Chris Barber Jazz & Blues Band- Royal Garden Blues - Featuring Sticky Wicket..!

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  • čas přidán 4. 03. 2021
  • The Chris Barber Jazz & Blues Band in a somewhat more casual setting.
    Subway Jazz Club.
    Alan "Sticky" Wicket unleashing his potential in ever wilder growing breaks and fills.
    High energy jazz...!!!
    Chris Barber - trombone, leader
    Pat Halcox - cornet
    Ian Wheeler - clarinet
    John Crocker - tenor saxophone
    Johnny McCallum - banjo
    John Slaughter - guitar
    Vic Pitt - bass
    Alan "Sticky" Wicket - drums
  • Hudba

Komentáře • 11

  • @user-vh6zt7ty3b
    @user-vh6zt7ty3b Před 7 měsíci +2

    Chris Barber - the best
    .......................................

  • @markt1387
    @markt1387 Před 3 lety +2

    Superb👍RIP Chris, we'll miss you x

  • @z94720
    @z94720 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Bravo!

  • @johnjensen4984
    @johnjensen4984 Před 3 lety +2

    👌👏

  • @JimTancock
    @JimTancock Před 3 lety +1

    Very sad to learn of Chris’s passing. R.I.P. 😥

  • @Li_ana351
    @Li_ana351 Před rokem

    Dit is pas echte muziek . Ooh ik heb mezelf zo vermaakt met jullie vrolijke muziek
    Het ritme zit erin zeg .
    In 1 woord geweldig 👌
    Hopelijk maken jullie als band nog muziek !
    Het spijt me van Chris Barber 🙏 R.I.P.
    Dank Bert voor wat vrolijkheid .)

  • @adamhowemusic283
    @adamhowemusic283 Před 8 měsíci

    what year was this, out of interest? Looks like 90s or early 00s?

  • @2ecnub2
    @2ecnub2 Před 4 měsíci

    Tempo too fast. Remember this was dance music. Listen to Beiderbecke to hear how it should sound.

    • @ABrandsma
      @ABrandsma  Před 4 měsíci

      Ah no. This was many years later than Bix, and the bands occupation was to play fulltime theatre concerts. They did 250 a years during those days. People didn't come for dancing anymore to the Chris Barber band. They had done so in the 1950's but in this state of the career it was listening only. They needed some real spectacular material for that.

    • @SAHBfan
      @SAHBfan Před 3 měsíci

      The song was written in 1919 - so an ‘authentic’ version might perhaps be ragtime piano. Anything after that would surely be a ‘modern’ interpretation, including Beiderbecke? I do struggle a bit with the concept of ‘traditional jazz’ - it implies a dedication a particular style, but jazz has ‘traditionally’ been a way of reinterpreting songs in a new way. “Trad jazz” almost seems like an oxymoron, leading to the idea ‘it shouldn’t go like that, it should go like this!’. 🤔