Le roman "Le grondement de la montagne" par Yasunari Kawabata m'a ammené ici.
@rayszymarek292014 күн бұрын
I have always admired Claude thornhill his big band had a clasical sound complete with French horns he hired great musicians that played their hearts out sadly Claude had a dinking problem his theme snowfall is tremendous
@shog426714 күн бұрын
“Such a waste of good scotch”-James Bond
@じぇんとるめ16 күн бұрын
か、かっこいい
@orthodium16 күн бұрын
Top notch!
@rayszymarek292017 күн бұрын
Here you go the wonderful angelic sound of Doris day a great voice she had that style an individual sound like June christy Anita o day Julie London thank you for playing class a number one music
This is one of the premier clarinet players even now he is respected more than ever he told me when I met him his idol was Artie Shaw as a drummer I told him my two were gene Krupa and buddy rich and he mentioned he played with gene and buddy by the way defranco and terry Gibbs still living all came from Philadelphia all giants in jazz
@Trombonology18 күн бұрын
As this great side attests, the TD orch was at its zenith in the 40-42 period. Everything came together for Tommy then -- musicians, vocalists and arrangers. The band could play both hot and sweet better than the competition. Both Manny and Ziggy's solos here are excellent, and I've always liked the way Buddy Rich comes in with Ziggy.
@konidolfine18 күн бұрын
The TD Orchestra was very strong during the period you mentioned. This chic band, influenced by Chicago style, built a massive sound after acquiring Sy Oliver. The flamboyance of the Pipers, Sinatra, Ziggy and Rich provided a contrast that further enhanced TD's own sweet playing. The union strike in 1942 was a real shame for the band, which was at the peak of its popularity.
Great line up here especially with Jess Stacy on board!
@dinkey931124 күн бұрын
ボブクロスビーに間違いはないなー!🎉カッコいい😎
@Trombonology24 күн бұрын
The rhythm section is so great here -- as are the soloists, particularly Lawson and Miller. Wonderful band!
@konidolfine23 күн бұрын
The core of Crosby's rhythm section was Ray Bauduc. Born in New Orleans, his playing made a major contribution to the band's trademark semi-Dixieland style during the heyday of swing music.
@PisanoAlessandro25 күн бұрын
Nem lesz semmi dolga, bízza ránk és meg van oldva, Lehet méreg vagy balta vagy pisztoly, Egy pukkanás, egy mukkanás, egy nyom sehol, Ha akcióba lép ez a geng
EXcellent non-bebop solo! We forget that those guys could also play!
@josemiranda257828 күн бұрын
Tenía, un genio musical, fuera de serie.Ese mambo, lo compuso, en honor al avión, Tom Cat.Un jet de combate, de la fuerza aérea de USAAF.😄👍🇨🇺🇺🇸✈️
@arlettekreps873Ай бұрын
J’ai valsé avec mon papa sur cette chanson. Que de merveilleux souvenirs. ❤
@MrpallekulingАй бұрын
Anyone else sing along after listening to Manhattan Transfer? Take a seat and cool it 'cause unless you overrule it We are ready to show you some blowin' A rompin' and a stompin' is a lot of fun Four brothers who are blowin' our horns So settle down an' listen 'cause you don't know what you're missin' And we're ready to give you a showin' A movin' it 'n groovin' it has just begun Four brothers who are blowin' our horns We got a little message that you're gonna enjoy Ain't no sense in dodgin' the facts So settle in your easy chair an' if you ever had a care - forget it It's time to relax ....