Everyone in the comments have said this, but I just have to say it again. The level of this interview is mind-blowing. In a world in which every media person trivializes everything, out of sheer ignorance of course, to see this in YT gives one hope for the future of humanity. Wow, thank you!
@RickBeato9 ай бұрын
🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
@denniskielton24479 ай бұрын
KZbin is where the knowledge is nowadays. On TV & the radio (or anything controlled by mass media, the very people Rick calls out on this channel because he worked side by side with them in the 90's) all you'll find is sensationalism. Even car commercials hardly say anything about the product anymore, they sell a feeling not sell a car. (Look at car ad's & posters from the 50's-70's if you don't believe me, they list things about the engine that nowadays nobody understands except a mechanic.) The mainstream has been wayyyyyyyyyyyyy dumbed down. But fortunately, with platforms like KZbin, the people who actually deserve to be heard are getting a chance to be heard and in rare cases, becoming pretty well-known over it. And on here, what gets you well known is connecting with people, it's as close to a true majority rule on media as it gets in this age. And guess what? Channels like this one, Veritasium, Smarter Every Day, 12 tone music, and Adam Neely's channel are all literally the biggest channels on here, and they're all heavy into deep music theory and stories/views on the music industry and music education industry you could NEVER see anywhere else. A lot of their subscribers aren't even musicians. Veritasium & Smarter Every Day are two of the best modern science shows I've seen, period. Check them out, you'lll have even more hope. Because the whole reason these channels are popular, is because people are requesting them and watching them. There ARE smart people out there ha ha
@slotrane88539 ай бұрын
I know. Rick is great because he just talks music. He is a music lover and we can relate
@quicklicks59639 ай бұрын
@@denniskielton2447awesome I will check out those science ones
@ChipTingle9 ай бұрын
So well said and echoed!!!
@tevangoldberg9 ай бұрын
Every time Brad tries to make a point by playing something on the piano and plays the most beautiful music you've ever heard for 3.5 seconds...
@PawelLeszczynskipav8 ай бұрын
I know I just kept waiting for him to touch the piano. It's as if he turns the switch...... lush
@markfretless7 ай бұрын
@@PawelLeszczynskipav Yes! Even the way he lifts his hands to play each passage...The body language seems to always be as fluid and as graceful as his playing...
@coledavismusic7 ай бұрын
Literally
@echotalmusic48963 ай бұрын
Summed up perfectly.
@philippbehrend55593 ай бұрын
I want a Brad Mehldau jingle for every mood and situation I encounter in the future
@amziadi9 ай бұрын
Rick Beato continues to leave us as a legacy for posterity what by now is an encyclopedia of interviews of the best musicians of our time. We all should be grateful for this man.
@sandygoodall1239 ай бұрын
...and we are!!
@MartinVejarano9 ай бұрын
Grateful for YT as well, I know Rick is!
@StarlynMunson9 ай бұрын
Hear hear 🎉🎉🎉
@shamielsoeker93748 ай бұрын
Agree !
@christophervaughan26378 ай бұрын
Some of the best musicians: there are great musicians in every part of the world
@brucewhitcomb87009 ай бұрын
This is the greatest conversation about musical elements and style that I've ever heard. At age 71 I can only wish that I could have been influenced by all the elements of this conversation when younger. I am a musician and continue to play gigs and work on concepts when I get up every morning. This conversation is a gift in that you have two people totally in tune with everything brought up in "casual conversation". Also- I learned way more about Brad that I never knew- and how he has intellectualized all of his influences and current improvisational tendencies. This is a five star musical conversation on anyone's level. Rick- your contribution to the world of music is immeasurable. I'm truly in awe of the depths of this conversation. I can't thank either of you enough for the inspiration you both have given me today. I will undoubtedly come back to this interview several times. Thank you- both! 👍👍👍👍👍
@aaronmellinger8 ай бұрын
Amen.
@ButOneThingIsNeedful9 ай бұрын
Is anyone else just about as impressed with Brad Mehldau's facility with the English language as with his prodigious artistry on the piano keys? I've taught Language Arts for years and his mastery/precision of verbal expression is off the charts! Just wonderful to listen to.
@equiknox149 ай бұрын
Totally agree. I too noticed his expressive verbal capacity, not to mention his modesty.
@ButOneThingIsNeedful9 ай бұрын
@@equiknox14 Yes, the modesty. Nothing better than greatness mixed with humility.
@suremate9 ай бұрын
Being used to him trying to speak in French in his concerts (appreciate the effort!), it’s nice to hear him express himself so eloquently.
@youmothershouldknow49059 ай бұрын
Not only do we hear facility with language (and, of course, music), Brad really cares about clearly stating his thoughts, thoughts involving a lot of abstraction that isn’t always easy to talk about. There’s kind of a communications ethic involved in Brad’s efforts to both communicate musically and verbally.
@observethemfdynamic9 ай бұрын
We had a writing professor in college who used some of his liner notes from “places” as examples in an essay course
@Loppree9 ай бұрын
How refreshing it is to listen to a deep conversation between two wise people! It gives me hope that the world can be a good place to live.
@rickthaler9 ай бұрын
Brad was my neighbor growing up (elk dr. bedford, nh). he was astounding as a 4 year old. His dad was my eye doctor. Mel Sibulkin was my teacher as well.wonderful to see his success. congradulations from the Thalers!
@davidfleuchaus9 ай бұрын
Tell us more! “Astounding as a 4 year old”??
@Funkybassplayer9 ай бұрын
@@davidfleuchausyes please 🙏🏻
@jeffgough9 ай бұрын
Wait wait wait…Brad was MY neighbor growing up. And it was in Maryland, not New Hampshire! I remember his dad (the local dentist) and how Brad refused to play stand up or grand piano; he was exclusive to the keytar. Edgar Winter gave him Zoom lessons on keytar simultaneously to me getting sax lessons.
@rickthaler9 ай бұрын
he moved from bedford, nh to ct. he evan mentions living in bedford and taking lessons from mr sibulkin (mel) in the interview... if you think iot is the same, name parents and siblings@@jeffgough
@rickthaler9 ай бұрын
i was quite a bit older than he, but i remember he was just a little kid and couldn,t even reach the floor and was already playing bach and beethoven, but had an ear for jazz... it was apprent even then that he was going to be a virtuoso@@davidfleuchaus
@matthewweyant47788 ай бұрын
You just leave this interview smarter and better as a person. As a public school Band teacher, I so appreciate Mr. Mehldau's explanation of how he approaches "practice", and his desire to become better as a person through it. He also has the most relaxing, inviting voice I've ever heard, lol! He somehow is able to come across as incredibly intelligent, without being pretentious, because making and discussing music doesn't seem to be about his ego.
@Feltronc9 ай бұрын
We need someone to make a channel “What Makes This Interview Great”, because Rick is the best music interviewer of all time. As masterful as these artists are, and they *are* masterful, it’s the flow of the conversation that Rick provides that takes this to a whole another level. Seriously.
@RickBeato9 ай бұрын
🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
@jimbeveridge51859 ай бұрын
Be great if a broadcast channel could pick them up . Over here in the UK, BBC 2 or Chanel 4 . Luv KZbin , broadcast would resonate with an older demographic?
@davidjohnson16549 ай бұрын
And I think, as part of what you're saying, that Rick asks the musicians things that they wish someone would ask them, that they're waiting for someone to ask. You can sense that they light up when Rick asks them some detailed, insightful question about a nuance of what they played in a certain spot in their music. It's like they're thinking, "Wow, you noticed, and you correctly named what I did! YES!" ... I listen to Rick's interviews while I'm at work; in more ways than one, it's literally music to my ears. ;) Yes, pun intended... don't y'all roll your eyes at me. ;)
@MattFicarra9 ай бұрын
I think part of the chemistry is that musicians come into the interview with a certain amount of knowledge and respect for Rick as a teacher, musician and fan. This allows them to open up and relax and the interview comes across as two friends talking about great music.
@Feltronc9 ай бұрын
@@MattFicarra Most certainly!
@vKarl719 ай бұрын
This is my favorite Rick Beato video EVER ! Two extremely talented, knowledgeable, experienced, & articulate musicians talking about what they care so deeply about.
@johnzoccomusic9 ай бұрын
Rick’s depth is staggering. Whether it’s rock, metal, blues or jazz, his knowledge of the genre and the catalog is unreal. I don’t think there is anyone else who could pull off these interviews.
@ButOneThingIsNeedful9 ай бұрын
Add classical.
@popoff78088 ай бұрын
I hope he branches out more into country and hip-hop and even pop and more niche genre out of his wheel house.
@riehle.j85619 ай бұрын
How did I just go from having no idea Brad Mehldau was, to him being my favorite Artist & feeling in love with the piano; ... mixed, poured & set an hour and 1/2 later by Rick? Aetheric.
@alans38459 ай бұрын
Rick… this was one of the deepest and most inspiring interviews you have ever done. As a guitarist who has an MFA in Jazz I so appreciate you allowing Brad to share such incredible insights connecting composers from Bach to Radiohead. So grateful to you for making interviews like this happen. ❤️🎸💪🏻
@anteus649 ай бұрын
I just wrote a FB post saying that we have many supertalented musicians in Hungary (even if few of them reached global recognition) but simply nobody is capable to make an interview with them on this level...which is a great miss. This was terrific, I greatly enjoyed every minute of it.
@jowi57209 ай бұрын
watched it all - understood only half of it - enjoyed it twice as much. this interview is an ode to music
@littleole238 ай бұрын
Good way of putting it! 👍
@AndalusianIrish9 ай бұрын
Wow! Rick keeps knocking it out of the park with the people he's interviewing.
@R.Akerman-oz1tf9 ай бұрын
Too long right now; I'll soon revisit.
@m.i.c.g22469 ай бұрын
Man, as soon as he locked up Sting, Metheny and Sco, i thought that he had the key to all the doors
9 ай бұрын
except Kirk Hammet... that was futile... :)
@m.i.c.g22469 ай бұрын
@ I mean for all the shade Lars and Kirk get, they still are part of one the hugest acts of the last 40 years. Kirk knows a thing or two. They just don’t include a metronome.
@BionicTooth9 ай бұрын
Great show!!! Brad has taken up Keith’s mantle as jazz music’s most transportive, astounding and playful instrumentalist/improviser. Kudos to Beato for his impact on the medium by presenting long form, in depth dialogues with these icons of our times!
@TaylorG00149 ай бұрын
10 minutes in and I feel like I’ve received substantial revelation. Such generosity from Brad in this interview. Can’t tell you how grateful I am for your work, Rick. I’ve seen Brad several times in Seattle (mostly in my teens) and he has always humored me by answering questions and chatting with me. Very kind man. Brilliant improviser.
@EnriqueRamosCurd9 ай бұрын
Greats interviews. From Keith Jarrett to Brad Mehldau. Big educator, Rick Beato indicates the road to understand the great music of our time. Grande maestro. With much admiration and respect from Chile 🇨🇱
@TinusTegenlicht9 ай бұрын
Indeed, now I would like to hear an interview with Andy Timmons.
@fortunyrodrigo.9 ай бұрын
grande!!
@antoniog28549 ай бұрын
if there is one Rick interview that I'd wish had a Part 2, it would be this one! I didn't want it to end! My favorite pianist!!!
@OuterGalaxyLounge9 ай бұрын
This became a masterclass immediately. I only recently got my first Brad Mehldau album. His way of talking is so warm as he's demonstrating his concepts. This feels so classic, like some old music show from 1980s PBS.
@vaneast4119 ай бұрын
you are lucky as you have a lot to enjoy exploring in his music 👍
@kjames4608 ай бұрын
Listening for the third time. I think this is my favorite of all your interviews.
@heartpath19 ай бұрын
Brad is a monster musician, much more than a jazz pianist. Rick is arguably the greatest music interviewer ever…I seriously can’t think of anyone else who can get into the technical with such depth while keeping it accessible. He manages to have a conversation while giving the guest so much freedom to speak. I really treasure this channel. Thank you Rick!
@lucianfick22189 ай бұрын
I can only think of one interviewer who comes close to approximating Rick's level of engagement as an interviewer and that would be Marion McPartland- although her focus was strictly jazz. .
@heartpath19 ай бұрын
@@lucianfick2218 I love her interviews! I used to listen to them on WRTI in Philly late night on my way home from gigs. Great stuff!
@hugoantunesmusic9 ай бұрын
This was cool! Thank you both! I drove Brad on a solo tour, and he was always listening to music on his computer. Once before a concert he asked me to play something that I was listening in the car while he was not there (I always kept the system switched off while he was riding). I've played something that was in the cd player and he asked me to play it again. Later, on one of the encores, he played that song. True story. He called me sir all the time. Probably didn't know my name...
@phish19 ай бұрын
Cool story. Do you remember what the song was?
@Itsabikepackingworld9 ай бұрын
Wow. Who else was smiling ear to ear and mesmerized 🙌❤️
@richardbloemenkamp85329 ай бұрын
Rick himself and still he had the perfect questions. 😃
@deno77joe8 ай бұрын
His style is definitely a result of studying classical music. Playing piano is like playing all orchestral instruments at the same time between 2 hands, 10 fingers, SATB, then applying it to any song, any style. So cool. What a foundation! Thank You for an inspiring interview.
@tonydog44569 ай бұрын
Mehldau’s touch is out of this world. It allows him to really bring out the emotion of the tune, whether it’s the Beatles or Bach. And his recall of players and songs is astonishing. I bet he had not thought of McCoy’s “Passion Dance” in years but Rick mentioned it and he spit it out like he practiced right before the interview. Insane. My only quibble is that he doesn’t hear the subtlety in Bonham’s playing. He could be bombastic when it was called for, but he also played dynamically and simply. I honestly hear so many similarities between Elvin and Bonham. Brilliant interview, Rick. You are killing it. These musicians are so special to us mortals and they truly enjoy opening up and having a conversation with you. Thank you so much.
@teddykingsbury37428 ай бұрын
I think he has a point about the "wideness" of the quarter note or the tripolet of elvins drums
@Chipshotz9 ай бұрын
Over an hour and 20 minutes and never a dull moment. Rick is the best.
@RossCampoli9 ай бұрын
Brad’s playing is stunning and virtuosic. I’m lucky enough to have seen him live twice and would jump at the next chance I have to see him again
@nadim.bakhshov9 ай бұрын
Fantastic conversation - I'd love to hear you interview Bill Frisell
@robertwood24909 ай бұрын
Yes, Bill's the obvious next choice. Bill Frisell, please?
@Emadenigrisbravuomo8 ай бұрын
Yes!!
@tedandersen9778 ай бұрын
please -- and with his guitar in hand! (and effects pedals!)
@jonathanfogelman49788 ай бұрын
@@robertwood2490 I agree ! Let's hope Rick see's these comments.
@robinpowers36028 ай бұрын
Scofield too would be very fun and illuminating.
@adamgray80099 ай бұрын
13:27 Once again Rick picking the giants to interview. Mehldau, in my humble opinion, is the single greatest, and most influential, pianist of our time. I think he's what Bill Evans would be listening to, if he were alive today. Here's my ameteurish take on Mehldau: His ability to dissect and recreate melodies and harmonies of classic songs is just amazing. And then become so dissonant (and anti melodic in a way) and somewhat intentionally clunky, if you, at times is such an incredible contrast to do his incredibly fluid and beautiful re-interpretation of the melodies. Tension and release, constantly. And subtle changes in timing, especially solo, but also with his trios. These among many, many other things I adore about his playing. It was so nice to hear him verbally express what he thinks and intends while playing. What a gift! Thank you Rick!!!
@mrreemann37399 ай бұрын
I couldn't agree more. Well said❤
@steely_vine9 ай бұрын
Yes he is. I saw him play solo a few months ago in a lost Paris suburb concert hall. It was stunning.
@TeachingJazz9 ай бұрын
Fascinating and wonderful interview, just great. Brad Mehldau is so articuate - as a player and as a speaker.
@gdkemble9 ай бұрын
I am embarrassed to admit I'd never heard of Brad. This is one of my favorite interviews of all (so far). I have a lot to listen to now!
@valebliz9 ай бұрын
He’s an otherworldly player, really
@JohnSmith-oe5kx9 ай бұрын
No need to be embarrassed! Just be grateful that you now know about him 🎶🎹
@johanponin86809 ай бұрын
enjoy the discovery, the trip is gonna be long and crazy
@cs6927 ай бұрын
Brad Mehldau is my favorite musician, and I am so excited for you that you have found him!! Enjoy!!
@DavidMarshall329 ай бұрын
Masterful: This is Rick's best interview -- Beato is the best interviewer. It myself be said that Brad is an exceptional interviewee: Open, Honest and egoless. He knowledge of, performance and exposition of music and how he relates all form music is incredible.
@JochenVogel9 ай бұрын
I'm only 10 minutes in and already totally in awe. What a wonderful musician!
@vivlund9 ай бұрын
A pianist’s homage to the guitar. Just beautiful, heaven.
@WarhawkBeyond20409 ай бұрын
If there was any pianist that I would consider to be the successor of Keith Jarrett, it would be Brad Mehldau. In my opinion, he is the most important voice for the piano in the modern era. What a fantastic coup to get one of the best musicians in the world, brilliant interview. Keep up the good work 👏
@JarrettMehldau9 ай бұрын
I'm with you. I feel Fred Hersch deserves a shoutout too particularly when playing ballads in a solo setting Fred reaches similar heights to Keith and Brad imo.
@lp1926.guitars9 ай бұрын
@@JarrettMehldau I mean you could have said "look at my name" :) Anyway, I also agree!
@AndyAction9 ай бұрын
So great to see my college friend Brad (New School for Jazz/Contemporary Music, NYC) ascending to such spectacular heights! Thanks Rick and love you Brad!
@kaleydowood57469 ай бұрын
Adding one eulogistic commentary to the numerous others this video shall have (after Jarret's, Metheny's, etc): It's more than a masterpiece, it reaches pieces of the transcendance we feel when hearing Mehldau's, or Jarret's music. And it gives me fragments of understanding about "why" I came to their music, "why" it struck me. About "how" I found a continuation of the rock music I was listening to, being a teenager, in Jaco Pastorius, and then in Pat Metheny, and then in Keith Jarret, and so on. I had to listen again to "Paranoid Android" Live in Tokyo after that, and made to myself a rare observation : knowing how the music is "built", or "thought", just adds to it. It increases the pleasure, rather than removing any magic...
@jonasc12219 ай бұрын
His rendition of Blackbird is in my top five musical pieces of all time. It it so incredibly good, I can't describe it with words. And then he talks about it within the first five minutes!! So good.
@misteurpierre72149 ай бұрын
If was a music teacher, I'd get all my students to listen to this. Talk about openness! Thank you both!
@gitarmats9 ай бұрын
These types of interviews are what musicians really want to see. Long and in depth. It's a gift to get such insight from these amazing musicians.
@nimitng59229 ай бұрын
I’m a guitarist and my favorite pianist is Brad Mehldau… I feel so inspired knowing that he takes some ideas from the guitar fretboard and open strings!
@rosswhitaker93059 ай бұрын
In his recently published book, he cites Wes Montgomery as not only a big influence but, according to him, his recordings are full of quotes from Wes solos.
@nimitng59229 ай бұрын
@@rosswhitaker9305 thank you so much for the suggestion! I will definitely buy it
@wkojiro83912 ай бұрын
Thank you Brad and Rick for coming together to make the best video on KZbin.
@bradleylampo25359 ай бұрын
One of the most in depth and technically intricate yet easy to follow interviews, I must say Rick, just like Dick Cavett interviewing Oscar Peterson. Really wonderful interview Rick, one for the ages. 💜💜💜
@KeithRowley9 ай бұрын
I thought of Dick Cavett interviewing Oscar Peterson, too... Rick was having a great time, and I think Mehldau was, too, but he's so calm and Buddha-like it's kinda hard to tell...
@peterdvideos9 ай бұрын
I just checked Coltrane’s “Giant Steps” after Rick Beato hummed it and the pitch/key was exactly as Rick hummed it!
@RickBeato9 ай бұрын
I see some people are really paying attention :)
@jasongravely72178 ай бұрын
I'm less than 20min in and hooked on this guy's ideas and expression. Rick asking great questions, Brad explaining and playing is amazing. We are so lucky this is free.
@JohnSmith-oe5kx9 ай бұрын
What Brad says at 37:00 is so true. I play mainly classical piano, but (inspired by Rick) it has been a revelation to revisit my repertoire from a more jazz-like perspective, i.e. thinking more of the structure of the composition and the nature of the chords and harmonies rather than the specific notes--which I am sure is how the players of Mozart's day conceived it, which is why they were such great improvisers. The result is that I have found it so much easier to achieve the state Brad describes: the "intellectual component" is taking place in that "other tier" such that I can almost be an observer of my own playing. You can only imagine how much more expressively you can play when you are freed up to really listen to yourself.
@KeithRowley9 ай бұрын
This part of the interview really astounded me, too. The way music feels to me when I'm inside it, no barrier between me and it, like when dancing or singing or playing with other people. The flow.
@jfo30009 ай бұрын
@KeithRowley That was the most important topic of the interview to me as well. Topped off with the "and that's where I find God" that just slipped by. That could have been a major discussion. Those of us that are "addicted" to improvising...maybe we are with God at that point...and don't want to leave?
@Angus.Maclean8 ай бұрын
Like Rick's other interviews, it's like I snuck in and hid while these two immensely knowledgeable musical geniuses sat at the piano for a chat, conversing with ease while exploring the most ingenious musical ideas. I don't want to move or hardly breathe for fear of interrupting this extraordinarily wonderful opportunity to listen and learn, to understand music in a way I could never do on my own. Thank you for these amazing interviews that exist nowhere else and thank you for being our teacher.
@koho9 ай бұрын
My god - his reprise of the apex of jazz from Coltrane w Tyner to Shorter to Miles/Adderly. And Mehldau brings it to life, live, on cue. Led Zeppelin/Bonham vs. Elvin Jones - no one else gets this!! This is unbelievable. This should be a 10 part series.
@markshveima7 ай бұрын
Just utterly fantastic. One of the best interviews ever. Especially Rick's "Brad, you're killing me that you don't play a little bit more there, because that was absolutely beautiful." Always love Rick's completely unhindered enthusiastic admiration. I think he is often speaking for many of us.
@williamsmith95619 ай бұрын
Congratulations, Rick, on a masterclass in music interviewing. I've never seen anyone who can make musicians happy to be there like you do. Musicians are usually looking at the door from the off, but they always enjoy their time with you and open up about the music.
@RickBeato9 ай бұрын
🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
@lbamusic9 ай бұрын
Another monster interview with a monster musician/pianist!! Starting at age 4, Ive been playing everything from Classical piano, Sacred Choral music, Classical pipe organ, Black Gospel and Jazz. Now in my 83rd year, im still learning and hungry for more, like this musical feast. There are so many ways to view music, from an intellectuall assesment of modes, chords etc, as Brad and Rick can do, to the 'sound' only method used by monsters like Erroll Garner and Monty Alexander, who didn't read but knew as much Music using perfect pitch and other God-given abilities, to be among the best players. Im somewhere in the middle of these two extremes, I know barely enough music theory to follow along with Brad and Rick as they talked, but im able to remember and play an awesome amount of chords and progressions strictly by the sounds, without regard to whether they conform to the tenets of music theory, as long as they work. And yes, hes so right about the open string tones on the guitar - to my ears they make the best piano keys to play in, and the richest sounding chords. Thank you again for such an outstanding interview!!
@symbiosis079 ай бұрын
Brad is my all time favorite pianist. I saw him live years ago in Shanghai with Joshua Redman. The piano that day is shamefully faulty but he made that hour amazing as always. I used to listen to that collab album over and over again, and cry out loud listening to Old West. This is a dream-come-true interview for me because finally Brad could talk so much into his musicality, techniques and specific inspirations with Rick as an knowing and understanding interviewer. The guitar open tuning explains a whole lot about his "timbre" and The Garden together with every tune in Finding Gabriel is like rain and fog fusing the world into it. Thank you so much, Rick.
@Dozta9 ай бұрын
Please Interview John Williams! I’m so interested in his early KILLIN Jazz piano years and how he ended up scoring all those movies.
@joshuacrispin28409 ай бұрын
We definitely need this
@phildupuis10849 ай бұрын
Loved this. As a pianist Brad Meldau has been a hero of mine and it is special to hear him talk about the secrets behind his magical playing.
@lungching71022 ай бұрын
So thank you Rick for create this beautiful moment of brightness
@TinyMaths9 ай бұрын
First heard Mehldau on a live take of I'll Be Seeing You, around 2000, on the Jazz FM radio station in London, when they still had 'dinner Jazz' on weekday evenings, with lots of gorgeous solo, duo, trio and quartet tunes; ballads mainly. That live take wrecked my brain, particularly Brad's solo. Whoever this guy was, to me, he was nuts; those crazy note choices were something I hadn't really heard before; I first awoke to jazz in 93. Been a fan of Brad ever since that happenstance find back in 2000. Fell off my chair the other day when Rick said he was having Brad on. What a treat to see the magician demonstrate the ins and outs of his mind-bending music!
@FeronniTV9 ай бұрын
The later solos in that version by Brad are mind blowing!
@dreamdeeplyrelaxingexpansi91039 ай бұрын
Like so many comments …this interview is the greatest I have watched…the combination of these 2 giants …Brad has and is redefining the language of Western Music…when it seemed we have run its length and breadth …with utter simplicity of triads and a seemless boundary of harmonic freedom to superimpose 2nds 4ths and whatever suits the ear and heart in a gentle easy to follow genius manner ….Thank you both of you for a couple of hours of bliss…
@russianthroughpropaganda78459 ай бұрын
I saw Brad just a couple of weeks ago in Princeton. I greatly enjoyed his new compositions (Fourteen Reveries)... but his cover of Golden Slumbers was just a show-stopper. Really unbelievable. Anyone who has a chance to catch him in concert should definitely treat themselves. Many thanks Rick, you're the best!
@cooldebt9 ай бұрын
I missed Brad and Joshua Redman when they were last in Sydney and I'm dying for them to come back
@biggerlonely72428 ай бұрын
His playing literally brought me to tears. I am SO GLAD you reminded us to watch this video. Thank you.
@eddyjuillerat8359 ай бұрын
"Hey Joe" around 35:00 is stunning beyond belief. Rick is making me discover musicians like no other. Thanks man.
@Hardiarm8 ай бұрын
My education by Rick Beato: Goes on and on. Have all the courses, plus more and more conversations with the maestros. Could not be better. Thank you.
@davidkrupp83299 ай бұрын
This may be your best interview Rick. The amount of musical ground covered is absolutely staggering. Also, Brad expresses his musical ideas with the aptitude we are used to hearing in his playing. Very insightful.
@christerekstrom33858 ай бұрын
I dont even like jazz, but when he explains and plays the piano its totally amazing, great interview
@Convisis9 ай бұрын
Been a lifelong fan since 99, my son’s middle name is Mehldau. Thanks for the beautiful music, Brad.
@mandostrikesback87448 ай бұрын
Yay!!! mention of Highway Rider!! Got to see him play a decade ago, Joshua Redman and him rocked out!
@QuincyJamesMusic9 ай бұрын
One of my heroes, and I'm a guitar player. I find it so very interesting that Brad is wanting to represent guitar instrumentation within his body of work as a pianist, when I've been trying to do the opposite for so long on the guitar, truly prodigious. Thank you so much for sharing this Rick 🙏🏽
@lorincohen30209 ай бұрын
He’s mastered the piano language so it seems like the guitar thing is a new challenge
@srenschandorf9 ай бұрын
(at 36:50) A beautiful definition of intuition as a kind of interlectual process without thinking. Thank you (both of you) for a beautiful and lyrical conversation!
@ssrohan99 ай бұрын
Finally! Was waiting for an in-depth interview with him. Mehldau is a true legend.
@Rockettman9 ай бұрын
Brad's version of Elliot Smith's "Independence Day" with Chris Thile nearly moves me to tears every time I listen to it, and I could listen to it on repeat. Probably my favorite cover of all time.
@sopranohannah9 ай бұрын
With this and his interview with Belà Fleck. I’d love for him to interview Chris.
@GildaFiermonte9 ай бұрын
I was listening first in a light way while doing some housekeeping things we have to do after work when we are away at the office all day long. And I had to stop what I was doing so as to listen with 100 % attention. For a while I thought I was someone who understands things in music. Rick Beato, you've got the power to make great people explain their art in a way anybody can understand and enjoy ! Thank you so much.
@geogi_bodies9 ай бұрын
This great interview along with many others by Rick deserve a place in Library of Congress.🙏🏻
@robertklein66939 ай бұрын
Hey Rick, more than any of your other videos that I've watched, and I've watched many, you looked and acted like a kid in a candy store -- eyes agape, amazed by Brad's on-the-spot improvization and matter-of-fact technical, intellectual explanations. Requesting encore after encore of Brad's demonstrations. You couldn't get enough! Just simple, pure wonderment at Brad's creative genius and incredible talent that you were witnessing. There's a reason why all of the top artists want to be interviewed by you. You are a musician's musician!
@billcunningham84858 ай бұрын
Geez Rick, your videos and education of music lovers just keeps getting better. I love music but I am sadly not a musician… however I love listening to this video. I may have to watch a few times but I am picking up a few things. Brad Mehldau is amazing. Played a video for my 12 year old son of Brad playing Blackbird on a Steinway Piano. My son, while waiting for the school bus said “this calms my brain… I love this”. How freaking cool is that?
@trainretail9 ай бұрын
OMG!!!!! Rick you just keep getting better and better! Brad Mehldau is awesome. Thanks for getting some keyboard guys in here.
@robertpendergrast25008 ай бұрын
Wow just wow Rick. Brad is incredible and your ability to communicate is exceptional
@darrengagliardi15409 ай бұрын
That was simply the best interview of this sort that I have ever heard. I’m so sad it had to come to an end.
@TheJunehog5 ай бұрын
Fabulous interview. Brad made a record with Chris Thile a couple years ago. Just saying, as I tend to here, you need to have Chris on. He's recorded the Bach sonatas & partitas for violin on mandolin, and they're fabulous! You won't regret it, Rick!
@showingpig019 ай бұрын
Mehldau is one of my favs. Thanks for this interview! Favorite Brad Mehldau quote is on improv - “first you need to know everything, then you need to forget everything”
@goldylocks67959 ай бұрын
You have done it again Rick! You sure know how to pick 'em! Brads musical style is genius and most beautiful indeed. I just ordered Jacobs Ladder and Finding Gabriel on CD-thanks to this video. Mark Guiliana on drums and Brad Mehldau together is a dream come true for me. I would probably snub anyone and everyone who tried to cover Tom Sawyer, however this version is a work of art. Mind officially blown here.
@joshualeigh9 ай бұрын
I've been lucky enough to see Brad live a few times and I've never been as spellbound and immersed by a live performance as at his concerts. This interview is everything I could want from a Rick video...the chance to hear Brad unpack his thinking, and the level of consideration that sits behind his musical choices is just a joy.
@ibassnote9 ай бұрын
I met Brad in 1991. He came to New Orleans to visit a friend of mine and the three of us hung out drinking re-heated coffee arguing about the validity of studying Jelly Roll Morton in the early 1990’s. Brad was having none of it. My friend forewarned me that this guy was going to be a very famous jazz pianist. They argued and I mostly listened. He has clearly grown enormously over the decades. So many insights here. I love how much he loves Radiohead.
@myke2k29 ай бұрын
I went to college with Brad and we were in the big band together under Charles Tolliver. He was always a sweet cat, in spite of him being a creative monster! So glad to see him interviewed by Rick! (That’s now two of my college classmates you’ve had, including Kurt Rosenwinkel). Rick - you really should try to get Jon Brion, who Brad mentions, on the channel. He has an amazing story and is otherworldly talented. Thanks for everything you do!
@OS-yg9fr9 ай бұрын
well i kissed him ((how he paid for the drugs)) so i win. im a guy btw.
@patricelarose2839 ай бұрын
Brad si exactly the guy I thought. A genius playing like a kid with sand except that is sand is diamond and gold. When I was playing with a Brasilian band around the world , is wife was always telling me “Brad was here to ear you guys” and I felt so blessed for that. This musician is one of the most inspired in jazz history. Thanks Rick for this moment out of this world. Thanks also cause you got so much talent to find the good questions. Just a request: if someday he’ll come back, I would love you make him speak about how he found a so natural and incredible connection with polyrhythms. Thanks forever.
@zjokka9 ай бұрын
The piano demonstrations keep me locked to the screen -- and I'm just a guitar player. What a great teacher!
@malibru8 ай бұрын
Watched Brad at Montreaux in 2000 along with Pat Metheny, George Benson, Keith Jarret, etc. (quite a festival!). Brad's music was so interesting with how he blended harmonics with his unique melodic phrasing. I never could put my finger on it until this interview and his discussion of this very blending. So refreshingly brilliant.
@dansickles89839 ай бұрын
Thanks for this Rick. I was at Brad's solo performance last night in Santa Cruz. The depth of his harmonic and rhythmic resources puts him among the greatest musicians ever. He closed with Hey Joe which was stunning.
@samjhylton9 ай бұрын
I feel like I have waited for this interview ever since I discovered Brad early in high school. These are many of the questions I have thought to annoy Brad with at the off chance I’d see him live, but that’s never the right time or place to even begin such a discussion. Thank you so much, Rick, for making accessible such a special, valuable conversation with this undeniable master.
@harmtek19 ай бұрын
Mind blowing concepts and ideas just dropped like it’s nothing. ❤ I’m crying at the depth of this. Listen hard, feel hard.
@ScottWoolsey-wo1bh4 ай бұрын
Mind blown. Brad's mastery of his instrument is otherworldly. His blurring of musical genres is so refreshing. Wow.
@ivandevilliers57419 ай бұрын
Rick is a brilliant interviewer. Truly lets the guest speak and you can see how much he listens to the answers to follow up the conversation to get the most out of the guest. Thanks Rick! 👏🏻
@patdaveydrums9 ай бұрын
Brad is a complete monster. I still listen to the live at the village vanguard recordings weekly. So fresh!
@coolnout37659 ай бұрын
Thank you for a great interview. Brad Mehldau, is a wonderful musician!
@pieroiuretig16525 күн бұрын
Ok you see greatness when you hear "I don't have so much technique".... Thankyou both Rick and Brad for having done this! ❤
@julianmarantika9 ай бұрын
This is a masterclass, rather than interview😳 and it is free. Thank you @rickbeato🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
@basicsforbaroqueimprovisation9 ай бұрын
Thank you Rick & Brad for sharing your insight and wisdom throughout this interview. Rick - it's so clear how much you love music...beautiful to see. Nice that here you get to fully live the Dick Cavett position next to the piano. Gratefully - John
@cospittner35262 ай бұрын
I’ve been wanting to hear this interview with Brad for 20 years. Thank you for unraveling the magic a bit.
@mikesitter52099 ай бұрын
Dude, you're interviews are outstanding. This guy is an amazing musician. Truly gifted.
@HalethDagore9 ай бұрын
Thank you, Rick for making this happen and thank you Brad for all the creative output.
@paulgerards64949 ай бұрын
The "open strings" are ringing on and on in our hearts! THX Brad and Rick!! INTERFERENCE 💓
@PAULENDERS-u8o8 ай бұрын
Can't believe you got him in for an interview....Incredibly well executed as well asking all the right questions and allowing him to play and speak so freely! We need more pianists coming on your channel! Awesome job truly keep it up!