C'est le seul morceau que j'écoute les yeux fermés et je n'ai pas envie de les rouvrir.
@nigelstansfield1644Сағат бұрын
Genuine standing ovation.Sooooo good.
@dcbandnerd4 күн бұрын
I am so glad this is back on KZbin - this rendition specifically got me hooked on Morello's drumming. Absolutely incredible solo. The way he adjusts his glasses at about the 3:54 mark and doesn't miss a beat. Amazing.
@beric63214 күн бұрын
Quelle époque merveilleuse ce fût . .
@Solipse20004 күн бұрын
So.. Music in 1955, no working Fuck i-phone, and no TV.
@VickieRevellese6 күн бұрын
Oh Jesus help me They are just both amazing Why did you give me such love for music I just don't know
@VickieRevellese6 күн бұрын
I want to marry him Please probably already married but anyway my feelings are that I want to marry him
@VickieRevellese6 күн бұрын
Can anyone believe that amazing drummer Oh Lord I just think that's just so awesome There's nothing that can pass to that beautiful drama
@VickieRevellese6 күн бұрын
That's just impossible It's too amazing Oh my God it's just absolutely beautiful God bless the fingers and his whole body too Oh Lord save us
@Mart-u2u6 күн бұрын
I believe I will…
@jankowalski32208 күн бұрын
Paul Desmond!!
@1Rene9Night5cart09 күн бұрын
Men in Black meets the Blues Bros.
@whitneynuehring278411 күн бұрын
Anyone know where I can find the sheet music for this arrangement?
@tooManyMidgets11 күн бұрын
excellent
@charlespierred.115314 күн бұрын
Who dare listen today to this song ? My childhood is back
@thomasBednar-z1e16 күн бұрын
Stunned, overwhelming
@0cer019 күн бұрын
Joe's solo here is one of the most satisfying things you can experience.
@paulbariohay321321 күн бұрын
@MarlyGomezGarcia21 күн бұрын
solo digo : Fabuloso !!!🎉🎉😊👍🙏🤗
@jargonwhat59824 күн бұрын
So good!!!!!!!
@Tend-er-Rose26 күн бұрын
Listening in November 2024 👍🏽
@everramirez411428 күн бұрын
sin palabras un glamour de jazz
@everramirez411428 күн бұрын
que elegancia de música puro glamour del jazz
@alexanderwes5204Ай бұрын
Amazing, epic! 🙏🏻
@gsgordon3655Ай бұрын
The great Paul Desmond was born on this day in 1924. I saw them in Glasgow at about the same time as this was recorded.
@noohoozfurraАй бұрын
Fantastic! What was the venue? Sadly, can't find a thing about it, on a swift Google search... 🫤
@cheri238Ай бұрын
🙏❤️🌎🌍🌎🌿🕊🎵🎶🎵💫✨️💫✨️
@veronicablanco8589Ай бұрын
Jazz = Emotions Mix Wonderfull jazźz
@Sarahloulee101Ай бұрын
That’s gonna be my son 😎
@willcalhoun8615Ай бұрын
This piece is a timeless masterpiece/ straight up classic😮👌🏾😎😎
@islo5058Ай бұрын
Soy solo yo o los acordes iniciales suenan muy parecidos a los de Mediterráneo de Joan Manuel Serrat?
@DrisshaoudiАй бұрын
❤❤❤Les belles années
@johntechwriterАй бұрын
In my teens in Canada I signed up to join a Scottish regimental pipe and drum band. Once a week, along with a couple of other hopefuls - because this was an excellent band - we’d spend an hour with a veteran snare drummer who showed us the rudiments. We sat there slack-jawed as he went through singles progressing smoothly into rolls, to paradiddles and the other required elements of a Scots snare drummer’s bag of tricks. It was then we found out the percussion, not the pipes, are what put the energy into a Scottish military band. Just as the banjo player is the relentless force behind an Appalachian bluegrass band. Say what you will about artistic progression, but even we three dumb teens were struck numb by the awesome technique of that highland snare drummer. All these decades later that realization of the importance of knowing the fundamentals brings to mind the movie “The Last Emperor,” where English tutor Peter O’Toole is challenged by the boy emperor he is tasked with teaching English: Why is one way good and the other way bad? O’Toole’s reply, “Because if you can’t say what you mean, you can’t mean what you say.”
@mooseydeucyАй бұрын
Classic!! My parents had this on when they had company and that is how I grew to groove to it!
@Robert-cr8bqАй бұрын
Always wondered where John Bonham got his inspiration from. I think I have just found it.
@isabelleburo8846Ай бұрын
Merci pour ce grand moment hier soir à Leverkusen
@thunderace4588Ай бұрын
Thank you.
@garymcaleer6112Ай бұрын
The tone Joe Morello got out of that snare was the sweetest and most melodic I've ever heard. You can see why so many jazz and fusion drummers emulated the man.
@andradeopredestinadoef14-55Ай бұрын
Som Balanco Jazz e Batucada etc. MT Bom eu gosto Parabéns o Canal
@stevenaleman7454Ай бұрын
Seeing and hearing Joe Morello on drums is so cool..😎🥁 he taught some of my drum instructors when I was a kid long time ago…a great drummer/teacher who knew hire to play all time signatures very well.👍
@rineric3214Ай бұрын
This is what attracted me to music. Joe Morello's drum solo on this track. I ran home from school, every day and played it over and over. This is the first time I've SEEN him play it. Thank you!
@BrianLevine-u6rАй бұрын
Saw Dave only once. He played the De Cordova Museum in Lincoln,MA. 1991. Saw the show with a woman as beautiful as a day by the sea.
@HommeTerreАй бұрын
✨🙏
@sywtf4Ай бұрын
No bass solo? Great song.
@drh4683Ай бұрын
Finally this clip is back! Excellent!
@zoransavic6742Ай бұрын
When we die, and die we will, this number will hive us like bumblebees that we are...into a new. Hopefully better
@Sammy_316Ай бұрын
Great video, thanks. And to the 4 people who down voted this, I hope your Thanksgiving turkey is dry this year.
@joãoAlberto-k9xАй бұрын
O K.. 🎉.
@joedefelice7001Ай бұрын
Masters all!! In the pocket baby!👍
@kevinlowry3814Ай бұрын
Bravo!
@Terry-oj2biАй бұрын
Listening to Joes drums really makes me believe this is where John Bonham got his drum sound from, after all Joe played Ludwig Drums.
@boomerguy9935Ай бұрын
Bonzo said that Joe was a big influence on his drumming. He used polyrhythms in a lot of his playing. Some of the best rock drummers who used jazz were Danny Seraphine, Mitchell Mitchell and Ginger Baker.