Stan Getz & Charlie Byrd on the Perry Como Show

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  • čas přidán 17. 05. 2012
  • "That's the South American...stuff!" So begins Perry Como's introduction to the bossa nova performance that would follow. While "stuff" obviously wasn't the word he was searching for, he can be forgiven for his inability to pluck a more descriptive word from the ether since bossa nova was new to North American shores in 1962 when this performance took place.
    As American purveyors of this new sound, saxophonist Stan Getz and guitarist Charlie Byrd teamed up to make the 1962 "Jazz Samba" LP, which is regarded as the first exposure most Americans had to the bossa nova sound. In this video, the band performs one of the tunes from the Jazz Samba LP - Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Desafinado," followed by some fooling around when Perry Como joins in.
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Komentáře • 132

  • @jazsax8634
    @jazsax8634 Před 2 lety +10

    Getz, what a humongous sound, a massive wall of thick ass tone! Oh to have that sound. 🙏

  • @gintgotham
    @gintgotham Před 9 lety +33

    Real pros! Perry, Getz, and Byrd! Don't we wish we had this kind of television today!

    • @bobblues1158
      @bobblues1158 Před rokem

      For Real! But real musicians cost money. It is cheaper to sell amateur shows for the networks.

    • @MontyRaddimus
      @MontyRaddimus Před měsícem

      Mezzo TV

  • @123must
    @123must Před 10 lety +38

    Getz was the perfection on tenor sax !

  • @SuperCarver2011
    @SuperCarver2011 Před 8 lety +31

    Charlie and Stan were a great musical discovery in the late 60s.Both Stan's ad lib sax and Charlie's playing style were unique and distinguishable from anyone else of that era.

    • @MauriatOttolink
      @MauriatOttolink Před 6 lety +2

      SuperCarver2011
      Very true ...in fact any era. What's the best we got now? huh!

  • @kb1996
    @kb1996 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Love it!! So cool!! What great musicians...1962...wonderful!!

  • @steinmetzzz
    @steinmetzzz Před 11 lety +4

    They broke the mold after these two guys were made. Best ever!!!

  • @rayopezzo4052
    @rayopezzo4052 Před 8 lety +8

    Perry Como always kept his Penn barber's license active for his lifetime according to accounts I've read. Felt he always had a career alternative to singing. Genuine class and his warmth comes across on TV as well as in person. R.I.P. Perry.

  • @MilesBellas
    @MilesBellas Před rokem +3

    This is epic.
    Stan = fluid and virtuosic
    Musical history!
    Rare...... very few films of them playing together remain........

  • @SpeegBJ
    @SpeegBJ Před 6 lety +6

    Exquisite footage, Como in the mix..so smooth himself.

  • @charlesbarry6730
    @charlesbarry6730 Před 7 lety +2

    These two men were the names associated with bossa nova. The combination worked well. Sadly , they have left us. RIP.

  • @deep6thisdeep6this92
    @deep6thisdeep6this92 Před rokem +2

    wow! what times those were! como had 'em all on his show. ...all the best musicians.

  • @IanBoyterJazzsax
    @IanBoyterJazzsax Před 11 lety +4

    What a masterly performance from all in this clip. Stan Getz is red hot and so is Charlie Byrd. They were having a really good night. This is even better than the studio recorded version.

  • @chuckreddmusic
    @chuckreddmusic Před 12 lety +3

    I loved Charlie and I miss him. Stan is brilliant as always. Thank you.

  • @pianopappy
    @pianopappy Před 9 lety +36

    What a treat to see this again after 52+ years; although, I've heard it many times over. The night it aired, I recorded the audio on a reel-to-reel tape recorder; and, it became a prized recording, including the guys' banter and collaboration with Perry Como. (How about the way Stan takes out "It Happened in Monterey".) The program ("Kraft Music Hall") aired, according to the notes in my tape box, on October 17, 1962--and it was live.

    • @ramistucky9104
      @ramistucky9104 Před 6 lety

      pianopappy do you have that original recording somewhere? Or perhaps know where to find it?
      I want to know what Como is clapping. In no way does it sound like a clave, Brazilian or Cuban. It’s hard to tell exactly because the CZcams video starts somewhat abruptly. I’m doing a research project on American understandings of bossa. So any help would be appreciated.

    • @Dtruthseek
      @Dtruthseek Před 6 lety +1

      What Getz does on the bridge, the bars before it modulates up to C major, is real artistry. This guy composed some great melodies as he improvised. And his sound I don't think has ever been equaled, though guys played in different styles. Dexter Gordon also had a great sound. But Getz, wow. Stan, there'll never be another you. Como fits pretty comfortably into the mix. Great singer.

    • @pianopappy
      @pianopappy Před 6 lety

      Sorry, I can't help. I still have my tape; but, my off-the-air recording was audio only--way before home video recorders were available--and I started recording right where this posting of the kinescope recording begins. If you're asking what Como is clapping at the beginning of the clip, it looks to me like he's merely clapping his hands. Perhaps you can tell me what he is playing later when he sang with the group.

    • @nicolaselisabeth7897
      @nicolaselisabeth7897 Před 9 měsíci

      Stan getz bossa nova magique magnifique ❤
      Perry Como super merci

  • @b.bailey8244
    @b.bailey8244 Před 7 lety +5

    this video clip is golden! thanks!

  • @nanto88
    @nanto88 Před 3 lety +2

    ahh such a golden age of music

  • @lauraoliver1380
    @lauraoliver1380 Před 11 lety +2

    I love this clip AND this song!

  • @CosasdeDios1089
    @CosasdeDios1089 Před 7 měsíci

    I heard this the first time when I was 12. I was instantly mesmerized. I heard it dozens of t7mes ans the LP got damaged. Many years later i found a CD. Listened to ituntil it got damaged 😂.
    These days, I am realizing a dream, learning bossa in a guitar i recently bought. I'll invest my last years doing my best to play bossa nova and this record is in my heart forever

  • @getzfan1
    @getzfan1 Před 11 lety

    Love it! Thanks for posting!

  • @xavierhamel3169
    @xavierhamel3169 Před 7 lety +1

    Merveilleux ....... des musiciens exceptionnels qui auront marques l'histoire de la bossa et de la musique

  • @BGetz2011
    @BGetz2011 Před 12 lety +2

    What a fun clip!! Thanks for posting!

  • @jasondavidjian403
    @jasondavidjian403 Před 10 lety +1

    awesome. Live music with the utmost musicianship. People forget how great live recordings are compared the processing music goes through now in most popular situations.

  • @promerops
    @promerops Před 11 lety +3

    Just a few notes and you know it's the great Charlie Byrd - a unique style. Stan Getz is similarly distinctive - beautiful tone - always. Incidentally, why does GW Bush always put me in mind of Perry Como?

  • @johnbartholomew4831
    @johnbartholomew4831 Před 9 lety +1

    retrorex , that is new information to me. Thanks much for sharing.

  • @cesarsaldanha
    @cesarsaldanha Před 11 lety +2

    Fantastico, parabens pelo video.

  • @barrygouthro6315
    @barrygouthro6315 Před rokem

    ❤❤❤❤❤. Thank you 😊

  • @123must
    @123must Před 10 lety

    Thanks a lot !

  • @alejandra6048
    @alejandra6048 Před 11 lety +2

    Simplemente expectacular, me llena el espiritu,uff

  • @alexandrecaxito9101
    @alexandrecaxito9101 Před 8 lety

    ...lendário...maravilhoso...

  • @theHellzaPoppinjazz4u
    @theHellzaPoppinjazz4u Před 8 lety

    great. thank you Istash ;)

  • @pccbassbone
    @pccbassbone Před 12 lety +1

    You tripped me out with Bill Reichenbach. I took bass trombone lessons from his son at Cal State, Long Beach.

  • @ckvaldiviagt
    @ckvaldiviagt Před 11 lety +1

    Old favorite!

  • @sallemjazz1
    @sallemjazz1 Před 11 lety

    some classy stuff!!!!!

  • @mashtones
    @mashtones Před 10 lety +12

    The album Jazz Samba was recorded in a hall at All Saints church in Washington D.C.. Done mostly in single takes with no formal rehearsal Getz's improvised solos created the template for how much of the Bossa Nova that followed would sound. Byrd and Getz never played together again after this TV show.

    • @johnbartholomew4831
      @johnbartholomew4831 Před 10 lety +3

      Never again played together? How curious. They meld so well here.

    • @retrorex
      @retrorex Před 9 lety +6

      John Bartholomew
      They weren't friends, that's for sure, but bitter enemies. There were legal (and ego) battles between the two over the Jazz Samba album. Google it to check out the details. I'm surprised, given the bad blood between these two, that they even played this TV show! They DO has musical chemistry together, though.

    • @MauriatOttolink
      @MauriatOttolink Před 6 lety +3

      retrorex
      Amazing ..I'd no idea.. Busted my life-times dream's about them.

    • @loumcconnell503
      @loumcconnell503 Před 3 lety +3

      @@MauriatOttolink Stan tryed to stiff Charlie for his fee ! It took court action by Charlie to get his money ; Getz at this time was just an asshole ,

    • @MauriatOttolink
      @MauriatOttolink Před 3 lety +4

      @@loumcconnell503 Hello Lou.....
      That was not the worst of Stan's actions. And he knew it in later in life.
      According to one anecdote, when he learned that his life was limited by the cancer, the story goes
      that he said to a friend "Guess I'd better call around all the people I've upset and apologise.
      The reply was "Well don't use a Pay phone!"
      Of course we don't know how much truth there is in these tales.
      His artistry as just bewitching. Coltrane said of him "Well, we'd all play like
      that if we could!

  • @gannonb4u
    @gannonb4u Před 3 lety +1

    Another favorite duet is Jim Hall and Paul Desmond

  • @theantiantihero
    @theantiantihero Před 10 lety +1

    I absolutely love this stuff. Thanks!

  • @peterfogarty4969
    @peterfogarty4969 Před 11 lety

    what a story!!!

  • @georgegrunditz
    @georgegrunditz Před 5 měsíci

    1:57 Yup, I'm adding that line to my arsenal.

  • @user-zq5mn1nn2m
    @user-zq5mn1nn2m Před 8 měsíci

    2 genies

  • @tablacy
    @tablacy Před 10 lety +2

    Thanks for answering one of my questions about the identity of the other musicians. Guess I got it wrong when I figured the bassist was Keter Betts. That’s one down, two to go!

  • @ohiozetapdt
    @ohiozetapdt Před 6 lety +1

    wow a moment in history and that forgot to mention Antonio Carlos Jobim and Christopher Columbus.

  • @PolMrPol
    @PolMrPol Před 11 lety

    Wat moois vooral voor de liefhebbers is dat uniek thanks.

  • @markchergosky8659
    @markchergosky8659 Před 10 lety +3

    I would have liked to hear Stan solo over the changes!

    • @MauriatOttolink
      @MauriatOttolink Před 6 lety +1

      Mark Chergosky
      Agreed...Mark, He doesn't here or on the CD version
      (They were LPs in those days.)
      In this neither did Byrd. Don't think that he left the chord at all despite a magnificent solo.
      It's a technique I can't understand.
      Mind you Getz plays the head and also inserts genius chord-change figures at the same time!
      In Brubeck's Take Five, Paul Desmond does exactly the same.
      No changes in an utterly masterful solo.
      It happens a lot and it baffles me why.
      Can't argue with the Giants, I guess!!

    • @zvonimirtosic6171
      @zvonimirtosic6171 Před 9 měsíci

      It's the other way round. Bossa is not American east coast jazz. The guitar, not the saxophone, plays changes below the melody that rules the song.

  • @wayneandrus240
    @wayneandrus240 Před 4 měsíci

    Getz has a great tenor sound.

  • @TheodorusRex
    @TheodorusRex Před 6 lety

    Damn, son! Wow... Amazing! atlantic beach 4.20.2018

  • @barrygouthro6315
    @barrygouthro6315 Před rokem

    ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @retrorex
    @retrorex Před 10 lety +6

    Stan Getz sounds much, MUCH better in his solo here on "One Note Samba" than he did on the Jazz Samba album. This version is vastly superior, as Stan sounds much more relaxed and swinging! BTW, Perry had Luis Bonfa, a much better guitarist than Charlie Byrd, on his show a week or two prior to this one. Thanks for posting this!

  • @TheCaterham6
    @TheCaterham6 Před 8 lety +1

    I must say..this is "Cool"........!
    I have a Selmer Tenor/Alto..5yrs now....nearly there!....?

    • @MauriatOttolink
      @MauriatOttolink Před 6 lety

      TheCaterham6
      Wish you good luck..You'll need it..
      I've played Pro and Semi pro for 57 years..Still busy..
      Not a hope in hell of matching Getz.
      Nearest I got was an adult student of mine was asked "Do you listen to Stan Getz?"
      He answered "No but my teacher does!" I must have passed on SOMETHING!

  • @JosephSimsPHS1950
    @JosephSimsPHS1950 Před 11 lety

    DC disc jockey Felix Grant introduced Charlei Byrd to Brazil's Bossa Nova; Charlie introduced Stan to the same stuff and the rest is history. I had the great pleasure of watching Charlie at the Showboat, a few blocks from my DC apartment. Later I met the Brazilian bombshell who imported me to Brazil and became my wife.

    • @pianopappy
      @pianopappy Před 6 lety

      I well-remember Felix Grant and his hip show on WMAL. I also got to see Charlie at the Showboat Lounge one night. (I think he owned a piece of the place.) However, my best remembrance of the Showboat was the night (in 1960, I believe) that Mose Allison played there. And I think the outstanding bassist and drummer he played with were local DC guys.

  • @8aDe7
    @8aDe7 Před 11 lety

    what a big hand !

  • @garyiampaglia9030
    @garyiampaglia9030 Před 10 lety

    Vintage Getz!!!

  • @tommyspadaccini2121
    @tommyspadaccini2121 Před 11 měsíci

    OMG! Seems yesterday.
    In 1930's i lived in Brooklin.
    At that time, me and my friends, we usually spend the nights at the famous Dinky Donky Skbadaboob Da Boob Dabidubidi Dubidi Da Da Da Dinah's palace. Better know as DDSDBDDDDD, or for the real intimate customers, only Dinki.
    A hidden cubbyhole on the 56Th avenue.
    Famous artists usually performed there, people like Armostrong, Ella Fitzgerald, Korn, Iron Maiden, Etta James, Eminem, The Beatles, N.W.A., Bad Bunny, Travis Scott and many others.
    That's used to be the best place where we secretly drank whiskey. You know what i mean? Prohibition and stuff. Forget about it, we usually sayin' as Italians Immigrants.
    What a wonderful time of my life!

  • @lorenzomagazzeni5425
    @lorenzomagazzeni5425 Před 5 lety

    Every body in Italy - back then - loved Perry Como, not because he was a paisa'
    Lovely person.

  • @josephhsu9060
    @josephhsu9060 Před 9 lety +1

    Great jaza, bossa nova's original.

  • @gabrielituarte
    @gabrielituarte Před 11 lety

    Ritmo!

  • @ploppill34
    @ploppill34 Před 2 lety

    👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @jasondavidjian403
    @jasondavidjian403 Před 10 lety +4

    I do think Byrd is superb as well and it as good Bonfa in his own style, though I prefer Bonfa just in taste

  • @camilofloresaguila207
    @camilofloresaguila207 Před 3 lety +2

    what song is the one of the minute 7:44? Help me pls

  • @NORTH02
    @NORTH02 Před 2 lety

    culture is obviously devolving

  • @postatility9703
    @postatility9703 Před 4 měsíci

    Perry Como sounds strangely like Ed Sullivan, but without the mistakes❤

  • @bobdimarzio3972
    @bobdimarzio3972 Před 10 lety

    hey Joe , have you got an old tube hi fi with altecs or ev's to spin those great discs like jazz samba on ?

  • @djrobbio7895
    @djrobbio7895 Před 5 lety +2

    That bossa nova take on a Sinatra standard was absolutely phenomenal. Wishing it was actually a single or recorded for an album...

    • @stevestegman8181
      @stevestegman8181 Před 2 lety

      Actually, Charlie Byrd and Stan Getz had the first US version of the Jobim hit on 1962. Sinatra didn’t do his Jobim album until @1967-‘69.

  • @tablacy
    @tablacy Před 12 lety +1

    Does anyone happen to know the identity of the musicians playing bass, drums and second guitar in this clip? I figure it's likely Keter Betts on bass and either Bill Reichenbach (Sr.) or Buddy Deppenschmidt on drums, but I'm clueless about the second guitarist. Perhaps it was Charlie's brother Gene/Joe? Or Charlie's friend Herb Ellis?

  • @JarvisRose
    @JarvisRose Před 11 lety +1

    Perry Como was really a hip cat.

  • @kopacz9297
    @kopacz9297 Před rokem

    Anyone know if there is a transcription for this?

  • @ellenangell2079
    @ellenangell2079 Před 8 lety

    show...espetacular...BOSSA NOVA...gostinho de ser Brasil.

  • @clarinetssaxesandflutesohmy

    "Bossa Nova Freilach" is hilarious! Anyone know who the bass and drummer are?

    • @mrrickygee.
      @mrrickygee. Před 10 lety

      it's a shame the announcer didn't say their names

    • @clarinetssaxesandflutesohmy
      @clarinetssaxesandflutesohmy Před 10 lety

      I agree. Maybe they're on album, now that I think about it. I'll look to see if I have it.

    • @gvxrlole1264
      @gvxrlole1264 Před 10 lety +1

      Elsewhere in the comments someone claimed that their dad, Tommy Williams, is the bassist. And another comment suggests that the drummer is either Bill Reichenbach (Sr.) or Buddy Deppenschmidt.

    • @clarinetssaxesandflutesohmy
      @clarinetssaxesandflutesohmy Před 10 lety

      gvxrlole thank you!

    • @justhearmeout1
      @justhearmeout1 Před 7 lety +4

      bass tommy williams... proud to say my late father.

  • @marcomio
    @marcomio Před 10 lety +9

    Desafinado?

    • @RobKandell
      @RobKandell Před 5 lety +1

      marcomio - It didn’t sound slightly out of tune to me. :-)

    • @johncowhig841
      @johncowhig841 Před 3 lety +2

      @@RobKandell Jobim wrote it after a newspaper critic in Brazil said he wrote music that was " Out of tune." So he named the new tune " Out of tune" Desifinado.

    • @RobKandell
      @RobKandell Před 3 lety +1

      John Cowhig - I knew it was a response to critics, mostly due to his love of Chopin’s quirky, chromatic tone leading, but I didn’t know the specifics of the story.
      Thanks for sharing it.

  • @kiskasolnychka7374
    @kiskasolnychka7374 Před 4 měsíci

    Please, what's name of this track? Thank.

  • @SickChikin535
    @SickChikin535 Před 8 lety

    can someone tell me what type of tenor stan getz used?

    • @brickboo1
      @brickboo1 Před 8 lety +1

      +Sick Chickin There's only one type of tenor. Are you asking what brand? Selmer, Buecher, King, Martin Conn etc. Of course they each made student horns intermittent and professional too. Stan Played a Selmer Mark VI I think.

    • @SickChikin535
      @SickChikin535 Před 8 lety

      +Boo Hargis oh okay, thanks

  • @bebobalula
    @bebobalula Před rokem

    Does anyone know, who the drummer is?

  • @garyrey129
    @garyrey129 Před 4 lety

    one of the most famous bossa nova tunes that didnt feature a Brazilian

  • @jiyujizai
    @jiyujizai Před 4 lety

    🤝☝️😀🍑

  • @brendancorr5160
    @brendancorr5160 Před 9 lety +2

    perry had a watm sense of humour

    • @johnbartholomew4831
      @johnbartholomew4831 Před 9 lety +2

      That's the truth. He had a certain non-egotistical character that made him appealing to some of us, at least. Low key and likeable.

    • @JiveDadson
      @JiveDadson Před 9 lety +1

      +John Bartholomew Perry Como became a barber at age 10 when he had to stand on a box to cut hair. (Reminds me of working in my Dad's filling station at the same age. I had to climb onto a box to wash windshields.) By thirteen he had his own barber shop. He and his brothers had to support his family.
      After he became famous, he declined interviews.

    • @retrorex
      @retrorex Před 5 lety

      Your last sentence is not true. There are many interviews with Perry after he became famous, among them two consecutive issues of Down Beat (1957), three consecutive issues of Saturday Evening Post (1960), Collier's magazine (1956), two issues of Look (1958), several interviews in the National Enquirer(!) during the 70s, liner notes by Benny Green to The Best of the British (1977) and many more. Don't know where you got your information from regarding interviews.

  • @smythed.8512
    @smythed.8512 Před 6 lety

    who's in the band.

  • @swingmanic
    @swingmanic Před 11 lety

    Charlie Byrd had a grievance with Stan Getz over not getting a share of the Grammy award for "Desafinado" and he filed a law suit against MGM/Verve for monies due on the "Jazz Samba" album...Byrd claimed that as he was billed as co-leader on the album, he was entitled to a portion of the royalties!...It was settled out of court in August 1967 with Byrd getting $50,000 plus a portion of future royalties.

  • @lucianosery56
    @lucianosery56 Před rokem

    best*

  • @lukasalihein
    @lukasalihein Před 10 lety

    Yeah, sort of, but Getz had way more technical chops and versatility to go with it.

  • @saulduff493
    @saulduff493 Před 11 lety

    Does anyone else think Stan sounds a hell of a lot like Paul Desmond on tenor?

  • @petterilindholm4994
    @petterilindholm4994 Před 5 lety +3

    Charlie Byrd's sense of time is hillbilly in Desafinado (the first tune they play). Stan Getz on his part is groovin to a mellow bossa nova feel and immediately when the bass player begins his short solo after Byrd's, the rhythmic feel goes back to the funky bossa/jazz feel. Charlie Byrd obviously has his chops and is a great guitar player, but he can't really handle Bossa Nova.

    • @MarkBlackburnWPG
      @MarkBlackburnWPG Před 5 lety +2

      That's an astute observation. A perfectly fair criticism that Charlie Byrd's sense of time is "hillbilly" and that while he can play well "has the chops and is a great guitar player, he really can't handle Bossa Nova. If you took away the drums track he might as well be playing in straight 4/4. Thanks for the insight, Petteri Lindholm.

    • @arip9234
      @arip9234 Před 2 lety +1

      Haha yea because you can do it better. Right

    • @zvonimirtosic6171
      @zvonimirtosic6171 Před 8 měsíci +1

      That is because the album was advertised as "Samba Jazz", not "Samba". There is a difference. Jazz is not Samba. In Stan's album with Charlie Byrd, the sound has more hints of classic North American jazz flavour thanks to Byrd. But in Stan'z album with Bonfa, "Jazz Samba Encore", the feel is different, and is farther removed from the North American jazz.

  • @hippydjkit9913
    @hippydjkit9913 Před 5 lety

    This silly Perry Como destroyed all the magic with his shoe-shine brushes............

  • @bobdimarzio3972
    @bobdimarzio3972 Před 10 lety

    no

  • @FrankySnot
    @FrankySnot Před 10 lety +4

    Leave it to a super talented Ukrainian Jew to teach the Latinos how to play the Bossa Nova the right way.

    • @TheForrbidenFruit
      @TheForrbidenFruit Před 9 lety +3

      Wow, really?

    • @BuckshotLaFunke1
      @BuckshotLaFunke1 Před 9 lety +1

      ***** Yes, his real surname was Gayetzky.

    • @ddarkshark
      @ddarkshark Před 9 lety +7

      I am thankful that I don't live in your mind. it must suck.

    • @sapereaude3748
      @sapereaude3748 Před 7 lety +5

      Indeed....then again, is there anything Jewish guys can't do in the arts and sciences? A very admirable people.

    • @caifancabr0n699
      @caifancabr0n699 Před 6 lety

      Lul aut

  • @gregd6022
    @gregd6022 Před rokem

    Sorry to say but Stan didn't get Bossa and kinda ruins it .. as basically all the Americans did.. vs Brasilians.. the best way to think of it they're playing the way they'd dance..

  • @stephenhathaway269
    @stephenhathaway269 Před 2 lety

    Pity about the cringeworthy presenter