Thank you so much to both of you. Definitely the most interesting and unusual conversation with Brad I've ever heard. Thanks for asking deep and not easy questions, and Brad your honesty and openness is an inspiration. On a personal note, having been born near blind I have always learned all classical music - from Bach to Messiaen completely by ear, and transposing classical pieces has been an important aspect of my practice. Thanks from all my heart for this.
@olivernism3 ай бұрын
Thank you . This is moving and wonderfull.
@FlorisV8210 ай бұрын
BEST interview with Mr Mehldau online! Thanks!!
@matiasperezzalazar865710 ай бұрын
Tied with the one with Beato
@rickhood11 ай бұрын
I am relearning piano since 2021 after being away from it for more or less 30 years. I am mainly interested in Jazz, but Bach is the one composer in the classical realm I want to learn some of. I found this after listening to Rick Beato's interview of Mehldau. I hear what you are saying about Mehldau's love of music being in the forefront -- also his knowledges of music. I subscribed and looking forward to listening.
@jjzap293510 ай бұрын
Wonderful music conversation! I'm glad YT suggested the video after watching viewing Beato's interview with Brad. What an articulate elegant speaker Mr. Mehidau is. Thank You
@gcummings8810 ай бұрын
A great show!!!
@albertsanzmusic11 ай бұрын
Wonderful interview. Thanks to both of you!
@txsphere11 ай бұрын
Great interview, subscribed. I have never heard the idea Charlie Parker studied Bach. In a radio interview you can find here on KZbin Paul Desmond asked if Mr. Parker had quoted an etude book and said "yes it was all done with books." Which isn't surprising as much technique it takes to play jazz. Even in early jazz there was an influence of Creole players like Jelly Roll Morton who were allowed opportunities to be educated in music. There are two different styles of clarinet playing, the Creole being far more technical because of their education and opportunities to play, you can hear their experience playing Sousa in their improvisations. There is a wonderful story that Stravinsky was in the audience listening to Mr. Parker play and in his solo he quoted the Rite of Spring, blowing Stravinsky's mind.
@benarmeni337010 ай бұрын
Wonderful interview, great questions
@Pizaz011 ай бұрын
Been looking for that warm up for ages, awesome
@timbruer731811 ай бұрын
A thoroughly enjoyable conversation, thank you.
@therealrussellsmyth7 күн бұрын
Incredible interview kudos. What was the gavotte you mentioned please ?
@wtfbach4 күн бұрын
At which minute?
@sameerchaudhary4659 ай бұрын
Love the interview!! Maybe have Jonathan Kreisberg as the next guest? :)
@radioazma11 ай бұрын
So honest thank you
@benjammin4840 Жыл бұрын
Thank you!!❤
@edouardmonnin Жыл бұрын
Thanks 🙏🏻
@lagathy11 ай бұрын
fascinating...thankyou to both )
@svensvensson6705 Жыл бұрын
Pat Metheny next?
@vrixphillips5 ай бұрын
i know that the rest of the Bac(c)h-ants are going to crucify me for saying it, but... I've never liked Glenn Gould. I heard an album ONCE and I thought I was losing it because I had no clue about the humming, no one warned me lol so it soured me on him immediately and ever since then I've been...... very biased against him as if he's poison. He's way too idiosyncratic and I almost never enjoy his wayyy too slow interpretations. I feel like Bach would've been a speed demon for his day lol (zero proof.) Oh. And I DID almost do an All Bach program once. For a competition. And then I got seriously ill and didn't touch the piano for a couple years :/ I still can't touch the 6th Partita's Toccata without getting ptsd, which sucks, b/c I LOVE that piece.
@Jazzmaster5811 ай бұрын
Fellow Jazz musician here. I get baffled when I realize that most Jazz musicians believe in god, I also knew that Brad did too but I wasn't sure and now I am. Now I think that to play like Brad, you need to be intelligent and in these days with all the knowledge available believing in god is, in my opinion, a sign of great stupidity (no offense intended) and this is true for many Jazz musicians. How would Brad explain the fact that god doesn't exist ?
@hugofraser46211 ай бұрын
Do you not think there might be a connection? Creative people are often unable to account for their own inspiredness, relying on such expressions as "the music played through me". They are also highly resistant to reductive accounts or explanations of transcendent art. As to your point, I disagree that you have to be intelligent to be a great musician or that you have to be stupid to believe in God.
@wiseguy115311 ай бұрын
I invite you to read or watch John Lennox, who debates atheists; also William Lane Craig Explain DNA, origin of life, morality without reference to God, or why greatest artists like Bach were Christian.
@Jazzmaster5811 ай бұрын
@@hugofraser462 You're right, being a great musician doesn't make you implicitly intelligent, with the advent of KZbin and interviews being available I've been disappointed by many of my favorite artists when I learn of their ideas which I had idealized. Now, to believe in god, you have to be "a bit" stupid (nothing personal).
@Jazzmaster5811 ай бұрын
@@wiseguy1153 No thanks, I hate apologist idiocy.
@chairpeople11 ай бұрын
i don't believe in god, but know many smart people that do. part of intelligence is knowing how to operate your own mind/emotion, and if faith helps you live better, feel hopeful and like life has meaning, and doesn't make you behave harmfully towards others, seems like a good tool to have in the ol toolbox. facts and reason only get you so far- individual lives and music seem "rationally" meaningless, music is information encoded air pressure over time-- why would someone without some emotional (irrationally so) relationship to information devote themselves so fully?