is far from being unsung
agreed
Yaka Yoko not when compaired to Coltrane
Art J Johnson
yeah, Cannonball in not unsung, by any means at all. Read Miles's autobiography, he talks about Julian and Nat arriving in New York and blowing everyone away.
I love the sense of mystery of this version. This is the most Autumn song ever performed.
30 thumbs down? they couldn't have been listening to the same song! this song is gorgeous. ..such skill from some of the jazz greats.
+YayaPrican Prob because of the ads in the video
@:54
+Eric Trevino could be.... I never even noticed the ads because I always just listen to the song without watching the video :)
I am lucky enough to own this on vinyl.
smokeycretin9 moi aussi oauhooo
également.
Only CD...
Smokeycretin9 don't advertise it, you might get robbed!
One of the greatest line ups ever 🇺🇸⚓️
This kind of Jazz just takes me away from everything stressful. It's not like any other music. Almost like meditation, clearing the head of any thoughts. 😌
The piano outro at 08:38 invokes a feeling I cannot describe, it's as if everything I hold dear is summarized by that solo.
I hate how much I love it, for I never managed to find the meaning of this yearning seemingly emanating from my soul's absolute core.
Hyldebrandt Heelclick yes he caresses that blue note at the end of his solo then comes back.to it for the outtro
just embrace it
Could not agree more or said it better myself!! That solo got a hold of me from the very first time I listened. Its tooo good!!
How about not trying to express with words? There are other options like making sweet slow love to a beautiful woman
Couldn't agree more
Terrific version of Autumn Leaves.....
I'm not necessarily old by any means, I'm just 27, but this recording was such an integral part of my childhood. I discovered jazz on the internet at about 14 yrs old, and this immediately takes me back to riding the bus to highschool with my headphones in and playing guitar with my old buddy who was a big metal head, but learned this song with me because we didn't have anyone else to play with and he was just a cool dude.
this music raised me like my parents who cherished this music.
“ that’s how music should sound “❤
Is it rational to dislike this song? Would you refuse to feed your soul?
Haha, the ad :D
essennagerry that was very corny of me lol I admit!! I encourage everyone to ignore it and just enjoy the music 😁
Now being a huge miles Davis fan I would have to say he was a little jealous of that solo! Canonbal was extremely good! But didn't get the recognition because of miles and I love them both.
the intro is perfect
Mamma che meraviglia ❤️
Something keeps bringing me back to this one recording
Sheer perfection
Julian is tonally sound, clear, smooth, relaxed and comfortable as he tells his story from the heart in a classical manner.
He epitomizes the every kernel of "Organic Real Jazz" expressiveness - true and pure Jazz.
Miles demonstrates his pleasant "cool-school" nature without any encumbrances; for as always, to him less in practice produces more to the inner sensibilities.
Miles never impeded the developmental growth of his players by dissuading them from creating or experimenting.
Hence, he helped to bring out the best in all his members whilst he took it "lightly" but poignantly with the trumpet and concentrated on being the best band leader he could.
Ask it of: Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, Kenny Garett, Wallace Roney; and, if you could have, of: John Coltrane, Cannonball Adderley, Tony Williams ... [RIP]
All of the above- mentioned alumni of Miles Davis became great performers and leaders in their own right.
Thanks for posting!
In my opinion he was the best alto player ever.
+Vince Harrison, Sr
Even many great alto players will agree with you!
Julian "Cannonball" Adderley adored and admired Charlie Parker, Sonny Stitt, John Coltrane and Yusef Lateef - amongst others such as Benny and Johnny of yore.
Great comment!
He was a university, well-schooled USA Floridian of wonderful insights and creativity.
Julian loved delicious gourmets which he consumed with epicurean delight.
This is cannonballs band anyway
Hank Jones is just terrific
Extra money Miles?
Splendide, rien d'autre
8 people don't know of good music nor the significance of these sessions.
Charles Alvarez 66 thumbs down, what a sad world we live in now.
Kevin Cole 89 now. Dont understand how you could not like this masterpiece
Charles Alvarez I think there is a cult that is dedicated to disliking every video on RUclips lol.
Just shut the fuck up and listen to the music!
exquisita melodía de mi vida
Awesome
Sam Jones, deep. What a sound. Man...
6:40
7:03
7:15
7:19
7:29
7:41
MMmmmm Miles!
4:20 miles
Tarnishing such an amazing song with ads
Spencer Jacobs I realize that thank you... I’ve been reminded of that for years..... I was trying to combine two things I love (at the time anyway)... but.... it’s MUSIC... so, no need to watch the screen while the music plays. Cheers and thanks for stopping by!
Spencer Jacobs
Well at least they aren’t stopping the video
First time hearing this song......its fucking gorgeous. I almost cried guys😂
Looking for the extended version Can anyone help?
Did you all hear my comment. Taught myself. By trumpet and sax.
HOW IS THAT PIANO SOLO A THING
6:39 6:39
6:39 6:39
6:35 6:35
6:35 6:35
2:04 2:08
My father passed when I was a five year old kid. This song brings out a daydream in me of him strolling to the baseline in an autumn park. A constructed fantasy of a saint that lives on only in my mind
Music is so powerful.
Hassan Jawad I saw this perfectly as I listened. Thank you for that.
Hugs and Prayers for comfort, now and for all times.
@@rubenrios747 , Hi is this question for me? If so, pleased be assured, I'm not placing any ads - it's just a thumbs up icon. peace.
Jeff Bunn I’m sorry my comment got posted on your feed. The comment is for whoever put the ad on the video. This is a music to be respected and that ad stuff has its place. I do not think here is that place.
4:20
7:00
Cannonball's performance here is possibly the greatest recorded sax solo of all time... none finer.
I would second that. Era was VERY prolific, Jullian is a fine saxman, but ur statement, just no.
John Southern I think everyone has their own taste on what the "greatest" is and too each his or her own. Personally Cannonball is my favorite jazz musician and sax player and I enjoy this solo but I love all of his work so I couldn't say this is his best at least for me. Either way the song and solos with it are killer.
Caretaker Cain Cannonball's solo is definitely a masterpiece.
one for daddy'o :) the best alto sax solo ever!
Honestly! He was singing with his instrument
this is cannonball’s best solo. and miles’s solo is so simple but legendary.
i thank my parents R.I.P. surrounding me with such classics.
😅😊😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅 il 🤣 💕 🤣 🤣 io in 💞 in 💘 io io II di iiii è iiiiii io io 🤣 II a Roma 💕 🤟 💕 iiiiii a Roma io 🤣 😅 🤣 🤣 🤣 😊 in il in ❤️ il io 😂 in inglese per 🍐 🍐 🍐 🍐 🍐 🍐 🍐 🍐 🍐 🍐 il i io io io 🤣 💞 😊💞 io 😅 in 💖 💖 in 💞 io 😂 io il 😹 😹 in 🤣 🤣 🤣 💞 🤣 🤣 🤣 in italiano per 🍐 🍐 😅 🍐 🍐 🍐 😅 😅
😅
The first time I heard Miles solo on this LP I almost laughed at its simplicity in comparison to the saxes'.
I don’t know what it is about the piano at the end that just gives me chills. Such poetry...love the distant sound even
That part is absolutely amazing. In one phrase he goes for the kill and makes you melt instantly, I usually get instant tears. Then all the rest is just an act of politeness to let you descend peacefully from there.
My favorite jazz rendition of Autumn Leaves. Miles and Julian are simply amazing in this version.
Wat bout Hanks solo at the end? They are all GREAT!!! Best version of the cut I have ever heard!!
Art Blakey's brush work is nothing short of inimitable. Sam Jones on bass anchors the group while the soloists fly fly fly. Hank Jones free form expression over the last sixteen bars is the essence of extemporaneous genius. The BEST OF ALL TIME!!!
One of my favorite things about this rendition of "Autumn Leaves" is how Miles just 'touches' the high notes when he plays the head. You can hear it at 0:52 to 0:53 as he climbs up the scale, and again at 1:09 to 1:11
It's so subtle, but the way he just lightly hits the note and immediately cuts of is just so crisp and adds so much personality to the piece.
And of course the solos and performances of the entire band are absolutely remarkable. I love this rendition!
right on, Ithought the same during these moments
It.is like controlled combustion
Cannonball's vibrato and tone are superior.
+Seth Finch Couldn't agree more...it's astounding.
Every time I listen to this song...Miles pulling the beat to a slow pace. Amazing solo!
This music expresses that sultry peace we experience every now and again and wish it wouldn't disappear so subtlety as it came whispering in our souls. This rendition of this composition couldn't be embraced by any musicians with such dedication to their craft any better than this. This is a dream come true for anyone who appreciates music with the loving heart.
this album is one of the greatest jazz recordings ever!
Cannonball Adderley has never been unsung by anyone who knows or cares about jazz~he will always be one of the GREATS OF MODERN MUSIC!
내가 들은 어텀중 단연 최고다. 영원히 질리지 않을 마일스와 캐논볼 행크의 솔로. 인트로부터 아웃트로까지 단 한구석도 빼놓지 않고 세련되며 고급지고 완벽한 음악이다.
공감합니다 20년이 지난 지금도 생각나면 듣네요
I remember an Autumn day at 9 years old, adventurously exploring my uncles house in San Diego. In one room, marbled tile floors led to a two tiered record player...with this album on it.
I pressed play, and the piano interlude at 8:38 began. My life began at that moment. I didn't know what the instrument or sound was, but I knew I wanted to do that the rest of my life. O wanted to feel that, the rest of my life. Here I am now, 20 years later, doing exactly that.
Music, truly is everything.
Beautiful.
God what a masterpiece! Reminds me of one of my favorite bars in college. They had this on the jukebox. I played it at least once every time I went in. That was looong ago.
I always wondered if some people just give thumbs down to everything. How can you not appreciate the excellence of this song?
This is the first jazz song in which I understood it, for the subtle haunting tone of miles to the sharp highs, this song taught me space and the value of your own style. Thank Orpheus this exists.
iraplikeyoubreathe
Good luck lad
The Cannonball out front, with Miles handling sideman duties? The earth must have shifted apocalyptically at the completion of this session. Miles was the bandleader from hell to many musicians and producers who worked with him. Kudos to the Cannonball for getting the very best out of him on this recording. The rest, as they say is history.👑🎸🎶🎷🎺
Cannonball is amazing here, but I disagree that he was
I’ve heard from so many musicians who played with Miles and credit him with bringing out their best, pushing for freshness and uniqueness in the music, someone with great insight and intuition, who probably also had an edge and rough moments (we have heard his comments about women, sometimes pretty rough and misogynistic in themselves). I don’t know what cannonball had to say about miles, but I certainly know what Herbie Hancock John Coltrane Ron Carter Wayne shorter John McLaughlin, Tony Williams (
Who also had his issues with Miles, granted), Dave Holland Chick Corea, Keith Jarrett etc, Who speaks so highly of him as a band leader, and as someone who just taught them so much. So I’m not surprised cannonball played great here, and that miles in a sense took a backseat to other peoples’ virtuosity in this tune. Seems to me he was always encouraging that…
@@markcollins1497
I've never heard any musician who played with difficult, egocentric bandleaders, and they are legion, publicly badmouth them. That doesn't mean they weren't hard to work with. Or, that often times musicians just left, simply because they had had enough.
Miles is known as much for his vitriolic, curmudgeonly, "my way or the highway" attitude towards his ensemble mates, as he is for the landmark Kind of Blue sessions. He wanted Ron Carter to concentrate more on electric rather than upright bass, during the mid 60s. Ron played some electric early on, as Miles was moving his music into the psychedelic genre of the times. However, he realized his talent was best served, and he preferred playing double bass. According to Ron, Miles persisted in some very domineering exchanges, and Ron left.
His interviews tell you a lot about the man, and his view of a world that he believed revolved around him. It was nothing for him to go off on an interviewer, and send the entire interview into journalistic purgatory. Or, just simply answering the question with a question, and then glaring at the interviewer, who usually blinked first.
Archie Shepp wanted to play with him. All he got in return for his admiration was called an M F, and told he wasn't good enough. So much for the theory that Miles lent himself towards bringing out the best in musicians.
Look, Miles is legendary for his music, we all get that. I have followed him and his body of work for well over fifty years. But for whatever reason, his personality flaws were always manifested up front in his dealings with others, both on and off the bandstand. By his own volition, Miles was a very antagonistic person. He would do and say nasty things to his band mates and other people just to see if he could upset them.
Add to that a penchant for taking full writing credit for music his musicians brought to the group for development and recording (Blue In Green immediately comes to mind), and it's clear that it didn't take long for his band mates to get a huge dose of what it really meant to be in the band with Miles.
I've read that his personality was quite a study unto itself. Very complicated with volatility that could manifest out of no where. Eggshells anyone?
@@bustabass9025 :O) 'trane on Miles after being berated & fired (from a biography that came out about 20 years ago when I had a driving job, heard excerpts on the radio, & didn't write down who/what the book was): "He wasn't very nice to me." He could have been far less polite, but didn't, as you noted. 'trane was apparently very cautious with the spoken word, but spoke freely on instruments.
Reminds me of growing up a really young child. My Dad would play this jazz music all the time. Which is why I love Jazz today. What a Beautiful memoir of lengends he left to us.Role modeling by example is real. Thank you Dad 🎶💕🥰🎺
Why can't today's music sound this good?
Because our modern cultures turn the wrong way to materialise life , we lost parts of ours soul on art , music , spirit …
This version of autumn leaves is so smooth and dreamy...
Cannonball goes hard! One of the best sax solos ever!
So happy high fidelity recording equipment was readily available by the mid 50s.
Jazz its the biggest addition to the music in the XX century, such a wonderful music.
I can't say enough how Miles masterminds this session by letting Cannonball "off the leash" and then comes back in and shows everyone why he is the most successful jazz musician of all time! He has that magical mysticism for eternity. Long live Miles Davis...Bad!
I hearya
As was coin before, Mile's genius was in that intricate balance between what notes he chose not to play and what he did play.
Masterpiece ...... Beautiful Music
El sonido de cada instrumento surfea en tus oídos sanbuyendose en tu cerebro y tu imaginación nada como si volaras entre nubes.🎼❤🎶 adoró a estos tipos.
Miles & Cannonball together playing Autumn Leaves & Somthin' Else are unforgettable.
Absolutely timeless... amazing. Can listen to it over and over..
Nah I'm not recently retired... I'm 21...
Amazing combination Adderly Miles. Aweeesome!!!
10:15 OooooHhhh...
Eternal.
What a great album all around solid playing, iconic album cover and this was recorded well. I have streamed this album for the past four years and said its time to get this on vinyl, so i ordered the Analogue Productions 45 RPM record. Jazz is best heard on a vinyl record in my opinion. I cannot afford an original copy of this album, Kind of Blue or Blue Train since they are very expensive but the next best thing is well done audiophile remasters on vinyl.
So true. Just something about vinyl. A great tape deck can come close to rivaling the sound. Analog. When done correctly it can be sublime.
Sencillamente, maravilloso. No existen palabras para describir estos colosos de la música!! Thanks!!
Close your snd see with your ears. WOW
Close you eyes and see with your ears. The Best Of The Best .
Only here for my general study🙄🙄 not bad music tho😍👍👍👍
Cannonball creates the best tension and emotional pull of all time
My all-time-favourite jazz song
6:41
7:2
7:02
7:14
7:20
2:29
Love this version, just Love it...they are all outstanding..Sam n Art..CannonBall, MIles, and last but not least Hank. In my top 5 for sure
I'm a french kid but i like jazz song and this version with adderlay it's just extraordinary
Its a french song after all
L'escroc Clash of Clans You don't need to apologize, t's ok to be a French kid and like this song.
France/paris were in vogue when this was recorded. A lot of the players in this genre loved paris and would travel often.
Autumn leaves was originally from france
I'm sorry that you're French. Get well soon.
マイルスの真骨頂
Beyond genius.
1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58 1:58
1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53 1:53
Wonderful interpretation of Autumn Leaves by Cannonball - ex army veteran. What's not to love about the South Florida musician. Cescalovesjazz!
This is Miles Davis music that I really love. Cannon Ball is Simply Superb, great Music
🎵
6:40
Hank Jones' coda is some of the most exquisite playing on record.It never fails to bring tears.
One hundred & eighty eight dislikes!
Let’s just think about that for a minute
I thank God I’m not as stupid as these ppl
2:00
2:23
2:27
This is just so soothing and rousing at the same time. All emotions.
How can you miss with this line-up (?) ! All are gone, however, the music and style lingers on, and on ... Dandee Candee Radio
You know what astonishes me? How in the heck does he get that f# in tune at 4:34? I have to play it 123 to get it in tune with a harmon mute.
Cannon floats those notes like no other. So crazy
When you are alone this beats your hearts. Even when you are with lover, this track will make your time so lovely. What a great music.
0:00 0:52 1:09 1:26 2:00 2:13 2:18 2:27 2:35