At about the time that Erroll gave this delightful performance, he lived directly above us at 315 W. 70th, where our rent was $100/month. When he practiced (which seemed to be all the time) we could hear the same grunts through our ceiling. 13 years later, he was dead. He was very kind whenever we ran into him. A quite short, very pleasant person. Note how he messes around with the bassist with his meandering intros. The Isley Bros lived on the first floor. So many untold stories.
@luisalbertomezarina18622 жыл бұрын
Musical apartment building!
@scotsman67122 жыл бұрын
You are so fortunate to have these memories!
@WaltLong-zh9ow2 жыл бұрын
I lived at that time on 103rd just off Broadway
@trishoconnor2169 Жыл бұрын
My late mother knew him fairly well early in his career, before he became famous. Now that she is gone, I wish that she had told us more about him, not just so I could know more about HIM, but so I could know more about that special time of HER life. One of the things my siblings and I were recently discussing was how we had all gotten the impression from her that he was blind, yet none of us can swear she came right out and said so, and certainly no public sources seem to say he was. The best I can figure is that his hearing (and his brain's analysis of all that he heard) was so precise that his eyesight was a trivial sense. She spoke of him recognizing her by the sound of her footsteps.
Does anyone else notice Mr. Garner looks surprised every once in a while. Like he's not quite sure what's happening. A delightful insight into 'improvisation'.
@MrTolesi8 жыл бұрын
And see the wonderful Earl Hines on this idea, OMM - it's all in his FANTASTIC docu on Vimeo
@jeffreycraven81543 жыл бұрын
It's called being IN your music. Been there, love it; better than sex.
@gaz20023 жыл бұрын
Not half as surprised as his band mates who are racing to catch up with his improvisation.
@OldManMontgomery3 жыл бұрын
@@gaz2002 There're all pros and besides, they're used to it by now (then).
@jamesrichardsjr.62213 жыл бұрын
That's not the look of being surprised; that's the the look of extreme confidence 🥇
@MisterJSF8 ай бұрын
Quel plaisir de pouvoir voir un tel génie en action ! Génie mélodique, harmonique et rythmique, et en plus il avait l'air tellement simple et sympa... Probablement un des plus grands pianistes de jazz de toute l'histoire, même si pour moi Oscar Peterson est encore quelques crans au-dessus ! Merci pour la mise en ligne de cette vidéo, c'est un pur bonheur 😃👍🎹👍😃
@johnmoorely72754 жыл бұрын
The greatest jazz pianist of all time? Technical brilliance, swing like you've never heard it, breath-taking chord structures and progressions, the ability to switch between stride and swing and every other form of piano playing, his inimitable personal stamp, his humour, his pure enjoyment and his playing makes you happy.
@jazzlrdx9944 Жыл бұрын
He’s certainly one of the best!
@ektalon1 Жыл бұрын
There are and were so many greats, but he is definitely my favorite.
@ОльгаПолковникова-о9ж Жыл бұрын
100% правда!
@Pikestnt Жыл бұрын
I’m with Barry - There are many great jazz pianists but for sheer joy and exuberance, I always come back to Garner (and sort of by extension Dudley Moore). The intro at 29 mins shows his sense of fun. A truly great man and musician
@ticarot Жыл бұрын
Please check out Hiromi Uehara, heavily influenced by Erroll.
@josephpalmitjavila11814 ай бұрын
J'ai 77 ans, j'ai decouvert Errol Garner à l'âge de 12 ans, je continue de l'ecouter, et je m'emerveille toujours autant devant cet orfèvre du piano. Merci mille fois Errol.❤
@martinplatt592810 жыл бұрын
This was my father's hero. I played with my Hornby train set in 1966 with this blasting out.......Errol Garner......just amazing to watch again.
@jyonno10 жыл бұрын
Saw him Live in Pittsburgh...One of my Favorite times in my life! I'm 76! They don't get any better than Erroll Garner! Thanks for Posting!
@vintasgeport9 жыл бұрын
Pure genius. Didn't read music, doesn't look at the keyboard, incredible improvisations wild color changes and all done with pure unbuttoned joy. He and the piano are one. I have said it to several people over the last sixty years, "If you have haven't yet heard EG play "Caravan," you haven't yet heard him blow. To this day it's the wildest thing he ever did.
@vintasgeport9 жыл бұрын
+Nunov Yrbznes I should have specified the 1950 rendition. He recorded it again in 1971 in his Concert By the Sea album, but IMHO, I don't think he ever surpassed that 1950 performance.
@Melonhead6229 жыл бұрын
+Nunov Yrbznes Concert By The Sea was recorded in '55 as an amateur recording - released commercially in '56 - re-released in '69 - and an enhanced version (with extra tracks) was released on CD box set a few months ago. Hope that helps!
@martinplatt59288 жыл бұрын
Concert by the Sea, according to my late father, is seriously overrated. He loved the EPs that Garner made in the USA in the 1940s...."Fine and Dandy"...."Sweet and Lovely"....his best work he said.
@terryhicks35778 жыл бұрын
I think with respect your Dad was a little astray here-it is rated one of the best jazz albums ever and was no 6 in 1956 against Elvis and all those other big pop idols of the day.there is not one bad track on it and of course recorded live-no dubbing as happens in the studios.Terry
@da19lila388 жыл бұрын
Oh, yes! To my mind his "Caravan" is the best I ever heard...
@ltravail2 жыл бұрын
That little man stood head and shoulders above his peers. Of all the young pianists that the legendary Art Tatum took under his enormous wings and mentored - including Oscar P, Billy Taylor, and Erroll Garner - Tatum claimed that Erroll was his all-time favorite. The man was magical when he played the piano...his sound unmistakable and astoundingly original and his style of expression hypnotic and fluid in its beauty! That little man, who had to sit on a stack of phone books to reach the keys, had a gift from god great enough to carry the whole music-loving world in his elegant hands when he played a tune.
@dontheshark6 ай бұрын
Very nice tribute to Erroll.
@KornelisVanKalker3 ай бұрын
😅i agree
@maartenstolte62068 жыл бұрын
Super! The funniest thing is right at the beginning. Erroll Garner starts with an improvised intro and the drummer and bass player wonder when to hop in. At 0:50 the bass player (it's Eddy Calhoun, I think) after being misled a half dozen times, turns to a part of the public with an open hand saying like "what am I here for?"
@brynn.grumstrup3 жыл бұрын
I love watching for this every time. Thanks for pointing it out. 😃 I have been listening to Robin DG Kelly's podcast on Erroll Garner and it sounds like these types of intros were typical of him. He's such a fun genius.
@soledadlorenzoalonso80222 жыл бұрын
Un buen comentario
@ianlawrence16482 жыл бұрын
It is Eddy I believe....Smiling here in Suffolk UK
@henrybrowne72482 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I've seen that, I think on another video. Someone said he deliberate changes key on the fly then casts a knowing look to the audience. Poor bassist and drummer . .
@jaapfries Жыл бұрын
WORDS could never ever describe the absolute brilliance of these man's hands. I have listened to his music for about 60+ years and NEVER EVER tired of it . . . . . . . 💞
@PabluchoViisionАй бұрын
Yes agree 1000%. Erroll was, is, inexhaustible. A gift from and to the Universe.
@gwloganpoet12 жыл бұрын
It's amazing, Erroll Garner couldn't read music and yet he played the piano so great. His album Concert by the Sea is still one of the all time best seller. I can listen to Erroll all day.
@claudiarovan927610 ай бұрын
Concert by the sea. My beautiful and first album listened, because my father played on his piano some part
@regnar548 жыл бұрын
I was fortunate to see this amazing man at many of the jazz clubs in NYC. I have many (if not all ) of his recordings I play them constantly. I never get tired of listening to this genius.
@Jonnekevs8 жыл бұрын
+regnar54 you are so fortunate. What a treasure.
@GeometryDashAcamar7 жыл бұрын
wow.
@kurtzwar729 Жыл бұрын
Genius piano playing. Nothing else explains Errol Garner's beautiful touch and command of his piano. My mom's favorite and she was a tough critic. God bless Errol Garner.
@freddiefrumko42306 жыл бұрын
Major parts my education about jazz came from listening to this man play the piano. He showed up for a recital at my undergraduate university in the mid-sixties. I went looking for his albums following my discovery his talents. At the time of the recital I had known much about his contribution to jazz. This music was required listening for me as an adolescent and young adult. He played a form of jazz music called happy jazz piano that did not have a gloomy or sad side to it. I listened to a syndicated radio jazz program from Cleveland called "Just Jazz with Ed Beach". I acquired from this radio station five nights week the equivalent of a college degree about jazz history with college level knowledge about these artists. Errol Garner was most notable for this aspect of embellishing standards in this manner. He was able to play any standard jazz composition in any key at the drop of a hat but he could not read music. His embellishments were examples of superior creativity to give a new meaning to the term "improvisation". Look at the audience in attendance for this performance. The jazz tree has a branch for jazz piano. On this branch are places for Oscar Peterson and Art Tatum. Errol Garner is there too. An essential part of my life can be linked to hearing this man play jazz piano in this manner. I am grateful.
@kendallburks6 жыл бұрын
It's amazing I can just stumble upon something like this and watch it more or less for free... what an expansive time we live in!
@parkerthomas33954 жыл бұрын
Learned of Eroll Garner when I happened to turn my tv to a premium channel that had a documentary airing about him. I was amazed at how great of a piano player he was. The people in the program mentioned how he always changed the songs he played constantly, and that he was the best jazz piano player. I agree!
@petersmith39686 жыл бұрын
This is one of two concerts broadcast by the BBC in 1964. They are available (or were) on DVD 'Erroll Garner In Performance' issued by Kulture. I watch them regularly and will never tire of them.
@user-ig7nq7pc7k11 жыл бұрын
He's so cute at 20:00! He's teasing the band! He's asking them "What song am I about to play? Can you figure it out from this abstraction?" And the bass player is smiling and saying "No!" Hilarious. He IS a little Elf, isn't he? Magical.
@vincegeraci15588 жыл бұрын
I've been listening EG since I first heard him at the Band Box o, Birdland or the Embers in NYC. I have every album he ever recorded. No one like him. Sixty plus years later I still listen to this genius.
@jobooklover60710 жыл бұрын
My favourite pianist ever. Superb harmonies and melodies and infectious joy. Giant of the keys!
@afpseb458210 жыл бұрын
the only guy abe to litteraly trascend any jazz standard
@jobooklover60710 жыл бұрын
Yes, he played intuitively and by ear and with the help of telephone directories. What a man ! What a joy!
@stevegroves42212 жыл бұрын
hahaha , I have watched this a thousand times and his facial expressions make me love him more each time. This dude is SO enjoying himself. I wish I had one millionth of his talent.
@georgebenichou97278 жыл бұрын
fasten your seat belt for a trip to paradise ! oh Divine rhythm and harmony ....fabulous the legend of glamorous high standing rank :Jazz Erroll Garner , the unforgettable !!
@alanpayne14422 жыл бұрын
How can a human being play a piano so good !!!
@sergiocattapan11923 ай бұрын
@user-yp2mw2ko9kabsolutely not😂
@polskapianist8 жыл бұрын
my favorite jazz pianist
@olasavic78908 жыл бұрын
ik
@Prohobby1238 жыл бұрын
and George Shearing...
@Prohobby1238 жыл бұрын
and George Shearing...
@thezenbum4 жыл бұрын
@@Prohobby123 and george shearing right?
@robhosking93992 жыл бұрын
Mine too. 👍
@lmgaulin10 жыл бұрын
The extraordinary art of jazz piano playing by Erroll Garner!!! How could there be about 40+ people who clicked that they didn't like it! Probably people who simply don't like jazz... You can never please everyone ... :)
@johnmoorely72755 жыл бұрын
He was my gateway to jazz. When I was nipper he appeared on the London Palladium on weekend UK television. I immediately bought an EP (remember those?) and I was hooked. I am a pianist and I marvel at his genius - not a word I use lightly. He must be the greatest (jazz) pianist of all time. Such a shame he died before he had much more to gift us.
@autumnleaves2766 Жыл бұрын
Just before he died he had told Martha Glaser, his manager and friend, that the music he had performed and recorded thus far was "just the tip of the iceberg" and that he had so much more music within him. He composed over 200 wonderful pieces including Misty, Dreamstreet, Dreamy, Mood Island, No More Shadows, Nightwind, A New Kind of Love, Mambo Carmel to name just a few.
@williamtaylor41025 жыл бұрын
I brought a cassette tape when I was in the Marines in 1986 of his. No piano player I ever heard comes close to his dreamy sound.
@dggd13 жыл бұрын
Ahhh...just love how he gets lost in the good vibration of it all! This footage is truly a gift for all us Erroll-ites! I am certainly one...I love him so...a masterful genius that God annointed - and Erroll obeyed! I was in Pgh when he passed...the lines were endless...never forgot that. I cried and cried all that week. He left enough music to carry us through a thousand lifetimes! I wonder what that free spirit we knew as Erroll is doing now? Whatever it is, I know he's masterful at that too!
@johnbresnik9 жыл бұрын
Starting at 3:05 is the Garner you don't hear very often and he's doing it as good as any of the famous stride players... amazing guy. Of all the jazz piano players I've seen and heard over the last sixty years, Erroll is the only one who is having fun playing ... what a great entertainer he was...
@Shostakovichforever9 жыл бұрын
John Bresnik Agree with the stride (not with the only one having fun). I suspect he might have been ispired to emulate the composer's style (Fats Waller).
@johnbresnik9 жыл бұрын
Shostakovichforever Who else appears to be having fun while playing? Send me a link because I've never seen a jazz piano player having as much fun playing as Garner does.
@wolfgangreimers24429 жыл бұрын
John Bresnik Hiromi Uehara
@wolfgangreimers24429 жыл бұрын
Wolfgang Reimers me too, by the way :D
@Ergoperidot9 жыл бұрын
John Bresnik For your convenience: /watch?v=t7I2bvqwKFg
@gregorylightcatcher105810 жыл бұрын
This delightful pixie of a genius kept swing music alive in the 1960s. Of course, he played more than swing. He played "Erroll Garner music". He made it look so effortless with his "explorations" on the piano yet always always knowing what he was doing he would give a twinkle of an eye to his audience. Yes!
@penttirantala58697 жыл бұрын
Gregory Lightcatch
@grantkoeller891110 жыл бұрын
No doubt that Erroll Garner was one the greatest pianists who ever lived, and one thing is truly evident, he was a master melodist !!!
@robhosking93992 жыл бұрын
The greatest in my opinion. Total genius. 👍
@barracuda7018 Жыл бұрын
@@robhosking9399 Erroll, Oscar Peterson and Art Tatum, all of them the greatest in their own right and style..
@stephanvogt80389 ай бұрын
@@barracuda7018 Peterson and Tatum played by far not so original.A lot of runs and scales(Tatum) and Peterson didn't had Garners sence of melody and harmonic.To say it simple, garner sounds much better.
@lyndabeast9 жыл бұрын
If ever I'm down, I eat a banana and listen to some Erroll Garner. Erroll Garner SAVES!
@autumnleaves27666 жыл бұрын
Eddie Calhoun on double bass was always great with Erroll Garner and would watch Garner's left hand carefully so as to know where the little genius might be going next. Drummer here is Kelly Martin I think. Even by Garner's stellar standards, this 1960s live recording is musical gold. The stride piano section in Honeysuckle Rose is phenomenal, Erroll didn't do this often but it shows that he could play the Fats Waller style perfectly too. Love the way he makes the piano sound like an orchestra and the rhythmic left hand like a guitar being strummed.
@darrelwooden17708 жыл бұрын
Can you believe I've played the piano for 50 years, and never knew about Erroll Garner until about a month ago? Do you know how I found him? I love to play Misty (I always say it's one of my 5 favorite songs all time), and I knew that Erroll wrote it. So, I did a search, trying to find out if he'd written any other great songs. From that, I found out that he was a great Jazz pianist, so came here to see if I could find anything on him. And, thankfully, there's plenty of stuff out here on him. So, then I read more of his story and I'm just amazed. One of the greatest pianists I've ever heard, and he couldn't read music! Just amazing! I'll keep watching and listening not only to enjoy, but to hope that some of it will rub off on me!!!! What a genius he was!!
@JeffreySaxophoneTallNewton8 жыл бұрын
+Darrel Wooden Well, better late than never..... You might also enjoy Phineas Newborn....
@hakanpeters77667 жыл бұрын
Jeffrey Newton o
@autumnleaves27666 жыл бұрын
I discovered Erroll Garner as a student and have listened and tried to learn ever since. I confess to being one of those folks who tries to copy the master, with my own ideas too and I love to try to learn his pieces, by ear of course, as I cannot read either, and of course nothing like as good. But I think Garner himself would love to know that he is inspiring thousands of dedicated amateurs such as I, not to mention the armies of us who love listening to him for hours. This video is just out of this world.
@darrensmith5206 жыл бұрын
Darrel Wooden u
@merccadoosis88476 жыл бұрын
@Darrel Wooden GREAT comment. So glad to know you have been inspired by Mr Garner excellent music. His work will endure for generations to come!
@sandraceren9088 жыл бұрын
WHAT A TREAT!!! JUST LISTENING TO HIM, A CLOUDY DAY BECOMES SUNNY
@josephinegray51367 жыл бұрын
i love you
@GeometryDashAcamar7 жыл бұрын
^
@jeffreycraven81545 жыл бұрын
Sandra, I've heard first hand Earl Hines, Oscar Peterson, and Billy Taylor. No one played better than Erroll; always kept me amazed by his super human playing. What did it for me was his ability to make happy tunes make me smile, even his sad recordings had me smiling at his genius.
@rosalindkover93416 жыл бұрын
the second he starts playing my mood goes from 0 to1000.....i feel joyous..happy...it's like a miracle...he is a genius..
@arthurcarr15446 жыл бұрын
Concert By The Sea one of the best piano recordings of all time, thankyou Erroll, your My Honeysuckle Rose.
@PabluchoViision9 жыл бұрын
For a pianist famous for his crazy, playful flights of fancy on intros, the intro to Honeysuckle Rose for the first minute and change of this video, really takes the cake. Beautiful!!!
@EricVonS8 жыл бұрын
When I was in high school, I listened to Erroll's recording of his own piece, MISTY, with just Shadow Wilson on drums. Sixty-five years later that same 45 rpm version has made it onto my hard drive as part of a collection I call "45's from the '50's." My favorite Garner rendition, however, remains Bill Strayhorn's " A Cottage for Sale." I'm almost 82 and still appreciate the gifts left by Erroll Garner and George Shearing.
@czurawsky8 жыл бұрын
+Dick Purdy All due respect, but Strayhorn did not write "Cottage". Maybe you're thinking of another Pittsburgher, Billy Eckstine, who sang a famous version of "Cottage". But totally agree, PITTSBURGHER!!! Garner is awesome. sites.google.com/site/pittsburghmusichistory/pittsburgh-music-story/teachers/carl-mcvicker
@EricVonS8 жыл бұрын
Good possibility. Eckstine was my favorite male vocalist in Early '60's.
@EricVonS8 жыл бұрын
+Dick Purdy Make that Early 50's!
@robvanrosevelt55987 жыл бұрын
Dick Purdy m
@bledpicker12 жыл бұрын
There will never be another Erroll Garner.. What a genius!
@МишаПопов-п5о Жыл бұрын
согласен
@bzackbear12 жыл бұрын
It is absolutely WONDERFUL that we can see his movements as he's appreciating what he's playing. He's getting as much joy out of this as we in the audience.
@Horatio-Nelson10 жыл бұрын
Why didn't the LORD permit this chap to live much longer than he did. He was (and still is) brilliant .... his playing, his temperament and wit, coupled with these two quality musicians make him absolutely unbeatable. RIP, you've earned it. Regards, Horatio Nelson.
@tonyfatt38986 жыл бұрын
2 muso's i believe eddie calhoun (bass) Kelly Martin (drums)
@nancyeckroad-haney73096 жыл бұрын
Smoked like a chimney.
@JohnMarkfilmdirector5 жыл бұрын
True.
@misterbonzoid56233 жыл бұрын
Died of a heart attack caused by emphysema from smoking cigarettes.
@perryde78566 жыл бұрын
Love Erroll. He does somthing to my spirit every time I listen to him playing. 🎹💓🥇
@Stevorific16 жыл бұрын
Love this unbelievable performance. Thank you, Erroll and band!
@Thayer200011 жыл бұрын
This is the best 35 minutes i've enjoyed for a Long Long Long time! Thank you!
@carlboonzaier77516 жыл бұрын
Absolute genius!!! What can I say?. After just listening to him playing, if I had to die now, I would die happy and in a joyous mood, hoping I get to heaven and listen to Errol playhg in a free concert in perpetuity.
@lolaowens73202 жыл бұрын
That's just how I feel! God gave him the talent, and surely He called him Home, so He could listen all the time and Errol would never tire..... Erroll and Ella, that's all I ask!
@koreboredom43024 жыл бұрын
I've never seen anybody happier than Erroll playing. He's the kind of man to say "fuck it let's do this" and walk up on stage.
@Reichthoff3 жыл бұрын
And yet, he had the skill yo "fuck it", because having that kind of confidence is literally impossible for anyone who isn't half the musician he was.
@dean34342 жыл бұрын
@@Reichthoff All confindence knowing the machine and that machine knows you...
@PeteN752 жыл бұрын
Can't stop listening this concert again and again... I wish I could have sat there... real joyful music. Thank you for uploading this piece of diamond!
@fradifoci8 жыл бұрын
A pure genius for sure! But you'll have a hard time convincing me that he has nothing to do with knowing structure and harmony. His changes are so intricate and logical, his timing, HE KNOWS WHAT HE IS DOING!! Loved him from the start.
@JS-lx1qi9 жыл бұрын
Thanks for posting this! This is making my day. Beyond the incredible talent, he's saying with every chord, every note "I got this!" and everything is so much more better... He's SO got this, in so many ways, chorded melodies slinking so smoothly behind the beat, past-master rhythm, impeccable swing, can't stand still or help from smiling! Pianistic virtuosity that you can identify as Errol on the first note, mastery modulating like 'buttah', tantalizing the rhythm, spelling out melodies like nursery rhymes, then coming back to completely take it apart, wallop it, digress into sustained ringing of the whole piano, bringing it back to a sweet tinkle, complete dynamic mastery with no negatives, no snobbery, no attitude or ego, all giving, the humor, the 'show' is all honest, all the good stuff. He's so completely brilliant yet never looks to be taking himself too seriously (but you know he means every note like a preacher) It's such an amazing treat to hear Errol play! But then to actually see him, joy incarnate.
@DavidKlausa9 жыл бұрын
Wow, well said.
@PabluchoViision9 жыл бұрын
+Ja eS Yes Ja eS you really put it beautifully. Not for nothing did John Birks Gillespie call Erroll Garner "our most sanctified pianist"!!
@williamwharton67666 жыл бұрын
Q
@carlmiller19862 жыл бұрын
Love.your comment Yes indeed-y
@ltravail2 жыл бұрын
Erroll Garner and Wes Montgomery (guitarist) have the most unique and instantly recognizable styles in all of mid-20th century jazz!...along with Miles Davis, I should add. Each man's highly stylized technique became standard elements in the jazz vocabulary over time. You now hear Wes Montgomery's octave line improvisations and Garner's left hand comping and chord soloing technique in all kinds of music since these great musicians introduced their sound to the public.
@christynecisterna6278 жыл бұрын
His talent was nothing short of genius! What I wouldn't do to have been blessed with this raw talent!
@darylmichael77 жыл бұрын
Okay... After listening to this set, I had to reorder my top three pianists from Oscar, Art and Erroll, respectably to: 1. Erroll 2. Oscar 3. Art. This guy’s a genius. Period!
@kzustang Жыл бұрын
Wait till you hear Earl Hines.....Might kick one of these out of your top 3
@ritaandersson4139 Жыл бұрын
When he plays, oh how you enjoy it. I would agree with you. He's my number 1.🎹🎶
@ZurabChelidze10 ай бұрын
jarrett,hancock,corea
@andreawilkerson20065 ай бұрын
Nobody played like Errol! He was in a class by himself! Perfection!
@autumnleaves27666 жыл бұрын
Keep coming back to this incredible Erroll Garner performance from 1964, it is on a level with Concert By The Sea from 1955. Eddie Calhoun is on bass and I think it is Kelly Martin on drums, you can tell how they love playing with the Gemini Genius. Must learn No More Shadows, it is a lovely tune. I have sort of taught myself eight of Garner's wonderful compositions - by ear of course! - and there are many more to learn. It is so inspiring to hear him play and how I wish I were old enough to have heard him live. Love the "fake" stride technique in Penthouse Serenade, I guess he does this to keep time, or was he just having fun as ever?
@orenico965 ай бұрын
Thank you for identifying the drummer and bassist! I love all their playing!
@joshuabussy53008 жыл бұрын
The way he played misty in this concert was the reason I have started to listen to and appreciate jazz. I was absolutely stunned by the chords that he uses that sound so appealing!
@emanuelguerin99097 жыл бұрын
Joshua Bussy
@Iw-Files-UFO4 жыл бұрын
Genius! this Pianist was one of the most talented , gifted Artists ever ...!
@player063913 жыл бұрын
WOW! I really enjoyed this video. He is truly one-of-a-kind genius, has a unique style of his own, and is a real virtuoso pianist. No one else in the world can play like that.
@harryhughes43898 жыл бұрын
OMG- The man can swing like nobody else
@Reuben_953 жыл бұрын
Oscar might have something to say
@1948dock8 жыл бұрын
Have loved Erroll Garner for over 50 yrs - no one is better!
@JJamJ2 жыл бұрын
Peterson, Tatum?
@desperatetimes58736 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for this!!! Beautiful performance from a genius.
@maryweems6557 Жыл бұрын
Wow. What a blessing to sit here in my office, and 'see' and hear Erroll Garner work his magic. My number favorite pianist, and the list is short. Bravo!!
@briankatejohnstone18849 жыл бұрын
What I like about this whole clip is the obvious joy E.G. gets from playing, sharing his "thoughts", constant creation and interaction with his bass and percussion comrades -and their reciprocity. Musicians like this don't come along too often and I thank you for providing this treasury, musical AND visual, of a great natural genius in action. I'll bet my kilted toosh that he never played ANYTHING the same way twice -even "Misty"! And thanks to Guille Gonzalez for the chronology of titles.
@Melonhead6229 жыл бұрын
Brian Kate Johnstone Agreed, about "Misty". Also, I have four versions of the MJQ's "Django" - from the original 1952 (?) to about 1980 (?) - never twice the same. Tempo, phrasing and solos. Jazz is... hang on... why is your middle name Kate??!
@briankatejohnstone18849 жыл бұрын
Melonhead622 It's my wife's name -should be an "and" in there. Might have to see if I can edit it somehow. We have our own computers and email addresses but this computer is registered as belonging to both of us. Mind you, I've been called a Helluva lot worse!
@Melonhead6229 жыл бұрын
Brian Kate Johnstone LOL!!
@soledadlorenzoalonso80222 жыл бұрын
Un buen comentario
@simoncusonnet6 жыл бұрын
I LOVE Garner, he's a genius, just his intro to honeysuckle rose, it is so great, even his bass player dowsn't know where he's going, so good ! love him.
@briankatejohnstone18849 жыл бұрын
I also love that his bass man and drummer obviously LOVE playing with E.G. -as who wouldn't, providing a sense of joy to the concert. E.G. was Dudley More's hero - no slouch in his own right. He talks about playing in a London club when Mr Garner walked in and he went to pieces -until the maestro put him at his ease. There's a great camaraderie between Jazz musicians that I've never felt in any other type of music.
@Melonhead6229 жыл бұрын
Brian Kate Johnstone Trance does it too.
@ihateyoumother-fucker32045 жыл бұрын
"E.G. was Dudley Moore's hero." I'm happy to have this confirmed as it was via watching the great Dudley Moore that brought he here 😀😀😀😀
@GinMae6 жыл бұрын
Don't consider myself a jazz fan, yet, find Mr. Garner's music entrancing and magnetic...
@kelwyn10210 жыл бұрын
If someone who possesses complete mastery of his instrument and if the listener never knows what the artist will do next is a Genius--then Errol Garner IS a genius
@andrea222132 жыл бұрын
Staggering playing. A momentary glimpse of Joanna Lumley in the audience at 23.45 too.
@melhoresromanticas769212 жыл бұрын
I never saw Errol except on BBC TV as a kid and teen but wish I'd have caught him live as I did Basie, Ellington, Oscar P' and many others in my crazy wanderings around the world. Always amazes me that three perfectly attuned beings like this can sound and have the impact of a whole orchestra! I used to wonder what a "Full", inventive and intuitive pianist like E.G. would need a bass and drums for but listen closely and feel how utterly interconnected the three of these guys are. Joy is it here!
@terryhicks35778 жыл бұрын
Nobody plays like Erroll or can match him.His sense of melody timing etc are unparrelled.I am a piano player and have mad a study of him and can do an ok impression of him but you will never match the original.I was able to meet him on tour in 1972 at our club and he told me he neer got married as he hadn't found any woman who would put up with-he added and I have never forgotten '' I'm just a piano player'' he was most modest and I think he really meant it.Junior Mance still playing in NY in 2015 told me there at his gig that Erroll was an absolutely wonderful man-he said all the piano playeres were blown away by his playing.And yet he is not rated as the greatest ever bu for many he was the greateat and will never be matched.Erroll filled in for Art Tatum at times as a young chap and Art said he is gonna go places I tthink-how right he was.Erroll surpassed all the others even Oscar because he was not only a one off player but a great composer too;there are many other loely tunes that Erroll wrote -i love to play those I knbow.I by chance in 2001 met Errolls brother Liton in Vancouver and he was a top player himself-he said Erroll was a chain smoker and this may apparently caused his untimely demise.Verf sad as Erroll could still have been playing at about 94.Butwe have some great tracks which he left behind for all time.Bravo Erroll!
@darrentrammel30118 жыл бұрын
Terry Hicks az
@darrentrammel30118 жыл бұрын
X
@williamwharton67666 жыл бұрын
Terry Hicks v
@autumnleaves27666 жыл бұрын
Great post,Terry Hicks. I had often wondered whether Erroll had married or not. I knew about brother Linton being a fine pianist too and that all the Garner siblings were musical, three boys and three girls. He sounds as if he was gentle and modest and full of goodness. I have seen drawing he did, I think some were used on his album covers, so he was a talented artist too. To my knowledge, there is only one book about him and that is out of print. I knew that he smoked and that he suffered from emphysema. He had to stop touring in about 1975. Just hours before he died of a heart attack on 2nd January 1977 he had told Martha Glaser that the music he had played thus far was "just the tip of the iceberg" and so there must have been so much more inside his mind. What a shame that the doctors could not save him that day. There are clips from about 1972, in Italy on RAI TV, where he does look rather unwell with a swollen face. Imagine if he were still alive, he'd be 97 and probably still playing !
@soledadlorenzoalonso80222 жыл бұрын
Un comentario muy interesante
@apsomar6 жыл бұрын
The one and only Erroll Garner never had a single piano lesson he learned the craft by watching his older brother Linton practice
@НиколайМезенцев-ы4ф3 жыл бұрын
Музыкант с большой буквы, и мастер импровизаций! Моё восхищение! Это подарок человечеству сВыше! Всем спасибо. Привет всем людям, добрым и утончённым в плане искусства. )
@lamiamano12 жыл бұрын
Absolute genius : what a swing, what a rythm, innovator of piano, a deliverry full of soul and goodness. bless the day he got up there to deliver such pleasure and beauty.
@WalterGropious7 жыл бұрын
Played this for my bud, we got about 10 minutes in and he goes, LETS JAM. Erroll is the best inspiration.
@jomanjo810 жыл бұрын
I saw Errol live in Adelaide, Australia, and to this day I have great regrets on missing the opportunity to shake those amazing hands of his as I walked past him in his room. RIP Errol, live on in our memories.
@051963mf8 жыл бұрын
Erroll Garner was an amazing musician, his work is always so charged with coolness.
@rainman67538 жыл бұрын
Just proves one thing, when you have it in you, it will come out so naturally.. never trained just watched and learned.. the man is an absolute genius
@janroberts3472 жыл бұрын
I always love the cheeky look on his face when he throws in an lmprovised phrase from an unexpected and musically dangerous point and how he makes it resolve perfectly .masterful andy (bob )yates
@matrox9 жыл бұрын
Todays most of the music greats are all gone. Todays popular music is nothing ashes, smoldering ashes left in the wake of the real talents.
@grinischkibenoit18978 жыл бұрын
Please go listen to some Hiromi Uehara! She may cheer you up!
@teamrealnew38278 жыл бұрын
+Grinischki Benoit LOVE her. Honestly, to me, fusion is simply the voice of jazz is the present day. We had swing, bebop, funk, latin... in all its iterations, jazz is still what it is. So I believe the arts still have as vivid a present, and future, as the past.
@cynthiamclaglenallen11507 жыл бұрын
No need for that surely. We all love music from the past and present.
@creepygamercom7 жыл бұрын
Cynthia McLaglenAllen alright old man, it was just a joke. When you see all those people complaining about today's music being bad, it's starting to grow annoying. Some people just listen to the wrong kind of music, then complain about it. They don't seem to understand that jazz still fucking exists.
@mosk6662 жыл бұрын
@@grinischkibenoit1897 I have seen Hiromi live many times in NYC and adore her. Oscar P. was her idol and she plays similarly to him. She has great stage presence and is a delight. But Erroll Garner is still the one at the top of this rare jazz piano mountain.
@freddiefrumko42302 жыл бұрын
Foundation of my learning about jazz piano improvisation was delivered to me packaged in this bundle of phenomenal talent that is not duplicatable or emulated. I am still unwrapping the same package for learning more about this man's musical genius and talent.
@johnbresnik9 жыл бұрын
How can he play like that without looking at the keyboard? That's amazing.
@alancobain21519 жыл бұрын
John Bresnik yes it is uncanny, three qharters of the time he is staring off into space, I don't know how he does it, I think he is from another world.
@carlboonzaier77516 жыл бұрын
One simple answer John - "GENIUS"
@ihateyoumother-fucker32045 жыл бұрын
Answer: Quite clearly he knows what he's doing 😂😂😂😂
@Alffovinni7 жыл бұрын
fucking amazing..... It's beautiful and genius the way he is able to bridge the swingin hot jazz and bebob styles of Jazz together.
@PabluchoViision9 жыл бұрын
First heard Garner around age 14, the LP: Gemini. He was on his Latin kick, Jose Mangual (Sr) on congas and Jimmie Smith, also Ernest McCarty Jr on bass, no traps player. "How High The Moon" was a rocket flight beyond wildest imaginings. He rang change after change after change on that tune, and after every chorus he always had something more in his pocket, something new. Still the greatest piano solo I've ever heard. Have never recovered from that space flight (thankfully), never fell out of love with the music, genius, and joy of EG.
@jacquesthibault26386 жыл бұрын
PabluchoViision b
@theflamingredone12 жыл бұрын
If you can look that happy while working then you know you're doing something right. What an absolutely amazing musician. Thank you for the upload Melonhead622!
@autumnleaves276610 жыл бұрын
Erroll Garner is one of my jazz favourites and heroes. He couldn't read music, a skill which I've never mastered either in my humble efforts on the piano. He is famous for having written the slow ballad Misty, but the real genius comes out most in up tempo numbers. He really could swing and seemed to enjoy himself at the piano. Dorothy Donegan, the brilliant but underrated American jazz pianist (1922-1998), used to imitate Garner and he apparently admired her instinctive virtuoso playing. Sometimes Erroll seems to launch himself into amazing, fancy introductions as if he wasn't even sure himself which number he was about to play. "Concert By the Sea" is a famous live recording which includes a sensational high-speed version of Where or When. Sad to think that this great musical talent was only 55 when he died in 1977.
@tomkelly54959 жыл бұрын
Donegan actually did study classical music and used many phrases from that idiom in her playing . Gardner als..o was an awesome pianist , I wish there were more people like them today .
@margaretnorman18116 жыл бұрын
Play it isn't fair
@soledadlorenzoalonso80222 жыл бұрын
Un maravilloso comentario le felicito
@soledadlorenzoalonso80222 жыл бұрын
Un comentario muy interesante le felicito
@colinsherwood219611 жыл бұрын
i love jazz of all kinds...please more jazz radio in th uk and ireland !...this is a realy talented man ..thank you for uploading..
@Jazzinthecountry12 жыл бұрын
Many thanks for this, the best upload ever to youtube. I always come back to this concert. Great stuff to work out to in the morning before work. I now own three Garner CDs, it is very addictive stuff, the best always is. Cheers.
@nahatsu2 жыл бұрын
Pure delight how the magnificent Garner messes with the intro - the expressions on the bass player (behind Garner) are priceless! Fabulous clip: thanks for a great show!
@121jazzy11 жыл бұрын
Absolutely unbelievable!! I feel like been taken into another world!
@antoniocarlosmachado91345 жыл бұрын
I Think he was the most creative jazz pianist of all times, no words to describe it
@cjerloeser9 жыл бұрын
There are millions of piano players who THINK they know how to play - but Erroll will always be a league of his own they will never ever be able to touch !
@bobbaskerville58292 ай бұрын
Nobody ever played like this genius. Saw him at The London House in Chicago around 1955 - unforgettable.. Great memories.
@1MrZackdaddy10 жыл бұрын
I absolutely love this guy!!!
@jimbaker64426 жыл бұрын
E.G. is one of my favorite jazz pianists and I have many of his performances on CD. It's true if you're a little down and you listen to his piano playing it brings you back up because there is happiness all through his playing. You can even feel it in his beautiful ballads. So sad that he left us so soon, but it's so great that he left us with so much of his music to enjoy.
@alanreubel53826 жыл бұрын
Jim Baker had it right! Erroll, as mentioned many times here, had no musical training. Period. In an article by Whitney Balliett, Being A Genius, Erroll's talent is described. But, if you a LIFT, just listen.
@Melonhead62212 жыл бұрын
Oh yes! Erroll was a genius - but while always being modest, he REVELLED in it.
@jamesalexander009313 жыл бұрын
Whenever i'm feeling down I just listen to Erroll Garner. He's so happy :)
@larssondj12 жыл бұрын
1:16 Honeysuckle Rose (Fats Waller, Andy Razaf) 5:37 No More Shadows (Garner) 9:30 Mambo Erroll (Garner) 14:45 Penthouse Serenade (Val Burton, Will Jason) 18:40 Jeannine (I Dream of Lilac Time ) (Nat Shilkret, L. Wolfe Gilbert) 23:50 On The Street Where You Live / I Could Have Danced All Night (Lerner & Loewe) 29:35 All Yours (Theme From "A New Kind of Love")(Garner) 32:35 The Lady Is A Tramp (Rodgers & Hart) 34:25 = Erroll's Theme (Garner)
@rand00710 жыл бұрын
Met him while on a business trip..had a short chat about music..later watched him play with a few scotches..another chat and as years go by..fond memories of a genius and gentleman along with meeting Ellington, Brubeck, Sy Zentner and Sinatra. Just lucky to be in the right places and the right times.
@leober710 жыл бұрын
Set List: 1 "Honeysuckle Rose" 2 "No More Shadows" 3 "Mambo Erroll" 4 "Penthouse Serenade" 5 "Jeannine, I Dream of Lilac Time" 6 "On the Street Where You Live" 7 "I Could Have Danced All Night" 8 "A New Kind Of Love" 9 "The lady is a tramp" 10 "Untitled"
@waazlov5 жыл бұрын
His smile is so pure that it makes me smile too
@keysthomas19662 жыл бұрын
At the 19 minute mark, he blows the band member's minds by creating something from the angels... and even he is surprised by that