Herbie Demonstrates the Fairlight CMI Synthesizer on Sesame Street, 1983

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  • čas přidán 18. 06. 2017
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Komentáře • 595

  • @deweybeattie4829
    @deweybeattie4829 Před 3 lety +1877

    Love watching my dad as a child on Sesame Street (black boy with fro) he’s 43 years old in 2 weeks ♥️

    • @jasminecaldwell6118
      @jasminecaldwell6118 Před 2 lety +31

      Awww, I’ll be 43 in June. I remember watching. Crazy how swift time moves but the things you can remember from that age.

    • @byronbenguche
      @byronbenguche Před 2 lety +49

      Wait that's your dad as a kid on Sesame Street that's so awesome 😎😎😎

    • @lukeveillon3490
      @lukeveillon3490 Před 2 lety +57

      Not many can say they visited Herbie Hancock on Sesame Street ! 😮

    • @sadomaz0
      @sadomaz0 Před rokem +20

      Wish him a happy 44th from us.

    • @philb4462
      @philb4462 Před rokem +7

      That is so wonderful! Has he talked to you about this? What does he remember about it?

  • @garykuovideos
    @garykuovideos Před rokem +174

    This video inspired me to become a composer for TV. Years later, I saw Mr. Hancock on a flight to LA and asked the flight attendant to share a handwritten note of appreciation and admiration. He was so touched that he left his seat to find me and say hello! Keep on rockin’ Herbie, and thank you for everything!

    • @JasonBoon02
      @JasonBoon02 Před rokem +2

      Great story! ✌🏼

    • @SewerTapes
      @SewerTapes Před rokem +1

      Awesome story. Herbie seems like a genuinely cool dude.

    • @awfully.average
      @awfully.average Před rokem +1

      How old were u when you saw this video ? Tv composer sounds oddly specific for a child ambition ☺️

    • @SewerTapes
      @SewerTapes Před rokem +3

      @@awfully.average
      I got the impression he was attributing where he ended up to the inspiration from this Sesame Street episode. Not that it necessarily instilled a drive to become a TV composer, but rather drove him to make music in general.

    • @zachhaywood1564
      @zachhaywood1564 Před rokem +1

      Awesome story! Thanks so much for sharing!

  • @erik_gerhard
    @erik_gerhard Před rokem +46

    “What do you need a monitor for in music? What are you looking at?”
    Most unintentionally insightful take on music production ever.

  • @mastercadillactus
    @mastercadillactus Před rokem +56

    What I love about these old shows is that they took their time to experience things. Allowed for some natural reactions/interactions. Pretty funky and fun stuff for these kids. God bless Herbie and his mastery

    • @stephaniecarrow4898
      @stephaniecarrow4898 Před rokem +2

      Yes ~ the old Sesame Street was much better than more recent years.

    • @SomebodyPickaName
      @SomebodyPickaName Před rokem +2

      For sure - what you said reminded me of the Dick Cavett show and how he and his guests would have natural conversations and interactions. It's too bad it isn't like that anymore.

    • @mastercadillactus
      @mastercadillactus Před rokem

      @@SomebodyPickaName Dick Cavity was great. Tom Snyder was like that, too.

  • @masterofdoinit6697
    @masterofdoinit6697 Před rokem +331

    It was interesting to see a younger Ashley Banks getting her voice sampled by Herbie Hancock in the 80's. This is a treasure!

    • @pharoahanderson6675
      @pharoahanderson6675 Před rokem +19

      And Tatiana Ali from Fresh Prince..

    • @evilmario6061
      @evilmario6061 Před rokem +4

      @@pharoahanderson6675 same person, fool

    • @TundieRice
      @TundieRice Před rokem +19

      @@pharoahanderson6675 That’s who they were talking about, Tatiana Ali played Ashley Banks on Fresh Prince of Bel Air.

    • @_jacksheldon
      @_jacksheldon Před rokem +1

      @@TundieRice He was making a joke.

    • @sharktamer
      @sharktamer Před rokem +1

      oh I thought she looked a lot like her!

  • @Breakbeats92.5
    @Breakbeats92.5 Před 3 lety +812

    I bet Herbie stayed up for 3 days straight when he got his Fairlight.

    • @djinsomnia666
      @djinsomnia666 Před 3 lety +142

      that was just to load his first sample :p

    • @lundsweden
      @lundsweden Před 2 lety +37

      Sampling was very exciting back in the 80s!

    • @AshleyPomeroy
      @AshleyPomeroy Před 2 lety +49

      I learn from the internet that the sequencer had a 65-page instruction manual, and because it was a computer system there were at least nineteen revisions of the software, so I imagine he must have spent ages getting up to speed. He has a degree in electrical engineering though.

    • @DicoT951
      @DicoT951 Před 2 lety +3

      For sure 🤩

    • @dopedrums
      @dopedrums Před rokem +9

      @@AshleyPomeroy I understand it sounds like a lot but it's really not. My synthesizer manual is thicker than the Bible. 300+ pages.

  • @djcoolcliff
    @djcoolcliff Před 2 lety +88

    My uncle Wah Wah Watson played rhythm guitarist on a lot of Herbie’s music!!!! RIP!!!!

    • @Jamaicafunk
      @Jamaicafunk Před rokem +5

      Nice. I played with Wah Wah briefly auditioning for Maxwell’s first tour. Being a hard core Herbie fan I was star struck. ( I didn’t get the gig) But Wah Wah was very nice. He changed the direction of Herbie’s sound. Herbie never used guitar until Hang up you Hang ups.

    • @uponthedownlow3555
      @uponthedownlow3555 Před rokem +6

      Wah Wah Watson is a LEGEND

    • @kevinr.3542
      @kevinr.3542 Před rokem +5

      Your uncle played on all my favorite Herbie albums. His funky 70s stuff was the best. And when he added Wah Wah it was even better.

    • @djcoolcliff
      @djcoolcliff Před rokem +2

      @@kevinr.3542 Thanks Kevin and you are right!!!!

  • @lo-firobotboy7112
    @lo-firobotboy7112 Před rokem +20

    I was 11 years old when this episode first aired. It laid the seeds of much of my life thus far... an amateur collector and player of synthesizers and a professional toy designer working with Sesame Street. Thanks Herbie and co.!!
    I miss the early days, back when Sesame Street was awesome and adults respected children.

  • @JosephDillman
    @JosephDillman Před rokem +172

    This was one of my favorite bits that's stuck with me my whole life. I even remember seeing it years later, being shocked to realize our Tatyana became Ashley on Fresh Prince of Bel-Air.

    • @jazznotes3802
      @jazznotes3802 Před rokem +15

      Because stars are grown in Hollywood. The world elite’s won’t just let anyone become a “star.”

    • @ChadDoebelin
      @ChadDoebelin Před rokem +1

      i reckoned that little girl looked familiar before she even said her name!

    • @arrjee9474
      @arrjee9474 Před rokem +4

      @@jazznotes3802
      She was never a star. People in that field who start at a very young age tend to continue in that direction. Therefore they land more jobs in the acting field as they get older. Some become popular enough that you recognize them throughout their career. This idea that there is an elite secret group that only allows certain people in is like an old wives tale. You see people progress, in any field by the way, because they work at it long and hard.

    • @jazznotes3802
      @jazznotes3802 Před rokem

      @@arrjee9474 Would be great if what you say was true, but unfortunately it isn’t. Just because you lack the knowledge, don’t let it blind you.
      Do the research!

    • @calumbliss8556
      @calumbliss8556 Před rokem

      @@arrjee9474 Of course with exceptional talent an actor can make it big, but elites are certainly brushing shoulders with each other. Makes it a lot easier to do anything when you have those connections.

  • @pfdtx4633
    @pfdtx4633 Před rokem +46

    What a treat it must have been. I love how he was so quick to ask Herbie to play in the lower keys. He was curious how a small girl's voice would sound in lower registers. That would have been my first thought at that age.

  • @MaggillaKutz71
    @MaggillaKutz71 Před rokem +70

    Herbie Hancock was always in the forefront when it came to technology changing our music forever

  • @lupcokotevski2907
    @lupcokotevski2907 Před rokem +74

    The Fairlight was invented by two guys in their garage in the 1970's in Sydney Australia. It cost a fortune. Stevie Wonder was one of the first artist to use it. Its use in the 1980's was ubiquitous.

    • @geofftefl
      @geofftefl Před rokem +7

      In the Sydney northern beaches suburb of Fairlight, adjacent to the also legendary suburb of Manly.

    • @lupcokotevski2907
      @lupcokotevski2907 Před rokem +3

      @@geofftefl I bought a vintage Manly Wormald footy jumper last Friday at an antique centre.

    • @carsonky
      @carsonky Před rokem +3

      Yep. Stevie and Theo Huxtable... "Jammin' on the One"

    • @FozziesRandomReviews
      @FozziesRandomReviews Před rokem +6

      Peter Gabriel and Kate Bush were prolific users of the Fairlight in the UK too

    • @J.S.3259
      @J.S.3259 Před rokem +1

      @@FozziesRandomReviews yep. I can’t think of 2 albums that employ it better than Gabriel’s Security/IV or Bush’s The Dreaming. There is a short BBC documentary here on CZcams that shows footage of Gabriel in his home studio using it

  • @MikeSmith-tx2lp
    @MikeSmith-tx2lp Před rokem +54

    Back in the eighties in Cheltenham, England, I had a couple of acquaintances, Julian Ilett (has his own CZcams channel - still crazy smart with electronics) and Brett Gossage (he had somehow acquired a Yamaha DX1 - rare then!). Anyway, the pair of them spent a few weeks in a dingy top flat on the London Road developing their own four note polyphonic Fairlight using a Sinclair ZX Spectrum and a memory / A/D/A board of their own design. I think it cost less than £100 and worked brilliantly. I still have a recording of their cover of ‘Drive’ by the Cars which made great use of their ‘Fairlight’ for the backing vocals. Very happy days and great respect for those two crazy guys.

    • @insolitusau
      @insolitusau Před rokem +1

      Man I love these kind of stories :) thanks for retelling!

  • @farty555
    @farty555 Před 4 lety +148

    We didn't know what we had with Sesame Street. What a great video, smiled all the way thru

    • @tnawcwvictoria
      @tnawcwvictoria Před 2 lety

      I ❤️ watching old clips of Sesame Street
      Rather watch old school clips of Sesame Street, The Electric Company, 3-2-1 Contact, Square One TV and Ghostwriter than watch the new stuff they have now

  • @valuedhumanoid6574
    @valuedhumanoid6574 Před rokem +233

    It's funny how people only associate Herbie with this kind of electronic synth music when he is in fact one of the giants of jazz. He has many jazz standards in his catalog and was with the legendary Miles Davis among others. A truly gifted man.

    • @stonetank7455
      @stonetank7455 Před rokem +6

      Fat Albert Rotunda is one of my fav jazz albums of all time.

    • @ahoimeboy6063
      @ahoimeboy6063 Před rokem +53

      name a single person who knows herbie as an electronic musician rather than a jazz musician

    • @jwaj
      @jwaj Před rokem +11

      @@ahoimeboy6063 joe

    • @stonetank7455
      @stonetank7455 Před rokem +13

      @@ahoimeboy6063 Hate to burst your bubble, but I'd be willing to bet that if you polled people about who Herbie Hancock is, most people wouldn't have a clue unless they saw the Rockit video in the 80s. It's sad, but that's reality.

    • @flashylite
      @flashylite Před rokem +11

      You could say a similar (but opposite) thing about Miles. He's obviously associated with cool jazz and hard bop, but he was also doing wild things with fusion and a more electronic sound later in his career.

  • @dustincassidy
    @dustincassidy Před rokem +73

    Truly a special moment. These are some of the first children on planet earth to be shown the joy and fun of a digital sampler and manipulating sound in this way.

  • @booklover3959
    @booklover3959 Před 4 lety +134

    What true class Mr. Hancock displays with his kindness towards these children. I know this instrument from the music of Kate Bush and this was fascinating to watch too as demonstrated by this famous music composer.

    • @chandeleerjet5637
      @chandeleerjet5637 Před rokem +6

      That’s where I first heard of the fair light too. It’s amazing that her song Running Up That Hill just became one of the biggest modern-day hits ever and was made and released decades ago on this synth. So cool that her music is getting recognized by the newer generation. That’s like the definition of timeless music

    • @Phil_529
      @Phil_529 Před rokem +2

      @@chandeleerjet5637 Crockett's Theme by Jan Hammer is a classic Fairlight piece worth checking out.

    • @Kohntarkosz
      @Kohntarkosz Před rokem +1

      Damn near every record made between circa1983 and 1988 or so had a Fairlight on it. The ubiquitous "orchestra hit" sample that you heard everywhere back then came from the Fairlight.

  • @KRAFTWERK2K6
    @KRAFTWERK2K6 Před 3 lety +112

    EVERYONE here aged fantastically :) The Music, Herbie, Tatiana and also the Fairlight Computer Music Instrument. So happy you uploaded this to your own channel too, Mr. Hancock. It really belongs here!! :)

  • @stephaniecarrow4898
    @stephaniecarrow4898 Před rokem +18

    The natural interaction between Mr. Hancock and the children is delightful and touching. And this clip reminds me just how great the early Sesame Street was.

  • @jordycomic144
    @jordycomic144 Před 3 lety +22

    2:39 Tatyana.exe has stopped responding

  • @DiegoMartinezCoria
    @DiegoMartinezCoria Před 3 lety +40

    This is how you deal with kids, always enthusiastic and happy.

  • @jwstout007
    @jwstout007 Před rokem +12

    I remembered the little girl’s name Tatiana Ali & spoke it before she did. What an amazing thing music does with the memory.

    • @bobbo11357
      @bobbo11357 Před rokem +4

      Tatiana Ali from Fresh Prince of Bel Air?

    • @jwstout007
      @jwstout007 Před rokem

      @@bobbo11357 the same!

  • @dilliot2k
    @dilliot2k Před 3 lety +60

    I'm 38 years and I still get nervous and excited about this the same way I did when I was a child.

  • @Ahzpayne
    @Ahzpayne Před 5 lety +184

    how has no one mentioned that Tatyana Ali was Ashley Banks on Fresh Prince of Bel-Air??

    • @tooltechrecords
      @tooltechrecords Před 4 lety +21

      on german wikipedia its listed that she "performed" with herbie on sesame street

    • @hervegilles7941
      @hervegilles7941 Před 4 lety +5

      Au moins, ce sample ne l'a pas traumatisée.

    • @drumatic
      @drumatic Před 3 lety +7

      Nor that Jim Carrey was the Cpu / synthesizer operator.

    • @the9-2-5outlawdoestech9
      @the9-2-5outlawdoestech9 Před 2 lety +3

      I knew when those kids came into the room, one of them had to become famous.

    • @starboy80s
      @starboy80s Před 2 lety

      @@drumatic haha

  • @viralbuthow000
    @viralbuthow000 Před 3 lety +44

    Trivia: Sonia Manzano who plays Maria is a longtime Herbie Hancock fan. In 1974 she convinced her then boyfriend director Michael Winner to let Herbie compose the soundtrack for his film DeathWish, starring Charles Bronson. Sonia had a bit part as a store clerk.

    • @lancepage1914
      @lancepage1914 Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks for that bit of trivia. I love Deathwish movie and the soundtrack. 👍

    • @mrpositronia
      @mrpositronia Před rokem +2

      Watching 'Maria' now reminds me of how much I used to love watching her back then. I still feel the same way.

    • @nupreznz
      @nupreznz Před rokem

      That's the coolest trivia I've heard in a long time! I loved the original death wish never knew my fave pianist was part of it.

  • @JMC4101994
    @JMC4101994 Před 3 lety +32

    2:10 That little boy just foresighted Vaporwave lol

  • @Doty6String
    @Doty6String Před rokem +11

    I like how the synth takes a player and an operator to use

    • @BD-yl5mh
      @BD-yl5mh Před rokem +4

      Like a sniper and a spotter haha

  • @RobertFairweatherMusic
    @RobertFairweatherMusic Před rokem +9

    I remember this as being one of the best Sesame Streets ever. Never forgot this one.

  • @papankunci
    @papankunci Před 4 lety +77

    i know all those kids just dying to push all those keys... but they are still well behaved.. =)

  • @poproxycodone6409
    @poproxycodone6409 Před 4 lety +135

    'what do you need a monitor for in music' oh simpler times

    • @thesonuvman7612
      @thesonuvman7612 Před 4 lety

      😂

    • @Art-zs6sl
      @Art-zs6sl Před rokem +2

      Nothing simple about learning an instrument. These days, people just use the monitor.

    • @St0ckwell
      @St0ckwell Před rokem +11

      @@Art-zs6sl Electronic music production is extremely complicated and takes years of hard work before you can make anything good. But it's easier now than it was when EDM started blowing up in the late oughts/early 2010s, because back then, we didn't have nearly as many resources, but people were complaining that "that's not real music, you just press play on a computer". In reality, there's composition, which involves knowing all about music theory from voice leading to arrangement; there's mixing and mastering which takes years of practice to do well; there's TASTE which can only be developed individually through years of exposure to different kinds of music; and then there's the "it" factor of having all the technical skills and taste, and also being able to be true and original AND marketable. Electronic music production is not as complex as composing classical for an orchestra, but it's a lot closer to that than just playing an instrument is.

    • @7cleverboys
      @7cleverboys Před rokem +1

      @@St0ckwell lbozo click button instant music

    • @St0ckwell
      @St0ckwell Před rokem

      @@7cleverboys Yes, music exists at the click of a button. You can click play and hear Coltrane or Bach or Van Halen or Stormzy or Hawaiian folk music or hillbilly covers of famous songs. Why is that supposed to be a bad thing? Or are you insinuating that electronic music is made with a single click? If you're really brain damaged enough to believe that, then why not put your money where your mouth is? Post your crypto address. I am giving you one week from the time that I'm writing this to create one electronic music song. If you can make a good product with no knowledge of it because it's that "easy", then I will send you 1000 USD, no further questions asked. It's so easy, you can do it in a few clicks! So you really have nothing to lose. Go ahead and nut up or shut up there big guy.

  • @ConceptJunkie
    @ConceptJunkie Před rokem +7

    Classic Sesame Street segments were done in a way that adults could appreciate them as well. This is really cool.

  • @wado1942
    @wado1942 Před rokem +125

    1983 "What do you need a monitor for in music?"
    2022 "How could you make music without a monitor?"

    • @bcj842
      @bcj842 Před rokem +2

      So true. I wouldn't know where to begin trying to record onto tape with no DAW.

    • @wado1942
      @wado1942 Před rokem +3

      @@bcj842 You should try it sometime. It's quite liberating. I put the recorder in the insert loop of my console so I can start building the mix, while the band is recording, without affecting what's being recorded. If they goof up a section, just rewind a few seconds and punch in a correction.

    • @smadaf
      @smadaf Před rokem +5

      I make music every day without a monitor. Thank goodness.

    • @Merlincat007
      @Merlincat007 Před rokem +1

      Limitations breed creativity! I haven't done much recording out of the box myself, but I do have a Tascam 4 track Cassette Portastudio that I use often for its cool distortion (feeding it boosted signals) and simple mixing. One of my favorite artists, Mid-Air Thief, uses tape (cassette?) re-recording per track from his DAW to get really nice slightly saturated slightly lofi textures

    • @Kohntarkosz
      @Kohntarkosz Před rokem

      I read recently about a band who had to cancel a concert because their laptop died on them. Pathetic.

  • @PHDWhom
    @PHDWhom Před 3 lety +22

    And to think that now I can open up my iPad Pro, load a sampler or synth, and be instantly productive musically is ALL DUE TO the Fairlight CMI, and others of similar origin.

  • @matthewcasey7226
    @matthewcasey7226 Před 2 lety +33

    Herbie is a national treasure.

  • @djdigital3806
    @djdigital3806 Před 4 lety +45

    I’m 56 years old and remember this. Today I own keyboards 🎹

    • @oholm09
      @oholm09 Před 3 lety +1

      Me too I dont give rid of my gear I work hard for it

    • @rdm5190
      @rdm5190 Před rokem

      Amen,60,got my 1st synth at 16(still have it and 33 more) and still remeber watching this with my younger sister in 1983....
      Herbi,edgar&rodgerinfunced me alot

  • @TheBeefeta
    @TheBeefeta Před 4 lety +13

    I remember this. Ashley Banks at 6.

  • @bentojgaard5434
    @bentojgaard5434 Před rokem +2

    Buying a workstation synth 40 years ago, a computer nerd were one of the accessories in the catalog 😀

  • @raminhonary5499
    @raminhonary5499 Před rokem +7

    I saw this on TV when I was like 4 or 5 years old (I'm probably younger than these kids by like 5 years, all in our 40s now). I still remember this. I still remember the name "Tatyana Ali." This short film really stuck with me.

    • @blakfloyd
      @blakfloyd Před rokem +1

      DUDE. Big same. I'm not sure if I saw this when it was new (I woulda been 2) or a little later but I know I was no older than 4 or 5 and I still remember my brother and I being captivated by how spacey it sounded hearing her name looped on the synth and we used to reference it for months afterward.

  • @byronbenguche
    @byronbenguche Před 2 lety +6

    Awwww that's Ashley (Tatiana Ali) she was adorable 🥰🥰

  • @melancholiaenshrinesalltriumph

    when i first used an emulated version of the CMI i didn't really believe that the monitor was a replica of the original. it seemed so futuristic but here it is. what an amazing instrument.

  • @_gili7626
    @_gili7626 Před 4 lety +22

    Tatyana’s soooo cute

  • @seyfodiaz5723
    @seyfodiaz5723 Před rokem +6

    Ten minutes before, I'd just watching videos about Peter Gabriel and Kate Bush (using the Fairlight), then I'm here. Herbie Hancock in 80s jogging outfit presenting the Fairlight (perfectly) to Tatyana M. Ali? I wouldn't believe it, if not everything would add up 🙊.
    Man, history can be so increadibly unbelievable, it's insane 😆.

  • @mingwingming1999
    @mingwingming1999 Před 2 lety +9

    All these years on we all still dream of owning a fairlight what a bit of kit..

  • @philipchance5454
    @philipchance5454 Před 6 lety +48

    Digital Sampling was so hip back then...

  • @Westindiantoffee
    @Westindiantoffee Před 4 lety +35

    Her Trinidadian accent was very strong in this video. 🇹🇹

  • @hypnagogicoid6341
    @hypnagogicoid6341 Před rokem

    I love this! Made a huge impression on me as a kid and has stayed in my memory to this day!

  • @retromasterhd1607
    @retromasterhd1607 Před 2 lety +4

    My favourite Herbie Hancock song is I thought it was you because it came on in my Dad’s car and he also really loves that song, seeing Herbie appear on Sesame Street is absolutely amazing because he’s demonstrating how the instruments he uses for his songs work. Keep going Herbie Hancock your the best. 👍🏿👍🏿👍🏿😄😄😄😀😀😀.

  • @andrulemon
    @andrulemon Před rokem +1

    I remember seeing this as a kid. Have always loved sampling and synths since then

  • @yaronbrecher7397
    @yaronbrecher7397 Před rokem +2

    Sweet kids beautiful to watch them happy

  • @ehvway
    @ehvway Před rokem +1

    A living legend that made a great contribution to the music industry! A while ago I saw a CZcams video about the best synthesizer music ever. Rock It was the #1 😎 God bless you and your family Sir

  • @novakingood3788
    @novakingood3788 Před rokem +5

    When you've gigged with Miles Davies and Kermit, you know you've arrived. No one cooler than HH.

  • @derekdexheimer3070
    @derekdexheimer3070 Před rokem +5

    Amazing to hear the print-through at 6:04 and later from a 40 year old tape. And at about 8:00 you can hear that giant 8" floppy clacking away.

  • @Brandoncolemanofficial
    @Brandoncolemanofficial Před 2 lety +1

    This is absolutely incredible ✨🤘🏾🙌🏾

  • @elcasho
    @elcasho Před 4 lety +13

    A machine 10 years ahead of anything else

  • @skinlayers
    @skinlayers Před rokem +3

    This clip was the first time I saw a synth as a child. It's one of my oldest memories.

  • @newforestpixie5297
    @newforestpixie5297 Před rokem +2

    Thankyou Herbie for being out -there back in those days and extending the boundaries of pop & dance music with others like Peter Gabriel , Georgio Moroder ,Trevor Horn and slightly before then with your writing of “I Thought It Was You “- which they’d play on Radio Victory in Portsmouth England before BBC Radio 1 did - & was a really nice song as well as being tech clever 👍🏴❤️😁

  • @jlinky2746
    @jlinky2746 Před 2 lety +6

    This video is beyond friggin delightful and awesome. I got to learn how to use the thing and I didn't even have to pluck down the 30k or so it took to own the system.

  • @birdthompson
    @birdthompson Před rokem +1

    laughter of kids is so needed these days! (& good jams)

  • @BKaneNp8
    @BKaneNp8 Před rokem

    This is classic footage for so many reasons

  • @richardbishop503
    @richardbishop503 Před 2 lety +2

    Oh my gosh she is so so freaking adorable

  • @heroinmom153
    @heroinmom153 Před rokem +2

    This is incredible, I actually remember this from when I was a kid

  • @MatthewHarrold
    @MatthewHarrold Před 3 lety +13

    Liked and sub'd ... how is this channel NOT a heavy hitter? Herbie Hancock is such an influence of mine, as is the Australian Fairlight CMI by Peter Vogel. He is also a legend of the emergent digital music industry. $0.02 with love to Sesame Street too.

  • @ConstantXplorer
    @ConstantXplorer Před rokem

    Truly brings back plenty good memories.

  • @wadahabbasher
    @wadahabbasher Před rokem +1

    Love this video, this was ground breaking tech for them

  • @bjedo3
    @bjedo3 Před rokem

    Its so wholesome 🥹

  • @jollyrott3nn
    @jollyrott3nn Před rokem +4

    That computer had a frickin stylus!

  • @Octovisuals
    @Octovisuals Před 2 lety +3

    Love synths! I'm a millennial who grew up playing videogames, so... Thank you.

  • @jasminecaldwell6118
    @jasminecaldwell6118 Před 2 lety +7

    I remember watching this in real time, lol. I can recall trying to get other people to remember with me that Tatyana Ali was on Sesame Street when Fresh Prince premiered but nobody did. I recall her speaking Spanish on here because I remember taking Spanish at my Montessori preschool and our teacher would show us Sesame Street clips to help us get the accent. Oh, the memories. 😁 Oh,and Herbie Hancock was everything. My friends dad had a synthesizer like this because he was a band teacher, so he had lots of instruments and we’d get in trouble playing his drums and saying our name in his keyboard…and of course, “Jammin on the one”, 🤣

  • @MuzikJunky
    @MuzikJunky Před 4 lety +31

    Just think that Tatyana Ali is now in her 40s! Peace.

  • @Punketeria1369
    @Punketeria1369 Před rokem

    This was such an awesome show back in da day; so happy I grew up watching it ;-)
    chEErs,
    93

  • @eldesgraciado6690
    @eldesgraciado6690 Před rokem

    This is art!

  • @bernardw4842
    @bernardw4842 Před 4 lety +27

    Wow listen to those 8" floppy drives grind

  • @damienlobb85
    @damienlobb85 Před 3 lety +49

    The Fairlight really was quite something. There were others like the Emulator and the Synclavier but this really was the Apple of samplers. Not necessarily the best when the Synclavier was around, but it was easy to use and had the ability to do quite a bit, well.

    • @Hectik17
      @Hectik17 Před rokem +2

      It was the first

    • @highestsettings
      @highestsettings Před rokem

      The Apple of samplers?
      So overpriced, lacking in features or third party support and manufactured with slave labour?

    • @romulus_
      @romulus_ Před rokem +1

      Emulator, Synclavier, and Fairlight. Sounds like the recipe for a timeless hit.

    • @hermestrismegistus3417
      @hermestrismegistus3417 Před rokem

      It’s price tag was quite something too

  • @krazywabbit
    @krazywabbit Před rokem +1

    Love the approach. Instead of telling, let me show you.
    On a side note, thank you for Rockit. Change my life for the better.

  • @kahlilsmith5243
    @kahlilsmith5243 Před 3 lety +4

    It was before I knew what sampler was, But I knew that I wanted one...

  • @toddtrillo7445
    @toddtrillo7445 Před rokem +9

    While at my sisters recently her 13 year old daughter was showing us where she has got to with her bass playing skills , I said to hear do you know who that is , that you are playing , she did , I was really impressed that a young girl her age knew who he was and that her teacher introduced him to her

  • @waverlyphillips2849
    @waverlyphillips2849 Před 3 lety

    This is awesome!

  • @martinferreyra755
    @martinferreyra755 Před rokem

    uffffff pedazo de historia, lo que el sintetizador marco la musica es increible

  • @EdgetonWolfeDrezwellington

    I'm 48. Remember this episode. Changed my creative ideas. Later developed into my own band, then my music at the age of 15. Built my 1st electric guitar in woodshop. The rest is history, man.

  • @SenpaiSchuda
    @SenpaiSchuda Před rokem +1

    This is so adorable!!!!!!!!!! And educational for the kids and me too......

  • @MorrisChannel4
    @MorrisChannel4 Před rokem

    Bro!!!! I remember this One! I think it was a rerun. Classic Herbie rocking the jogger sweats!

  • @FrankNFurter1000
    @FrankNFurter1000 Před rokem

    One of the most wholesome things out there.

  • @naota3k
    @naota3k Před rokem

    I love how you can just hear a hard disk platter seeking away in the background.

  • @tigershav
    @tigershav Před rokem

    this is so sweet

  • @etpslick100
    @etpslick100 Před 2 lety +5

    Herbie & Jane Childs really utilized the Fairlight CMI. The Future Shock album was the bomb!😌🎹🎶❤️👍🏾

    • @Sinjinator
      @Sinjinator Před rokem +3

      I thought the first Jane Child album was the bomb! 😁

    • @etpslick100
      @etpslick100 Před rokem

      @@Sinjinator Oh yeah! It was! To me, Still is!😌🎹❤️🎶👍🏾

  • @tomvanbreukelen2909
    @tomvanbreukelen2909 Před rokem

    Wow that is so amazing

  • @alifmuhammadchicago
    @alifmuhammadchicago Před rokem +1

    This changed everything for me as a kid.
    Everything.

  • @jdolandev
    @jdolandev Před rokem +1

    Love the tech support on staff in case a sample fills up all 4k of on board memory and crashes

  • @idontwanttousemynameyoutub7538

    Thank you Herbie. I don't think you have any idea how many lives you've changed for the better - mine included.

  • @_brocklee
    @_brocklee Před rokem +1

    Amazing how close they got to a “Rhodes” tine sound on this in the early 80s

  • @soso694
    @soso694 Před rokem +1

    This video is 40 years old. Wow.

  • @yaronbrecher7397
    @yaronbrecher7397 Před rokem +1

    HAncock is a genius. Getting better evry minute

  • @kumada84
    @kumada84 Před rokem +4

    When Fresh Prince of Bel-Air first came on I was like, "OMG, is that Tatyana Ali Tatyana Ali Ttatyaaannaaa Aaaliii??"

  • @johnstaf
    @johnstaf Před 3 lety +3

    Such a gentleman.

  • @TheBillyarnezz
    @TheBillyarnezz Před 3 lety

    Happy belated birthday, bro!

  • @debralynnpaxton5238
    @debralynnpaxton5238 Před rokem

    Love it ! ❤️

  • @johnduff3914
    @johnduff3914 Před rokem +9

    It's crazy he had an assistant to play that thing. I remember reading an article about the Fairlight back in the early '80's. I thought how long does it take to learn to use it?

  • @Dazlidorne
    @Dazlidorne Před rokem +1

    This reminds me of a Casio keyboard that could play dog barks. Used to love to mess around with that.

  • @davidlivernoche3683
    @davidlivernoche3683 Před 3 lety +4

    I want a complete version of the song at the start of the video❤

  • @JukeboxBalowski
    @JukeboxBalowski Před 4 měsíci

    People may not realize this but this was actually the future of music that he was showing off. While 1970's and very early 80's pop music was centered around rock guitars and live bands, synthesizers became a very big part of music in the 80's and 90's, especially in the cities and Metropolitan areas where freestyle music, hip-hop, and other types of music frequently used synthesizers and drum machines! Sometimes even in place of full bands with live musicians.