If there's ever been anyone that has truly mastered their instrument of choice, it's Buddy. A true master. There will never be another. The person who turned me on to Buddy was none other than my mother. She had an old wooden crate full of old LPs in her bedroom closet and one day I went thru them. She was old school Country-Conway, Loretta, John Anderson, and Elvis. She Loved Elvis. Then I saw the Buddy Rich LP. I asked who it was? She said its a really good drummer-she loved hearing drums. I put it one and my life was changed forever....I was around 10 or 11 at the time.about 30 years ago. She had great taste!
I turn 71 at the end of this month. I have been a drummer since 1965. Buddy has always been my all time favourite drummer. He was always Phenomenal. Thank You for posting this, yet another wonderful performance by him. RIP Buddy
A favorite standard of my Mother and Dad that danced to Tommy Dorsey, Sammy Kay et.all. Mr. Rich autographed the drum head of my brothers' Slingerland ride tom tom at a concert at Four Seasons Resorts in Lake of the Ozarks,MO. just before I shipped out to Vietnam and he still has it 43 years latter. God bless Mr. Trapps may he rest in peace.
Hard to watch knowing this was his last public performance but still driving hard, what a legacy he left us, "Buddy Rich the ultimate Master of the Drum Kit" now and forever
@@John-rw2zf This performance from Buddy was way from his best, here he is but a shadow of the great man he was. Hold tight and watch this from the 70's when he was at the top of his game. ruclips.net/video/94DeieWZgTM/видео.html
@@BigBillLucas Thanks so much for the tip. You were right. Amazing performance. The speed of what looks like his single stroke rolls is astounding and that left hand finger control using traditional grip is jaw dropping. I remember seeing him on Johnny Carson when TV was fairly new. Didn't have such a thing as a video recorder back then. This RUclips stuff is great for old video viewing.
My late father was a Jazz trained pro drummer. Lester Penman in Glasgow, Scotland. He played the 'Scene' in Glasgow dance halls around the 50's. He was my dad, he was my hero.
Not a drummer but we know this McCartney doesn't read music plays drums piano left handed guitar. Rich Krupa the greats not like most heavy metal drummers that just bang
I met Buddy Rich in 1960 and again in 1961 and again in 1962. I was going to High School (Class of 62) in South Tahoe, California and worked at a Hotel/Motel at Stateline, CA one block from Harrah's Club at Stateline, NV. He stayed there when he played at Harrah's. Very nice man, not stuck up what soever, despite his fame.
Wow, brought tears to my eyes that Buddy in one of his last performances could do everything...EVERYTHING his mind could think of and did not miss one stroke. A rare few will ever approach him as an equal.
I really hate it when people say that Buddy Rich wasn't a musical drummer and that he just played fast and flashy stuff. His musicality is evident from the very first notes he plays here. He was a tremendous musical talent whose technical virtuosity was so astounding that it often hid his awesome musicality.
Gives me chills to think this was toward the end of his life and he was still the best drummer in the world. The technique, the swing, the precision, the musicality in his playing is unmatched. Modern Drummer just released it's top 50 drummers of all time voted by drummers and 25 yrs. after his death still voted #1 by his peers. Enough said.
Yep, Buddy Rich is still a TOUGH act to follow. I've one of the new Tama®/Hoshino® New Imperialstar™ kits, packing three rack and one floor toms as well as a 14"x5" snare and 22"x18" kick as of 4 March 2014. This performance of: HAWAIIAN WAR CHANT (Prince Leleiohoku of Hawai'i/arr. John Avery Noble/Tommy Dorsey) EMI Miller Catalog, ASCAP is astoundingly difficult to keep up, with even when using 5A or 5B hickories; and I favor the huge Vic Firth® Ralph Hardimon nylon-tip side-drum sticks from the Corpsmaster™ series on the kit.
In 100 years, his name will still top that list. Long past the death of all of his peers, these videos will show those not yet born how phenomenal his talents were.
It's because there are people these days that think that there has always been the ability to digitally remaster things. They compare today's AI created videos to these originals. Imagine how amazing Buddy Rich would sound in a video produced today?!
@@Pickinbuddy He was that. There is a legend that while he was staying at a hotel on the road, the hotel got a noise complaint and sent someone to check it out. Turns out Buddy was sitting on the floor in the hallway using the carpet as his drum set. When asked to stop as it was late and guests were trying to sleep, he just looked at the guy and said, “I’m Buddy Rich goddamn it”.
I've been a drummer on & off for over 50 years. I like to think I have some skills, but on my very best day I couldn't have held a candle to Buddy. He was not only the world's best, but I doubt that there will EVER be a drummer who will be his equal. Rest in Peace, Buddy. You've been my hero since I was a child, and you'll always be my hero.
As a recording engineer used to listening to the perfect timing of artificial drums made a bit more human by some humanizing algorithm, the real life perfection and feeling Buddy Rich could bring (and at this age!) is just amazing. Beautiful. Thank you. Hearing this made my day.
Effen WOW! Thank goodness Buddy was asked to do that number I'm sure every musician on that date cherishes the memory. What a privilege to have been there gigging. Buddy Rich, RIP & keep Heaven rocking!
@@josephesposito3499 My friend who was also a drummer asked him about alleged money problems and Buddy yelled YEAH, WHAT ABOUT IT? and Carl apologized all over the place.😂
That's darn friggin' great playin' for a 70-year-old with a malignant brain tumor--and darn friggin' great playin' for ANY drummer at any age. Go, Buddy, go!
I remember the thrill of seeing Buddy live for the first time at Langley High School in McLean Va. his band was tight and I still have never seen faster hands and someone attack the drums better than Buddy. may he RIP!
Sad to think Buddy died 3 months after this. Gene Krupa died in 1973 . The two Slingerland kings, both gone. Thank God for RUclips footage of them both.
I wanted to be a drummer but all I got was the snare; never could afford to go beyond that. At least it was a sparkly blue Slingerland! I always wanted a Ludwig, the other name brand in the 60s. Now I'm glad I had the Slingerland.
Once again Buddy Kicks Ass. I saw him in 1967 and I can swear he was a force of nature. You had to see it to feel the full force of his power. Here he is older but still, how many drummers can play like this at any age?
This was the era when MUSIC was king, the players could actually play instruments, not just electronic keyboards and simulators, and almost every city and town in England had at least one dancehall where you could dance the night away to LIVE bands. Thank God I was in my prime at this time.
@@SujitDas-qd4uv No-one funded music for these guys, or when I was in school, so we learned to play various intruments, now the kids are too busy on computers and synthesisers to learn to play REAL instruments
Terry Wright preach my friend, it’s a sorrier lot you’ll never see then what passes for talent today. Odd enough, there is talent today, it’s just people today do not classify it as talent, don’t find it, or don’t care. What i’d give to go back.
To all the great drummers of all time - Ginger Baker, Karen Carpenter, Alex Van Halen, and John Bonham- I salute the absolute best Drummer of all time - Buddy Rich playing a song so hard in time at the the age of 69 to perfection with a huge “real band” of musicians. Just Wow!
Unless you're a drummer its really hard to say how difficult it is to play like Buddy while keeping perfect timing! Buddy is truly the king of drummers and there will never be another even close to him! RIP Buddy.
Absolutely right there, listening to 'Panelbeaters' today have neither style nor class despite sitting amongst three sets with numerous Ride a sizzles,all microphoned, and so many of them have to add some weird head shaking and throwing the sticks in the air,so that the teenies can scream with glee....doh. RIP Buddy, the best in the world.
What strikes me about B Rich was the speed, the clarity, always executing difficult sections in perfect time. that he was able to do so as a senior citizen should is even more astounding. What an era?
Amazing right up until the end. it is true though.. I used to take lessons from Al Miller and they were both great band leaders.. Buddy was obviously more well known had once asked Al to show him to read once and he said no it's not worth it, you don't need it but buddy did have at least one book that I know of that someone transposed for him so I brought mine when I went to see Buddy, Louis Bellson and Al Miller play at a local high school near me someteme around 1982.... I'm so glad I got to see him as a kid and he autographed my copy of his drum book.
Great video, thanks for sharing. I had not discovered jazz, blues and a couple other genre, until I was 70 years old. Better late than never, I guess, but missed so much. Again, thanks for this video, so sorry we lost him to such a cruel disease, my wife has fought non-Hodgkin lymphoma for three years, had it cornered this June, got news of breast cancer the week before thanksgiving, surgery dec. 3. Smile on buddy, no more infirmities for you.
Wow, magnificent drummer, what a performance, one of a kind….love this kind of music….may you rest in God’s eternal peace Buddy, and may your love for the drums inspire others….👍👍👍👍👍👍👍❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
I was lucky enough to see Buddy play 10 to 15 times. I was a Marine Corps Rudimental Drum & Bugle Corps drummer and a USMC Band Drummer. In my humble opinion Mr. Rich was the the best Musician ever to make the drum kit their instrument of choice.
Have a look at the way Buddy keeps his hi-hat and kick drum going through the solo. That's how all the greats of that era played. The total package. Hands and feet working together. Now keep an eye on the younger players of the current generation. So many don't do that in their solos.
Yes, Buddy was the greatest, and today I would to say Chip Ritter comes very close, not just because of his stick tricks but the way he moves around a three piece set. Met in person, magic.
@@mikegrigg11 so what, though? Most of them have total garbage hands. And worse yet, can't keep any time to save themselves. One day, I'm going to go over to Guitar Center with 1,000 in 20s and just bet the kids to keep a straight beat for 5 minutes. I'll walk out with a good deal of money. Never could figure out why they're always trying to show off. Loud as hell, too. I mean, I can BE loud, but you're at a store. Nobody wants to hear it, and they can't friggin play. It has nothing to do with the tone of the drum, either. You don't need to bash away for 20 minutes to tell a good drum. This is why someone runs over in about 30 seconds and politely tells them to STF up. Because bad playing sounds even louder than it is. And of course, they never buy a damn thing, even, for all that noise. Jmo.
Buddy was our inspiration. An absolute Monster, and a beautiful human. He, along with Gene, Davy, Louie, Joe and a few others set the stage that let drummers be soloists in their own right. And his chops were unequalled.
No way in a million years was Buddy suffering with a heart problem in this performance in my opinion, his breath control and oxygen levals were those of a 21 year old superfit athelite i am blown away by his fitness leval...
You know he's hot when the band turns around to watch him. I saw him live twice once at the Disney pavilion and once in San Francisco not long before this was filmed. And nobody danced. we all just watched in awe.
It's absurd to think that a 69 year old man could play drums better and faster than most guys half his age. That's true talent. He had him some fast hands.
The greatest!! Looked like near the beginning of the solo, he twirled the stick in his right hand...in the midst of it! He changed grips with his left hand too. There are no drummers like him anymore....
Oh I know Buddy was tough on his crew and fellow musicians. What I meant in my comment was, that generation is a lost art compared to today’s winy little girlie dweebs of today. Once that older generation is gone, all class goes with it.
@@luvbasses5487 Thank you for that response. It says a lot. The thing that confuses me about Buddy Rich are the stories. I mean, with all the insulting things he said about other musicians we're supposed to believe that he liked & respected Karen Carpenter's drumming?
I had the privilege of seeing Buddy with his band at Lafayette's music room in Memphis. He was an incredible showman and cool. He did things on the drums that I have never seen anyone else do.
Wow! Thanks for sharing this. Stranger how I'm just now watching this after being posted 7 years ago. Glad to hear this though. Buddy Rich and Gene Krupa were the best drummers. Thanks again for sharing.
He said it one of a kind. You couldn't get a machine to get that much swing. The best drummer who ever lived in my humble opinion. He could do things with 1 hand what most drummers could do with two. An absolute genius.
Lots of guys had fast hands but that LEFT hand of buddy's is LEGENDARY!!! Those of us who played AT the drums only imagined our left hand doing what Buddy did all the time.
Fantastic performance. The sure sign of greatness is when people can make something look easy when you know it's not, but he did look as if it took its toll on him at the end. Still he died a legend. God rest the great Buddy Rich.
All of Buddy Rich's solos centered around 1 thing...........................kicking ass on the drums!!! He was to drums what Jordan was to basketball!!!
Wow....just plain f'n WOW....the interaction between Buddy and the trumpet soloist so good...a tribute to Gene and Harry going on there!! Buddy could kick a band like no other...he knew when to be out front and push and when to be in the background and drive. R. I. P.....Buddy.....there will never be any other like you.
I saw Buddy with his big band in the 70s or 80s. Steve Marcus on tenor sax. Amazing. I had never heard cymbals sing a melody before but Buddy did that. I still can’t quite believe what I heard nor how beautiful it was. And it was on the drums.
My God! Thank you for this gift, and you now have THAT to listen to, and we don't. That's ok, we will get to see him play again, in Your presence. This is about 3 years before I got my first early 60's set of Yamahas. Not sure the series, but they were kind of a velvet red wrap. The thing that made my drums, my first drums, that I totally demolished unfortunately, they had the original heads on them, but what made them odd was the sizes. I had a traditional jazz 20x16 kick drum, and my toms were rock toms. I had a 13x7"? Maybe? Rack Tom, and a 16x16 floor Tom, so traditional rock toms, with a jazz snare, a Ludwig superphonic 14x5.5", generally, a jazz snare, not specifically but that's where it is/was/will usually be played, is in a jazz setting. So, rock toms, jazz back beat. Ya know, like Buddy! Who'da thunk it. I didn't at the time for sure. I of course appreciated who and what Buddy was, and have even since before drumming, when seeing him as a kid on Sesame Street. I have always said that Nicko McBrain from Iron Maiden is the one who made me want to play, but I am beginning to realize that isn't true. He IS the one who made me decide to take it seriously, and ask for a kit for Christmas in 1990, but he's NOT my first awe inspiring "I've got to do this" influence. That, if I'm right, which that was a few days ago now lol, was Buddy Rich on the Muppets, not Sesame Street, durr.... He did show up there I'm sure I remember, but I first saw him battling Animal, another early influence lol. But yeah, that's truly the earliest moment in my life I can recall, seeing a drummer, and knowing I was destined to..... Never even come within the same galaxy as, but try to sound like! Generally, the influence is just "I play drums, he did too" kinda thing. I can't wrap my puny monkey brain around what that man does. Why is the snare like that! Of course now I know why, but anywyas. I am a progressive drummer, think Danny Carey, Mike Portnoy, Neil Peart, and I can pretty accurately sound like those guys, maybe not Danny, but he is afterall the greatest living drummer, he took that spot in April of 1987, when the greatest of all time, no ifs and or buts, no contest, was tragically "for us, certainly no tragedy for him" taken to Heaven. Imagine if he'd have been given just 10 more years, then had cancer. 1997 medicine was a very long way from 1987 medicine for sure. I was going to say "imagine if he'd gotten cancer with today's medicine" but no, they would have "treated" the cancer for the rest of his life, which they will have tried to convince him, he should lead as a woman or some such nonsense. No, not by today's medical standards, I don't wish that hell on anyone. Oh, what's a woman anyways, no one can say for sure. Sorry, for getting off there, but I brought it back fairly quickly. Buddy Rich! Thank you sir, for giving me clips like this. I can watch these when I get frustrated with my own playing and abilities, and they make me feel like "yeah, you in fact have wasted countless dollars and years of your life for nothing." Lmao! Thanks Buddy!
Faster then the speed of sound travel! I saw him at London Ale House in Wildwood New Jersey in the 70s! "West side story" He did like 20 minutes and walked off, Maybe felt sick or something.. That said he is the best I have seen and I saw a lot growing up in between Philly and NY late 60s and 70s!
Legend a legend a legend. Buddy Rich set the stage for so many drum players in the future that it's unbelievable and yet no one to this date can do with Buddy Rich did in his career. God bless you Buddy Rich Wherever You Are and hope you still wrapping those skin's
If you watch closely - he’s using the matched grip through the intro to make it easier to twist and face the floor tom, but when he faces the snare, he pivots the left stick to the traditional grip.
I thought traditional (and apparently we have more than one of those, news to me, a French and another one) was mainly for marching snare. It doesn't make much sense on a kit, imo. I know people who use it, but most flip back and forth between matched and traditional if they had any jazz training.
How could the Hawaiian War Chant make me cry ? God Bless you Buddy and thank you on behalf of all drummers.
If there's ever been anyone that has truly mastered their instrument of choice, it's Buddy. A true master. There will never be another. The person who turned me on to Buddy was none other than my mother. She had an old wooden crate full of old LPs in her bedroom closet and one day I went thru them. She was old school Country-Conway, Loretta, John Anderson, and Elvis. She Loved Elvis. Then I saw the Buddy Rich LP. I asked who it was? She said its a really good drummer-she loved hearing drums. I put it one and my life was changed forever....I was around 10 or 11 at the time.about 30 years ago. She had great taste!
I had an uncle who turned me onto the big bands. I had a record with the Dorseys and Buddy Rich.
I turn 71 at the end of this month. I have been a drummer since 1965. Buddy has always been my all time favourite drummer. He was always Phenomenal. Thank You for posting this, yet another wonderful performance by him. RIP Buddy
A favorite standard of my Mother and Dad that danced to Tommy Dorsey, Sammy Kay et.all. Mr. Rich autographed the drum head of my brothers' Slingerland ride tom tom at a concert at Four Seasons Resorts in Lake of the Ozarks,MO. just before I shipped out to Vietnam and he still has it 43 years latter. God bless Mr. Trapps may he rest in peace.
The absolute BEST drummer of the 20th century.
Hard to watch knowing this was his last public performance but still driving hard, what a legacy he left us, "Buddy Rich the ultimate Master of the Drum Kit" now and forever
Virus didn't get you, did it, Bill? Haven't seen you around, lol
That was fun to watch. Best performance by Buddy that I've seen so far. Also the first time I ever saw him play using Matched Grip.
@@John-rw2zf
This performance from Buddy was way from his best, here he is but a shadow of the great man he was.
Hold tight and watch this from the 70's when he was at the top of his game.
ruclips.net/video/94DeieWZgTM/видео.html
@@BigBillLucas Thanks so much for the tip. You were right. Amazing performance. The speed of what looks like his single stroke rolls is astounding and that left hand finger control using traditional grip is jaw dropping. I remember seeing him on Johnny Carson when TV was fairly new. Didn't have such a thing as a video recorder back then. This RUclips stuff is great for old video viewing.
The 🐐 GOAT. Often Imitated, Never Duplicated.
I'm a drummer over 50 years. This is one of my "masters." And to think he couldn't read music, and was self taught.Amazing!!
Not true. He learned later on. I'm not sure why, though...
My late father was a Jazz trained pro drummer. Lester Penman in Glasgow, Scotland. He played the 'Scene' in Glasgow dance halls around the 50's. He was my dad, he was my hero.
Buddy Rich grew up in vaudeville. He had 100s of drummers he could watch, ask questions, and get tips from. He apprenticed from an early age.
Loads of us self taught cuz WE JUST LOVE DEM DRUMS
Not a drummer but we know this McCartney doesn't read music plays drums piano left handed guitar. Rich Krupa the greats not like most heavy metal drummers that just bang
Keith Moon's, Ginger Baker's and John Bonham's favorite drummer 🥁...That tells you all you need to know about Buddy Rich...The GOAT...
Neil Peart, as well.
@@thegentlemansanta1225 I was about to say the same thing
Neil Peart too.
@@jeffthomas6092 ...Yes, indeed!
Agreed the Goat
How Lucky we were to be able to listen to wonderful music like this. Thank you
Good news, you still can!
Im 67 and learned this song in 5th grade. I still remember all the words! Buddy Rich the GOAT! The Velvet Fog was there too! Fantastic! ❤❤❤
Velvet frog
@@ccbarr58 No ,Fog!
I met Buddy Rich in 1960 and again in 1961 and again in 1962. I was going to High School (Class of 62) in South Tahoe, California and worked at a Hotel/Motel at Stateline, CA one block from Harrah's Club at Stateline, NV. He stayed there when he played at Harrah's. Very nice man, not stuck up what soever, despite his fame.
I was a rock drummer, Buddy Rich was the most pure drummer I have ever heard. Love everything he did. Magical!!
Wow, brought tears to my eyes that Buddy in one of his last performances could do everything...EVERYTHING his mind could think of and did not miss one stroke. A rare few will ever approach him as an equal.
I can't think of any at his level and I grew up playing drums and played Rock, Jazz, Dixie, and more.
I really hate it when people say that Buddy Rich wasn't a musical drummer and that he just played fast and flashy stuff. His musicality is evident from the very first notes he plays here. He was a tremendous musical talent whose technical virtuosity was so astounding that it often hid his awesome musicality.
Gives me chills to think this was toward the end of his life and he was still the best drummer in the world. The technique, the swing, the precision, the musicality in his playing is unmatched. Modern Drummer just released it's top 50 drummers of all time voted by drummers and 25 yrs. after his death still voted #1 by his peers. Enough said.
Yep, Buddy Rich is still a TOUGH act to follow. I've one of the new Tama®/Hoshino® New Imperialstar™ kits, packing three rack and one floor toms as well as a 14"x5" snare and 22"x18" kick as of 4 March 2014. This performance of:
HAWAIIAN WAR CHANT
(Prince Leleiohoku of Hawai'i/arr. John Avery Noble/Tommy Dorsey) EMI Miller Catalog, ASCAP
is astoundingly difficult to keep up, with even when using 5A or 5B hickories; and I favor the huge Vic Firth® Ralph Hardimon nylon-tip side-drum sticks from the Corpsmaster™ series on the kit.
And did you notice he held his sticks in the classic style?
It wasn't Lars Ulrich?!
jmdrummer7
THE GREAT BUDDY RICH legend
In 100 years, his name will still top that list. Long past the death of all of his peers, these videos will show those not yet born how phenomenal his talents were.
How can anybody thumbs down that? Let's see them perform like or beyond that with brain tumors. Buddy's the greatest! Period!
Well, all drummers are brain damaged...
Hell. Try to play at his level in perfect health.
It's because there are people these days that think that there has always been the ability to digitally remaster things. They compare today's AI created videos to these originals. Imagine how amazing Buddy Rich would sound in a video produced today?!
Loved his drumming, but I HATED his arrogance!
@@Pickinbuddy He was that. There is a legend that while he was staying at a hotel on the road, the hotel got a noise complaint and sent someone to check it out. Turns out Buddy was sitting on the floor in the hallway using the carpet as his drum set. When asked to stop as it was late and guests were trying to sleep, he just looked at the guy and said, “I’m Buddy Rich goddamn it”.
I've been a drummer on & off for over 50 years. I like to think I have some skills, but on my very best day I couldn't have held a candle to Buddy. He was not only the world's best, but I doubt that there will EVER be a drummer who will be his equal. Rest in Peace, Buddy. You've been my hero since I was a child, and you'll always be my hero.
The greatest drummer then, now & forever!!!!!
Amazing that this was recorded only a few months before he died and that he was 69! I love watching Buddy, always a treat.
Buddy rich is one of the reason I picked up a pair of sticks and I'm pretty sure slot of others drummers too forever grateful for him thank you man
It must of been a real treat to be able to see buddy play live!
Never gave less than 100% even at the end of his life, Amazing Drummer!!
As a recording engineer used to listening to the perfect timing of artificial drums made a bit more human by some humanizing algorithm, the real life perfection and feeling Buddy Rich could bring (and at this age!) is just amazing. Beautiful. Thank you. Hearing this made my day.
But why do you need artificial drums?
Shame we lost him. THE GREATEST OF THEM ALL. MR.DRUMS BUDDY RICH 🌟
Effen WOW! Thank goodness Buddy was asked to do that number
I'm sure every musician on that date cherishes the memory. What a privilege to have been there gigging. Buddy Rich, RIP & keep Heaven rocking!
I was fortunate enough to go to see him and meet him in his dressing room.
Signed my Buddy and Soul LP in 1969.
I heard he was crabby, somewhat like Ginger Baker, both great drummers. I'd have to say Buddy was the best
@@josephesposito3499 My friend who was also a drummer asked him about alleged money problems and Buddy yelled YEAH, WHAT ABOUT IT? and Carl apologized all over the place.😂
That's darn friggin' great playin' for a 70-year-old with a malignant brain tumor--and darn friggin' great playin' for ANY drummer at any age. Go, Buddy, go!
Seeing this amazing last performance made me realize, the only thing that could slow Buddy down was death! He was truly a perfectionist.
We can count the number of drummers that could even come close to Buddy on one hand. Simply an incredible musician.
I remember the thrill of seeing Buddy live for the first time at Langley High School in McLean Va. his band was tight and I still have never seen faster hands and someone attack the drums better than Buddy. may he RIP!
He also performed at a Jr. High School here in Michigan and was there. 17 at the time 1974. Awesome.
Sad to think Buddy died 3 months after this.
Gene Krupa died in 1973 .
The two Slingerland kings, both gone.
Thank God for RUclips footage of them both.
Gene died a couple days after spending a whole night with my teacher playing!!
@MichaelKingsfordGray, our God is real and alive. Hope you will someday agree.
@@MayorMcCheeseStalker
Someday, he will have no choice.....
I wanted to be a drummer but all I got was the snare; never could afford to go beyond that. At least it was a sparkly blue Slingerland! I always wanted a Ludwig, the other name brand in the 60s. Now I'm glad I had the Slingerland.
The Two "Slingerland Gunslingers"... They'll never be another One... Never mind Two drummers like them!!!...
Once again Buddy Kicks Ass. I saw him in 1967 and I can swear he was a force of nature. You had to see it to feel the full force of his power.
Here he is older but still, how many drummers can play like this at any age?
God Bless you Buddy Rich! What an artist. Thank you for being a part of our lives.
How come we don't have this kind of entertainment any more? Enjoyable stuff!
Our Ukulele group plays it...with the words...sans drums.
Big bands are very expensive.
I reckon he was and remains the greatest drummer of all time
Can’t discount Gene Krupa..🤔
@@Hambone571 Louie Bellson too.
Fastest pair of hands.
OMG! this is ...breathtaking fantastic. Will there evever be a better drummer? Buddy Rich was really a true drum wizard and master.
This was the era when MUSIC was king, the players could actually play instruments, not just electronic keyboards and simulators, and almost every city and town in England had at least one dancehall where you could dance the night away to LIVE bands. Thank God I was in my prime at this time.
Fund music in schools and the instrumentalists will emerge.
@@SujitDas-qd4uv No-one funded music for these guys, or when I was in school, so we learned to play various intruments, now the kids are too busy on computers and synthesisers to learn to play REAL instruments
Terry Wright preach my friend, it’s a sorrier lot you’ll never see then what passes for talent today. Odd enough, there is talent today, it’s just people today do not classify it as talent, don’t find it, or don’t care. What i’d give to go back.
@@terrywright7470 You should listen to the San Andreas Jazz Band. Plenty of gigs on Utube.
@@trevorsouthwell2733 Thanks Trevor, I shall give it a go.
Great drumming. Not only did Buddy have great talent, but he put his heart and soul into every performance.
Never seemed to ever just phone it in from what I can tell. Always seemed to give 100%.
To all the great drummers of all time - Ginger Baker, Karen Carpenter, Alex Van Halen, and John Bonham- I salute the absolute best Drummer of all time - Buddy Rich playing a song so hard in time at the the age of 69 to perfection with a huge “real band” of musicians. Just Wow!
You forgot Neil Pert and Keith Moon.
@@chuckwood5556 How about Gene Krupa
I saw him play in Williamston, NC in 1981. Amazed then and amazed now. I played drums in high school and jazz band. He was the best ever.
Unless you're a drummer its really hard to say how difficult it is to play like Buddy while keeping perfect timing! Buddy is truly the king of drummers and there will never be another even close to him! RIP Buddy.
Absolutely right there, listening to 'Panelbeaters' today have neither style nor class despite sitting amongst three sets with numerous Ride a sizzles,all microphoned, and so many of them have to add some weird head shaking and throwing the sticks in the air,so that the teenies can scream with glee....doh. RIP Buddy, the best in the world.
Never missed a beat. RIP Buddy. You gave countless people great times.
A true legend and talent... a simple four piece kit that he absolutely destroyed... the Lord has the ultimate drummer in his band...
Greatest ever no question
Gene Krupa and Buddy Rich were the two greatest drummers in my lifetime, at age 82!
Don't forget Louie Bellson please! ;)
Look on you tube for Barrett Deems solo at 82 years old!
Stuart Namm Buddy was the best for any age. Best recorded drummer in history up to this point.
and Chick Web
Bingo!!
Right up to the end, Buddy could play and swing like nobody else...he truly was the greatest, in my book
What strikes me about B Rich was the speed, the clarity, always executing difficult sections in perfect time. that he was able to do so as a senior citizen should is even more astounding. What an era?
JM said it. Speed is one thing, PRECISION at that speed is artistry. RIP BR
WOW! WOW! WOW! Loved watching this guy on the Carson show. So did Johnny. He was invited many times to the show. Mesmerizing.
Same here. Would make sure I watched Buddy every time he was on.
The man said he never took a lesson. You can't teach this . . . . It just IS!
Amazing right up until the end. it is true though.. I used to take lessons from Al Miller and they were both great band leaders.. Buddy was obviously more well known had once asked Al to show him to read once and he said no it's not worth it, you don't need it but buddy did have at least one book that I know of that someone transposed for him so I brought mine when I went to see Buddy, Louis Bellson and Al Miller play at a local high school near me someteme around 1982.... I'm so glad I got to see him as a kid and he autographed my copy of his drum book.
Buddy Rich,the finest drummer to take a breath,shame he took his last.Guys with that self taught talent should live forever.
What a lot of people don't understand about drumming is, it's a language. Buddy speaks in full clear sentences with perfect diction.
Great video, thanks for sharing. I had not discovered jazz, blues and a couple other genre, until I was 70 years old. Better late than never, I guess, but missed so much. Again, thanks for this video, so sorry we lost him to such a cruel disease, my wife has fought non-Hodgkin lymphoma for three years, had it cornered this June, got news of breast cancer the week before thanksgiving, surgery dec. 3. Smile on buddy, no more infirmities for you.
30 years later theres no one even near the same league as what buddy was in.
Thoughts on Zachary Hill? ruclips.net/video/IsY0hT8kAHI/видео.html
And now, 35 years later, your comment is still true.
Wow, magnificent drummer, what a performance, one of a kind….love this kind of music….may you rest in God’s eternal peace Buddy, and may your love for the drums inspire others….👍👍👍👍👍👍👍❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
THE VERY BEST EVER TO PERFORM BEHIND THE DRUM SET, AN ORIGINAL.
I was lucky enough to see Buddy play 10 to 15 times. I was a Marine Corps Rudimental Drum & Bugle Corps drummer and a USMC Band Drummer. In my humble opinion Mr. Rich was the the best Musician ever to make the drum kit their instrument of choice.
Have a look at the way Buddy keeps his hi-hat and kick drum going through the solo. That's how all the greats of that era played. The total package. Hands and feet working together. Now keep an eye on the younger players of the current generation. So many don't do that in their solos.
Yes, Buddy was the greatest, and today I would to say Chip Ritter comes very close, not just because of his stick tricks but the way he moves around a three piece set. Met in person, magic.
Cause they do a lot more with their feet theses days !!
@@mikegrigg11 so what, though? Most of them have total garbage hands. And worse yet, can't keep any time to save themselves. One day, I'm going to go over to Guitar Center with 1,000 in 20s and just bet the kids to keep a straight beat for 5 minutes. I'll walk out with a good deal of money.
Never could figure out why they're always trying to show off. Loud as hell, too. I mean, I can BE loud, but you're at a store. Nobody wants to hear it, and they can't friggin play.
It has nothing to do with the tone of the drum, either. You don't need to bash away for 20 minutes to tell a good drum.
This is why someone runs over in about 30 seconds and politely tells them to STF up. Because bad playing sounds even louder than it is. And of course, they never buy a damn thing, even, for all that noise. Jmo.
Its hard to imagine he was gone 3 months later!!! They'll never be another like him! RIP Buddy
Thanks for posting Brian. No words are need, none would suffice.
Thanks, Hawk. I'm glad you appreciated it.
Buddy was our inspiration. An absolute Monster, and a beautiful human. He, along with Gene, Davy, Louie, Joe and a few others set the stage that let drummers be soloists in their own right.
And his chops were unequalled.
And his skills never diminished....astounding.
Use it or lose it. He always “used it.”
Had the pleasure of seeing buddy play live at the Hammersmith Odeon backing Tony Bennet. Outstanding the man is a legend
No way in a million years was Buddy suffering with a heart problem in this performance in my opinion, his breath control and oxygen levals were those of a 21 year old superfit athelite i am blown away by his fitness leval...
Hé lays his head once, and shows heart 2 times... anyway great: until the last day do your best!
He was still 69 with a brain tumour that killed him 3 months later !!
You know he's hot when the band turns around to watch him. I saw him live twice once at the Disney pavilion and once in San Francisco not long before this was filmed. And nobody danced. we all just watched in awe.
*It's simply amazing and a true tribute to talent and dedication that the man could play THAT well at an advanced age of almost 70 !*
I love it when a musician’s instrument turns into a wild stallion and they’re just hanging on for the ride.
Buddy died just a few months after this performance. He always gave it his all.
Thank you Mr. Rich, for some awesome memories growing up with my grandparents ,and remembering a time of innocents.. love the big band sound !
It's absurd to think that a 69 year old man could play drums better and faster than most guys half his age. That's true talent. He had him some fast hands.
his wife must have loved them also haha
*****
LOL
Jack Stubbington Assuming he could fight, he would have got you 30 times before you blink
Well he would not have been a man to cross!! Lol
Very talented he was. But on the drums I've never seen better.
Buddy Rich is always amazing and my dad worked with him back in the 60's, but man does Dorsey's band have some chops. They are one kick ass band.
The greatest!! Looked like near the beginning of the solo, he twirled the stick in his right hand...in the midst of it! He changed grips with his left hand too. There are no drummers like him anymore....
Thanks a lot Brian Sokoloff ! Really great. What a wonderful drummer.
Greatest drummer of all time & 40 yrs ahead of his time!
wouldn't want to be the drummer who follows that..the best ever and very sad when he pats his heart.
Boy....that was fun.... Different breed of people...back then....it's called CLASS....RESPECT.
Buddy Rich is not on record as ever having respected anyone other than himself.
Oh I know Buddy was tough on his crew and fellow musicians. What I meant in my comment was, that generation is a lost art compared to today’s winy little girlie dweebs of today. Once that older generation is gone, all class goes with it.
@@luvbasses5487 Thank you for that response. It says a lot. The thing that confuses me about Buddy Rich are the stories. I mean, with all the insulting things he said about other musicians we're supposed to believe that he liked & respected Karen Carpenter's drumming?
man i just wish i could have felt the energy in that room in person. !!!
yeah they called them racist , bigots and all those other minority talking points.
I had the privilege of seeing Buddy with his band at Lafayette's music room in Memphis. He was an incredible showman and cool. He did things on the drums that I have never seen anyone else do.
He was the best drummer ever. No one could do what he did. Even playing on his sticks. He was amazing.
Wow! Thanks for sharing this. Stranger how I'm just now watching this after being posted 7 years ago. Glad to hear this though. Buddy Rich and Gene Krupa were the best drummers. Thanks again for sharing.
It is amazing to see him still soldiering on after the fight with cancer.
He said it one of a kind. You couldn't get a machine to get that much swing. The best drummer who ever lived in my humble opinion. He could do things with 1 hand what most drummers could do with two. An absolute genius.
Can you imagine the actual drummer for The Band? Buddy Rich steps down to the stage and now You have to get up and follow that? LOL
👍😆😆😆💜💜💜💜🥁🎵🐉🎤🎶💖💕💞
I’d bronze the sticks.
Right?!
@@shelleywantiez7964 yeah right
Lots of guys had fast hands but that LEFT hand of buddy's is LEGENDARY!!! Those of us who played AT the drums only imagined our left hand doing what Buddy did all the time.
Just remarkable. He actually got better with age.
You’ll never see another like him.
Fantastic performance. The sure sign of greatness is when people can make something look easy when you know it's not, but he did look as if it took its toll on him at the end. Still he died a legend. God rest the great Buddy Rich.
I don't know that anyone ever mastered the hi-hats like he did.
His hi hat skills were next to none
"Buddy Rich. One of a kind!" That's for sure. Miss seeing Buddy play live.
All of Buddy Rich's solos centered around 1 thing...........................kicking ass on the drums!!! He was to drums what Jordan was to basketball!!!
+apiece ofdirt except way tougher
People today...Isn't there an app on my apple hand held device for that?
...and his longevity! He's the Lou Gehrig/Cal Ripkin of jazz too...lol
D Mutant Most definitely
Wow....just plain f'n WOW....the interaction between Buddy and the trumpet soloist so good...a tribute to Gene and Harry going on there!! Buddy could kick a band like no other...he knew when to be out front and push and when to be in the background and drive. R. I. P.....Buddy.....there will never be any other like you.
Puts a smile on your face. Damn I miss those days!
Buddy Rich was simply insane on the drums. There are (and were) many excellent drummers but Buddy stands out as the hardest working and most exciting.
He had it and he took it with him! Thank you for sharing this video!
This was one cool cat one of the greatest drummers ever to pick up a pair of sticks sorely missed RIP Buddy 🥁
How the hell you gonna beat that?!?
Good lord...
I saw Buddy with his big band in the 70s or 80s. Steve Marcus on tenor sax. Amazing. I had never heard cymbals sing a melody before but Buddy did that. I still can’t quite believe what I heard nor how beautiful it was. And it was on the drums.
Buddy was dead 3 months later.
The greatest drummer to the end and never matched since.
My God! Thank you for this gift, and you now have THAT to listen to, and we don't. That's ok, we will get to see him play again, in Your presence. This is about 3 years before I got my first early 60's set of Yamahas. Not sure the series, but they were kind of a velvet red wrap. The thing that made my drums, my first drums, that I totally demolished unfortunately, they had the original heads on them, but what made them odd was the sizes. I had a traditional jazz 20x16 kick drum, and my toms were rock toms. I had a 13x7"? Maybe? Rack Tom, and a 16x16 floor Tom, so traditional rock toms, with a jazz snare, a Ludwig superphonic 14x5.5", generally, a jazz snare, not specifically but that's where it is/was/will usually be played, is in a jazz setting. So, rock toms, jazz back beat. Ya know, like Buddy! Who'da thunk it. I didn't at the time for sure. I of course appreciated who and what Buddy was, and have even since before drumming, when seeing him as a kid on Sesame Street. I have always said that Nicko McBrain from Iron Maiden is the one who made me want to play, but I am beginning to realize that isn't true. He IS the one who made me decide to take it seriously, and ask for a kit for Christmas in 1990, but he's NOT my first awe inspiring "I've got to do this" influence. That, if I'm right, which that was a few days ago now lol, was Buddy Rich on the Muppets, not Sesame Street, durr.... He did show up there I'm sure I remember, but I first saw him battling Animal, another early influence lol. But yeah, that's truly the earliest moment in my life I can recall, seeing a drummer, and knowing I was destined to..... Never even come within the same galaxy as, but try to sound like! Generally, the influence is just "I play drums, he did too" kinda thing. I can't wrap my puny monkey brain around what that man does. Why is the snare like that! Of course now I know why, but anywyas. I am a progressive drummer, think Danny Carey, Mike Portnoy, Neil Peart, and I can pretty accurately sound like those guys, maybe not Danny, but he is afterall the greatest living drummer, he took that spot in April of 1987, when the greatest of all time, no ifs and or buts, no contest, was tragically "for us, certainly no tragedy for him" taken to Heaven. Imagine if he'd have been given just 10 more years, then had cancer. 1997 medicine was a very long way from 1987 medicine for sure. I was going to say "imagine if he'd gotten cancer with today's medicine" but no, they would have "treated" the cancer for the rest of his life, which they will have tried to convince him, he should lead as a woman or some such nonsense. No, not by today's medical standards, I don't wish that hell on anyone. Oh, what's a woman anyways, no one can say for sure. Sorry, for getting off there, but I brought it back fairly quickly. Buddy Rich! Thank you sir, for giving me clips like this. I can watch these when I get frustrated with my own playing and abilities, and they make me feel like "yeah, you in fact have wasted countless dollars and years of your life for nothing." Lmao! Thanks Buddy!
I saw Buddy in 1982. I could hear sounds and his hands were not where the sounds were coming from. Incredible.
Faster then the speed of sound travel! I saw him at London Ale House in Wildwood New Jersey in the 70s! "West side story" He did like 20 minutes and walked off, Maybe felt sick or something.. That said he is the best I have seen and I saw a lot growing up in between Philly and NY late 60s and 70s!
John Cooper, you are exactly right. I had the same experience watching him and wondering...where did THAT sound come from?
I believe he was black belt
Legend a legend a legend. Buddy Rich set the stage for so many drum players in the future that it's unbelievable and yet no one to this date can do with Buddy Rich did in his career. God bless you Buddy Rich Wherever You Are and hope you still wrapping those skin's
If you watch closely - he’s using the matched grip through the intro to make it easier to twist and face the floor tom, but when he faces the snare, he pivots the left stick to the traditional grip.
I thought traditional (and apparently we have more than one of those, news to me, a French and another one) was mainly for marching snare. It doesn't make much sense on a kit, imo. I know people who use it, but most flip back and forth between matched and traditional if they had any jazz training.
Makes the hair stand up on the back of my neck every time I watch this video. What a performance. What a privilege it was to watch him.