Chris Potter The Wheel Solo During a Masterclass

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  • čas přidán 2. 09. 2022
  • Chris Potter - tenor sax
    Rhythm Section - SDSU Jazz Big Band
    Filmed and Edited by Portraits of Music, Nonprofit 501c3
    Follow Portraits of Music:
    linktr.ee/PortraitsofMusic
    April 14, 2022

Komentáře • 101

  • @reginaldbrown8012
    @reginaldbrown8012 Před rokem +63

    She killed it on the drums 😊

    • @sidighermaoui9945
      @sidighermaoui9945 Před rokem +3

      yessss she wase exellent on the drums !!!!

    • @TboneWertman
      @TboneWertman Před rokem

      Billy Kilson like

    • @rk702
      @rk702 Před 5 měsíci +1

      She needed to tone it down a little when someone is soloing. Especially, when it's a non amplified instrument.

    • @ThomAvella
      @ThomAvella Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@rk702sax/drum duos are supposed to go hard. they are soloing together

  • @ChrisF_1982
    @ChrisF_1982 Před rokem +121

    I can just imagine being the guy standing next to him, knowing that at some point he will be expected to play after Chris Potter. Talk about pressure.

    • @_Thomas.
      @_Thomas. Před rokem +1

      Ish brah, that feelin’…😂
      You start thinking about a particular line you can just use to kick in with that same energy the player before you set, and just build something along the way after

    • @ChrisF_1982
      @ChrisF_1982 Před rokem +1

      @@_Thomas. I know, but what I was thinking what might be going through the guy's head, considering Potter's status.

    • @zvonimirtosic6171
      @zvonimirtosic6171 Před rokem

      You suffer from the celebrity worship syndrome. That has nothing to do with the music.

    • @alexisgoodfellow2195
      @alexisgoodfellow2195 Před rokem +11

      I actually know and am good friends with "that guy" - his name's Dylan Soto and he runs a jazz jam in Vista, CA at the Aztec Brewing Company every 1st and 3rd Sunday with his group, the "Soto Six". He's KILLER.

    • @zvonimirtosic6171
      @zvonimirtosic6171 Před rokem +6

      ​@@alexisgoodfellow2195 You Americans abuse the language and music so much, that your exaggerations and superlatives mean nothing. So when you say "he is a killer", it really means he is able to play scales and here and there produce a decent sound on an instrument.

  • @raymondkarlsson9794
    @raymondkarlsson9794 Před rokem +38

    Great drumming

  • @ksenos69
    @ksenos69 Před rokem +8

    I wish the joy of these youngsters, seeing, hearing, and playing with Chris Potter, will become knowledge and wisdom to a step beyond.

  • @BassByTheBay
    @BassByTheBay Před rokem +11

    *Love* Chris' improvisation. Interesting ideas with purpose.

  • @knoel8329
    @knoel8329 Před rokem +5

    1:48 love this moment where the drummer skips a beat and Chris readjusts. Not knocking the drummer, its just interesting to see how these situations play out. For a couple seconds they’re both in time but in different spots, and you can literally see Chris realize this and stop playing briefly to readjust.

    • @jch6275
      @jch6275 Před rokem +1

      Yes, I am always amazed at how the greats can process what they hear at the same time as they are deeply into an impro.

  • @crockmans1386
    @crockmans1386 Před rokem +2

    i love mr. potter ....... and i hope one day cool jazz will be back.

  • @SeanLeonDrumz
    @SeanLeonDrumz Před 8 měsíci +1

    He uses so many alternate fingerings. Awesome!

  • @soulfulsaxophone34
    @soulfulsaxophone34 Před rokem +1

    Nicely done 🎷

  • @rpj-sax4lyfe
    @rpj-sax4lyfe Před rokem +1

    Absolutely incredible🎷🙌🏾

  • @danieldacosta8403
    @danieldacosta8403 Před rokem

    Very, Very good!!!

  • @drphelps9017
    @drphelps9017 Před rokem +1

    Ran across his music by accident years ago. Really glad I did.

  • @jonunderscore
    @jonunderscore Před rokem +3

    Shredded.

  • @thomassicard3733
    @thomassicard3733 Před rokem +1

    Great job, all. I do absolutely love Chis Potter's art.

  • @calientexl7217
    @calientexl7217 Před rokem +1

    Magistral excelente

  • @parks-music-cafe
    @parks-music-cafe Před rokem +3

    Nice performance !!!!!!!
    I enjoyed your music.
    Thank you for sharing nice music.
    Good night~~

  • @carzeen3601
    @carzeen3601 Před rokem

    OMG!

  • @ikespivak
    @ikespivak Před rokem

    Yeeaahhh!

  • @hefewiseman
    @hefewiseman Před rokem +3

    very good drummer.. Chris is killing it..great soloist

  • @hudsoncampos2201
    @hudsoncampos2201 Před měsícem

    👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

  • @saxophone3043
    @saxophone3043 Před rokem +1

    안녕하세요
    훌륭한 연주 잘 들었습니다,,,,

  • @tombrakey6022
    @tombrakey6022 Před rokem +13

    Must’ve been awesome hearing Chris Potter 6 feet away from you

  • @MrPedal88
    @MrPedal88 Před rokem +7

    I first saw Chris 29 years ago in a three- piece sax section with Bob Sheppard and Cornelius Bumpus, with Steely Dan. I don't know how old he was back then, but he looked really young. If he was good enough for Becker and Fagan, he's good enough for me.

    • @FrictionFive
      @FrictionFive Před rokem

      Not a bad saxophone section! Those Steely Dan guys certainly have good taste.

    • @FrictionFive
      @FrictionFive Před rokem +1

      I once saw Cornelius Bumpus playing at 9:30am in the subway interchange at 96th st and Broadway. He played round midnight with 3-part voice leading. It made a big impression on me. I would have listened fir more than 5 minutes, but I needed to get to my job. That’s life in NYC.

  • @imbees2
    @imbees2 Před rokem +1

    Chris potter hey now

  • @Zxx459
    @Zxx459 Před 7 měsíci

    The drums is the best

  • @stangetz534
    @stangetz534 Před rokem +2

    i would shit my pants if I was that kid in the back and had to solo after.

  • @hudsoncampos2201
    @hudsoncampos2201 Před rokem

  • @baccaratfunk
    @baccaratfunk Před 4 měsíci

    Trolling? If you are serious then you do not understand what melody means. Melody in improvisation is best demonstrated through varied and unpredictable yet developed phrasing without repetition. Add in theme to and variation to satisfy the magic of expressing an idea. The "non-melodic" portions are in fact superb mastery of melody in both execution, range, dynamic, timing, and variation. Types of interval relationships are demonstrated including octaves, Minor thirds, major Thirds. He plays modulations, chromatic climaxes, and sequences all with connected transitions and contrast. He never overplays for the sake of intensity and he continually says something in-between spaces.
    This is an example of phenomenal melodic knowledge and yes: creativity. At this level, the experience and work are so vast that it is routine. To express passion afterwards would be very personal and reveal that deviation from his intention and imagination were minimal, that he did not play anything other than what he intended. Such a feat would be very personally satisfying . . . Instead he is merely happy to share his gift without ego or audacity.
    What's happening is he is navigating his melodic inspirations. It is highly likely he executed what he imagined many times . . . But in his own mind it was far from perfect or "executed". In terms of composition. Of course, he is respnding to his own play and pre-hearing where the melody should go whilst incorporating less common yet intriguing harmonic relationships, outlined multiple times.
    This my friend is mastery. This is what I dreamed of . . . Alas, Chris has always been a genius. I still dream of it . . . But memory and time to do it are huge requirements. I have tasted what it feels like to play this way . . . But despite modesty or calm energy afterwards . . . He truly did "execute" spontaneous melodic composition while avoiding cliche and undirected intellectual indulgence.
    Between breaths there is deliberate intention and purposeful phrasing.
    So . . . This is anything but non-melodic. And yes . . . We are always practicing. Like a Doctor . . . They perform surgery. We perform spontaneous composition using the words and vocabulary we have acquired to form unique poetry lines . . . Making them worth reading is the ultimate challenge.

  • @zmerz
    @zmerz Před rokem

    Guys what the name of tune?

  • @imbees2
    @imbees2 Před rokem

    Alright now

  • @jakecostanza802
    @jakecostanza802 Před rokem +1

    Nice soloing and nice riff. Is that a pentatonic in the riff?

  • @MrBoblesax31
    @MrBoblesax31 Před rokem +3

    a vous êtes beaux avec vos masques des moutons

  • @markmoore7074
    @markmoore7074 Před rokem +2

    I'll be whistling this tune all day now! lol I've been tenor for years, this kind of music is like modern art, I just don't get it?

  • @mimicro83
    @mimicro83 Před rokem +1

    😷😷😷😷👈👈🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤯🤮

  • @trobson9952
    @trobson9952 Před rokem

    Ugh

  • @nubopgritty634
    @nubopgritty634 Před rokem +1

    Incredibly technically proficient but alas, all the passion of a calculus exam.

    • @nicholassverdloff2566
      @nicholassverdloff2566 Před rokem +2

      Define passion? Because to me, Chris is one of the most genuine and passionate players that has ever lived

    • @nubopgritty634
      @nubopgritty634 Před rokem +1

      @@nicholassverdloff2566 I mean passion in communicating an emotional and artistic idea to the listener. When I hear Chris Potter I hear someone who is obviously quite passionate about the saxophone and exploring various musical patterns and his command of the sax is impressive. But I never hear anything beautiful or sensuous or soulful or warm. I do hear a guy who is obviously very driven and disciplined. and that is interesting but only in small doses, which is how I feel about calculus too. To each his own. People like different things and feel different things from them. I've tried listening to him a fair amount and have seen him play live before and he's kind of boring to me, but I'm guessing not to you.

    • @nicholassverdloff2566
      @nicholassverdloff2566 Před rokem +2

      “To each his own”
      Exactly.
      A person can’t elicit emotion in another person; it’s always a choice to feel an emotion.
      No player can make a listener hear “soul” or “beauty” in their playing, that is the emotional choice of the listener. And even if a player were to try to elicit these emotions, they would surely fail in the ears of many who just don’t connect with them. And even further to that; would trying to play with soul and emotion be contrived? Would that intent be insincere if it’s not pure and natural? I don’t know… but I think most people at the highest levels of artistic expression are playing with a deep level of soul and emotion.
      Sincerity is key here. If Potter is playing with sincerity then he is playing with “soul” and “beauty” in his own concept.
      So how would you teach someone to play with soul and beauty for the listener? How would you define it?

    • @jro1472
      @jro1472 Před rokem +5

      @@nubopgritty634 Holy hell, come off it. Talk about pretentious drivel. You're fully within your right to dislike Chris as an artist, he's not exactly in my Mount Rushmore either, but his playing is brimming with palpable fervor and sincerity and to claim otherwise is just moronic.

    • @nubopgritty634
      @nubopgritty634 Před rokem

      @@jro1472 Chris Potter is the hero of jazz college dudes worldwide ... so keep enjoying his extreme competence, keep basking in his brimming palpable fervor and be relieved that you are not a moron!
      Oh Chris , I'm not worthy, I'm not worthy.....

  • @jrgreiner
    @jrgreiner Před rokem +1

    Face diapers.. SMH.

  • @espr7564
    @espr7564 Před rokem +3

    Is he practicing? not so melodic ☹️

    • @langholmarmstrong2235
      @langholmarmstrong2235 Před rokem +18

      bruh no way you’re fr

    • @zangsax
      @zangsax Před rokem +20

      Chris has practiced everything and a lot more than you could imagine to a level of proficiency you could hardly imagine so he plays what comes to him with no intention of entertaining or pleasing anyone, He hopes you like it but he doesn,t condescend. In the studio when you have to play whatever the producer likes or can hum you do your job but that,s not creative for most jazz musicians. Sorry for diatribe. Best wishes to all- nothing wrong with melody.

    • @kuumbafranklacy490
      @kuumbafranklacy490 Před rokem +1

      Interesting you said that......I agree

    • @jonathandeutsch3991
      @jonathandeutsch3991 Před rokem

      Not melodic enough… 🤔

    • @emberflame8396
      @emberflame8396 Před rokem +7

      2:31 if yo think he isn't playing melodically, you are deaf.

  • @len2026
    @len2026 Před 6 měsíci +1

    the crackling sound of a snare drum, like a shot from a Kalashnikov machine gun. Why not make it softer and in balance with the whole world. How balanced percussion instruments sound from professional masters such as Steve Gadd and others. These jazz performers are fed up with the rock sound of their drums. In short, you are already annoying with your cracking sounds. It’s like hitting a table with a sledgehammer. Exactly the same sound