Actually he didn't do that union. Art Tatum and especially Earl Hines pioneered the idea long before him. By the time he recorded this, Thelonious Monk and Erroll Garner had played quite a lot of Stride Bebop already and Bud Powell also had his own entries in the genre (check out Jubilee and The Last Time I Saw Paris). Of course none of that changed the fact that this is an awesome piece of music!
I'm trying to hold back the tears... something about the way he plays this song and the sound and the way it swings makes me want to say Hallelujah...HALLELUJAH!!!
I think it's a good thing that most jazz of this time was never transcribed. I feel like we should go about finding out our own ways in a similar style, not trying to imitate these performers/composers, rather learn from them and enjoy figuring them out by ourselves.
Hi Todd from 2012. I feel exactly the same. Have seen him a few times in concert (ok, I am bragging 😁, two times with Ella Fitzgerald). My first reaction hearing him was "Ok , playing just 30% of what he plays, I WILL BE PROFESSIONAL JAZZ PIANIST". All best Todd from the past
Apart from me wanting to listen to this all night long,I would definately agree with you that this is a brilliant peice of coordination,insanely masterful.
The elegance and power in his fingers is simply UNmatched.. Nobody has ever come within a mile of Oscar.. Ray Brown told Oscar to really practice before going to play SOLO concerts... HAHA!! I guess he did!!
This man is unbelievable; the reason why Oscar's transcriptions were never put to paper is the fact that along with the busy schedule he had (which also caused his music school to close),his solos are too difficult for the average pianist to play
This performance is truly one of Oscar's Best just hearing it for the first and MAN is it SICK...check out the independence of is hands you would think he has two brains...WOW! oh my God listen to his right hand go while his left hand just mind its own business..LOL.. i feel butterflys in my stomach every time i hear it...it always make me smile...
@shelim23 Actually Oscar was 35 when Tatum died and they were very good friends but Oscar was so terrified by Tatum through listening to the infamous "Tiger Rag" by Tatum as a child that he wouldn't dare challenge Tatum. Its all in an interview between Oscar and Andre Previn were they sit down for a good 40 minutes discussing music it is beautiful search it up!
I've listened to lots of Art Tatum -- he is a giant. I understand that after hearing Tatum for the first time Oscar was willing to give up. But I find Oscar just as technically adept and harmonically more interesting than Tatum. Tatum is a giant.
@@josetato Peterson could swing harder and faster than anyone, but that's only one factor that makes Oscar great. I could say Tatum was the best, for his insanely fast stride and the harmonic substance he had at dizzying levels. I could say Bill Evans for incredible voice leading with his block chords. I could say Keith Jarrett for his incredibly beautiful voice leading and imaginative linear improve. I could say Bud Powell for combining "melodic" with "virtuosic" better than anyone else. I could even say Thelonious Monk for applying space in his music better than anyone else.
Jas yes there are definitely hints of the Nica’s Dream melody in some parts! I love how jazz players do that -doing a little run or a bar that hints at another piece. So cool!!
Casually shredding the piano to its limits with a smile on his face. What a legend.
Oscar just shredded that piano like it was stuck by a bolt of musical lightning! Absolutely insane....
Take a listen to Art Tatum's Tiger Rag. Art was one of Petersons major influences, and his playing was almost inhumane how difficult it was
How is this even humanly possible? This guy is a Genius
Alexander technique
The “Franz Liszt “ of jazz piano, The Master.
i mean he was taught by franz liszt's fav pupil
@@integer9590 wot?
@@PhileasFogg lol no
@@PhileasFogg why does Oscar get all the youtube views?
@@PhileasFogg Franz Lizt is the most overrated classical musician also. Chopin is a thousand times better.
In this composition, Oscar Peterson has united two jazz style: Stride and Bebop. Genius...
Actually he didn't do that union. Art Tatum and especially Earl Hines pioneered the idea long before him. By the time he recorded this, Thelonious Monk and Erroll Garner had played quite a lot of Stride Bebop already and Bud Powell also had his own entries in the genre (check out Jubilee and The Last Time I Saw Paris). Of course none of that changed the fact that this is an awesome piece of music!
Some one referee this style a swing bass
I'm trying to hold back the tears... something about the way he plays this song and the sound and the way it swings makes me want to say Hallelujah...HALLELUJAH!!!
Completely stunned at 1:26 - do you see all those people walking by...it's as if this is no big deal.
He is the best piano player ( jazz style ) ever passed through earth .
lol, check out Art Tatum
Monk
lol check out billy Joel he is the pieano man
Or Michel Camilo
NintalTutoriales lol Michel Camilo himself would disagree so hard with you haha
his hands are a mirage...
A stylistic masterclass in one sitting! Peterson is musical and inspired! Genius.
I think it's a good thing that most jazz of this time was never transcribed. I feel like we should go about finding out our own ways in a similar style, not trying to imitate these performers/composers, rather learn from them and enjoy figuring them out by ourselves.
This might be the most perfect musical art piece ever created
watching him play makes me feel like I could play anything. :)
same as me , but i cannot
Hi Todd from 2012. I feel exactly the same. Have seen him a few times in concert (ok, I am bragging 😁, two times with Ella Fitzgerald). My first reaction hearing him was "Ok , playing just 30% of what he plays, I WILL BE PROFESSIONAL JAZZ PIANIST". All best Todd from the past
Oscar Peterson plays Stride Piano. Very cool!
Peterson can plays all Piano Styles !
Apart from me wanting to listen to this all night long,I would definately agree with you that this is a brilliant peice of coordination,insanely masterful.
Absolutely wonderful!
The elegance and power in his fingers is simply UNmatched.. Nobody has ever come within a mile of Oscar.. Ray Brown told Oscar to really practice before going to play SOLO concerts... HAHA!! I guess he did!!
This man is unbelievable; the reason why Oscar's transcriptions were never put to paper is the fact that along with the busy schedule he had (which also caused his music school to close),his solos are too difficult for the average pianist to play
fabolous! miss him....
THATS WHY HES THE GOAT. THE GOAAAT!!!!
Losing my shit over how good this guy is.
I love this man!
Whoever transcribed this is brilliant.
Very enjoyable! Talented
This performance is truly one of Oscar's Best just hearing it for the first and MAN is it SICK...check out the independence of is hands you would think he has two brains...WOW! oh my God listen to his right hand go while his left hand just mind its own business..LOL.. i feel butterflys in my stomach every time i hear it...it always make me smile...
this is the best video available on the internet
Not anymore: czcams.com/video/PXZLjjHHRao/video.html
Virtuosic piece and performance
peterson simply the best!!!
Endlessly inventive - just magic. Superlatives fail me!
Magnifico!
Who could possibly dislike this video??
Oscar deserves an oscar!
Maravilhoooooooooso !!!
Que bom que vc passou pela terra para iluminar o mundo com o seu brilho.
I have this on Montreux jazz festival concert on dvd-- an excellent video
Semplicemente FANTASTICO.
Grazie Oscar...
Una joya. Bravoooo.
@shelim23 Actually Oscar was 35 when Tatum died and they were very good friends but Oscar was so terrified by Tatum through listening to the infamous "Tiger Rag" by Tatum as a child that he wouldn't dare challenge Tatum.
Its all in an interview between
Oscar and Andre Previn were they sit down for a good 40 minutes discussing music it is beautiful search it up!
and i haven't even taken any medication. and it STILL sounds like that?? DAYYYYNGGGG!!!!
Awesome
Это очень....заворажительно!!
Super! J'adore!!!!
Oscar's the man.
Great performance
Genius!
can't get enough
Это очень....заворожительно!!
i think if tatum was still around even he would have backed down when hearing some of peterson's solos
OP, ART TATUM, BUD POWELL, TMONK, ERROL GARNER, TOSHIKO…. ROYALTY OF PIANO
BRAVOOOOOOO
He was the "god of jazz"
GOAT
Can't stop watching this ! dunno what to do
Virtuoso!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Unreal
Genius
Superhuman on another level!
OHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!! AMAZING!!!
It remembers me Miles Davis's 'Milestone' in some part... great Oscar
One word SUPERMEN!!!
Crazy technique
God Iove jazz piano!❤
Yes .. stride piano style!
he still is ...
❤❤❤❤
🐐
word
i feel like i know nothing about jazz before Oscar Peterson
❤️❤️❤️🔥🔥🔥
I've listened to lots of Art Tatum -- he is a giant. I understand that after hearing Tatum for the first time Oscar was willing to give up. But I find Oscar just as technically adept and harmonically more interesting than Tatum. Tatum is a giant.
H G Nope. Not really.
@@josetato Peterson could swing harder and faster than anyone, but that's only one factor that makes Oscar great. I could say Tatum was the best, for his insanely fast stride and the harmonic substance he had at dizzying levels. I could say Bill Evans for incredible voice leading with his block chords. I could say Keith Jarrett for his incredibly beautiful voice leading and imaginative linear improve. I could say Bud Powell for combining "melodic" with "virtuosic" better than anyone else. I could even say Thelonious Monk for applying space in his music better than anyone else.
@@HG-ow9jn cant find your previous comment so i dont remember what this was about. Oh well.
@@HG-ow9jn beautifully said.
But Tatum was blind…
@shelim23 -Oscar was not 11 when Art died. Oscar was about 21 or so. In fact, they used to have cutting contests with on another.
oscar peterson god
A transcription of this performance is available via jazznote.co.uk
Total keyboard awareness.
@shelim23
You are absolutely right. Thanks for this comment.
Jesus christ the tenths are so awesome, and of course I have no chance of reaching the damned things
the besttttttttttttttttttttttt :P
yeaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaah
Thanks for posting this. Just amazing! e.g. watch the left ring & pinky around 0:29. (and many other times!)
I made a Synthesia video of this one: czcams.com/video/PXZLjjHHRao/video.html
Bloody hell !!!!!
@Jigov "NO PROBLEM" please post a video of you playing something similar. anyone who thinks this is "no problem" i would love to hear them play
that tenth...
supernatural
unico
🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦
mh no big thing, i maybe need a trillion years to learn it
@Tinmilkjazz this is one Perfect comment.....
reminds me a little of "nica's dream" (in parts)
Jas yes there are definitely hints of the Nica’s Dream melody in some parts! I love how jazz players do that -doing a little run or a bar that hints at another piece. So cool!!
@@lenalgd haha yes me too do u play?
@@jojotanify yes play a little, sing a little (@lenakipemusic) and listen A LOT. You?
Yeesh
Walking 10ths with 4-5, 4-5?!😅
Why is everyone leaving?
thats fuckin jazz!
Was this recorded on the same show as C Jam Blues in Denmark?
No, I don't think so.
@@hakonkvamme8685 Indeed it wasn't, this was live in 1975 in Montreux Switzerland.
1:15
I made a transcription of this, check it out.
church run at 0:42
hmm, i dont know.
playing those fast lines with left and right is harder
whoa!
......
what the fuuuuckkk.
donegan
There are three right now. Need some help?
Reality shows for the Goode of Mankind. Just love them...
Piano Tiles 2 god