Awsome! I was in Mr. Levinson studio for 5 years and got to meet Mrs. O'Brien. Very tall and kind woman! Thanks for posting this footage of music history being made!
"Now boys and girls, you might recognize this melody called 'Meat Hook Sodomy' by a little group called Cannibal Corpse. It goes something like this. And Ah 1, 2 ,3, 4 -"
I was ten. My mother came into my room and said in her wonderful southern accent, "Leonard Bernstein said Cream is brilliant..." I recall thinking: Damn that's MY music. But then knowing in Marietta, GA in 1968, I probably had the only adult relative who knew that and who cherished the accompanying insight. I'm still a very lucky daughter.
I think another reason why so many jazz and classical composers had little appreciation to rock and roll was due to how much more popular it was to their own music. For example, often in the past and in modern times, pop music is so simplistic musically. However, even though its true its so simplistic, I think what irks these people is how well known it is compared to their own music
You can tell how Bernstein is trying to bring theory to a younger generation through most of these pieces ... notice how the audience lights up at 1:08. What he was trying to do worked. This is probably one of the reasons he is well remembered today. He was one of a few who was able to straddle the line between popular music and classical composition.
@@DarrenGauthier yet you don't hear about him. Rock (Metal, funk, etc) bands with classical orchestra accompaniment won't help with popularising classical music. The orchestras are out of spotlight when it comes to playing with huge bands like this. People mostly go to see the band, not the orchestra. Both have their qualities, but let's be real, most folks wouldn't check out the orchestra just because they played with Metallica. And even with pop bands using excerpts from classical works (Pachelbel's canon in D in Maroon 5's Memories) will go right above people's heads (myself included).
No matter who you are, when you hear Beatles music you become instantly happy and the mania sets in. Even the maestro had the Beatle mania. You just can't help it.
David Harrison That's 160 cigarettes a day. An average cigarette takes about 7 minutes to smoke. So you're telling me that they spent 18 hours a day smoking?
I wish he had played the Boogie Woogie a bit longer in this clip....a pleasure to listen to ! You could immediately notice it in the faces of the young viewers.
Leonard Bernstein was not only a musical genius, he was the greatest music educator that ever lived. Nobody in history wanted people to understand and appreciate instrumental music more than he did. That is the problem with music education today. Music educators do not care at all if anyone understands or appreciates instrumental music. They only care about how many plaques and trophies their students win and about their reputation among their peers. They don't want to waste any precious rehearsal time teaching their students to respect and appreciate the music they perform. When those students become adults, they do not appreciate instrumental music and they do not support instrumental music education. Music education is suffering and dying because of a lack of support, even from adults who themselves participated in school music ensembles. Music "educators" are killing music education with their selfishness.
Fortunately, there are exceptions. My youngest son studied for 10 years at a music academy that was housed in a Lutheran church. His teacher was probably paid very little. She put in so much of her own time teaching him. She knew of a church with a magnificent pipe organ and arranged for him to play "Rhapsody in Blue" there. I feel lucky that we met her.
I agree with you that Bernstein was a genius & a fantastic educator. However the technical standard of playing at the elite level is higher now than it has ever been. Today I would have trouble even gaining a place at the music conservatory I graduated from back in the 1980's. It's possible that music education among the wider population may be deteriorating, but i'm certain that depends on where in the world you live. i love seeing young musicians surpass the efforts of my generation, & i see it all the time.
Absolutely. It gets on my nerves when people say "music used to be better back in year x" and dismiss the amazing wealth of musical talent that exists in every generation. And they'll go "would you just LISTEN to this trash they play on the radio these days" as if that's a new phenomenon. There was always trash on the radio, but we don't hear those songs from back then because they didn't stand the test of time. The greats of today will be remembered decades or centuries from now - at which point we will again see people point out how music from today was much better than whatever will be popular by then.
There is a maestro hier in Brazil who study music history and once he said that Bernstein was not only a great man but a super musician too. In fact, a real genius.
I was lucky enough to have Mr. Bernstein come give a Young People's Music program at my grade school in Manhattan. Years later. waiting with my friends on line to get into a Grateful Dead Concert at the Fillmore East, Bernstein and his family got out of a limo, Billy Graham personally escorted them inside. He loved rock & roll, and especially the Beatles.
He's actually using pop music of the time to teach the "Modes". Scales that do not start with "Do" but rather another note as a tonic. Very brilliant way to teach it, and the way my music teacher taught it as well.
Undoubtedly the greatest musical educator of the 20th century, his televised Young People’s Concerts inspired a generation of music lovers and musicians. At a time when Rock music was disrespected, he elevated it and presaged today when its taught in college courses. Bernstein was a genius way ahead of the times.
I watched all these episodes on tv as a child on Sunday nights. It was wonderful. He had such a gift for teaching and finding joy in all music to share and connect with people across all ages, all styles, all cultures, and to make it simple and understandable for everyone. Thank you.
man, Lenny knew how to stay in touch with the pop scene of his times and be able to hold his solid career in the classical music biz. A true inspiration to all musicians, wether classical or not.
You got that right, hoss, and while I've admired many famous and not-so-famous musicians that have passed away during my lifetime of nearly 60 years, I still mourn his passing most of all.
I don't know what the context was, but in one show he used The Beatles "And I Love Her" and the kids just screamed, like they knew EXACTLY what he was talking about, course he couldn't sing it as well but he showed how he knew what he was talking about and how to make it relate to these kids.
I remember watching the episode in which LB discussed modes and played "You Really Got Me" by The Kinks. The image/scene has stuck with me all these years.
I was going to say he should've tried ELP Tarkus, but at the end he played Honky Tonk Train Blues which was covered by Keith Emerson himself, I think that's good enough.
He has a better voice than Bob Dylan. He could have been the keyboard player for some rock band. After all, he has the lyrics memorized, can play the piano at the same time, and is able to have eye contact with the audience as well. He is getting applause even before he is finished. He really knew how to connect with the youth. They smiled when he played. It could have been a back-up plan in case the symphonic conducting didn't pan out. Or maybe a moonlighting job. I am trying to be comical, but in all seriousness, it is inspiring to see him use rock songs to explain music theory in ways that would interest them. It reminds me of Mr. Holland's Opus, where Richard Dreyfus plays Lover's Concerto for the class.
@rockclimber21 with extensions ‘by licence’ up to a′ and even down to e. In addition to the final, the note d′ - the tenor of the corresponding seventh psalm tone - was regarded as having an important melodic function in the fifth church mode. In the Renaissance the term ‘Mixolydian’ was sometimes applied to polyphony. In modally ordered collections, pieces ending on G in cantus durus are usually divided into two groups using different clefs.
@rockclimber21 It's what you call the collection of whole steps and half steps you get when you start the Major scale from the fifth degree The modes aren't "different" scales, as much as they're just different ways to think about the major scale
The fact that one of the greatest, most talented composers, musicians, conductors of all time did love all that popular music should tell us something... What does that tell you ?
@rockclimber21 It is the fifth degree of the major scale, like G7 In The Key of C! If you are in C major you just start on the fifth note "G" and play up an octave and stop on the note G and you have played the G mixolydian scale! When you REALLY understand the meaning of 5 to 1 you will have the key to the diatonic harmonic system! It is pure musical mathematic magic!
From a number of different "Young Peoples' Concerts..." With the possible exception of Robert Greenberg (who could only be tied with him for first place), Bernstein was the greatest musical educator who has ever lived. With the possible exceptions of Benny Goodman, Wynton Marsalis, and Yo-Yo Ma (and they could only be tied with him for first place), no "concert" musician has ever been so comfortable with, so embracing of so many other musical styles.
The kick I get from these shows is the way the kids dressed. All the boys wore suits & all the girls wore dresses. Nowadays if you went to a concert like this you'd wear jeans & a collared shirt. It's like going to certain Churches. Some people even wear shorts & T-shirts.
It's easy to get lazy about it if everyone else isn't putting as much thought into it, or you may feel awkward looking like you have dressed up too much for something. But there are always ways to do it subtly rather than ostentatiously.
I am somewhat competent at this when feel like doing it. Although I like the way you encourage others to be their best, you are quite bossy. Maestro_T does not work for someone dancing to her own tune.
“ also”?! I m not sure he would like to be remembered for being “ also “ a composer! In addition to the huge success of West Side Story , there were the Chichester psalms, Candide , On the town, Wonderful Town and his Mass , among his celebrated works. Of course, he was a terrific conductor too - and knew how to charm audiences, both adults, and - as seen here- young kids.
@rockclimber21 The common name for the seventh of the eight church modes, the authentic mode on G. In the Middle Ages and Renaissance the Mixolydian mode was described in two ways: as the diatonic octave species from g to g′, divided at d′ and composed of a fourth species of 5th (tone-tone-semitone-tone) plus a first species of 4th (tone-semitone-tone), thus g-a-b-c′-d′+ d′-e′-f′-g′; and as a mode whose FINAL was g and whose AMBITUS was f-g′,
@rockclimber21 For example, in Palestrina's second book of Madrigali spirituali (1594), nos.24-7 use CHIAVETTE to represent the higher (authentic) Mixolydian mode, while nos.28-30 use normal soprano, alto, tenor and bass clefs to represent the lower (plagal) Hypomixolydian. -Oxford Dictionary of Music TimboBandit is right, that's exactly how we use it today but by coincidence I just happen to be looking at the history when I came across this video so why not paste it in...
Was für ein weitgefächerter Geist, was für ein Musiker! Das hätten wir uns auch in Deutschland gewünscht, einen Karajan (der zumindest genauso gut aussah), der uns und unseren Kindern Klassik und Jazz erklärt hätte!"
@rockclimber21 haha, take any major scale and lower the leading tone (7th) a half step, and thats mixolydian. example, g major with f natural, or c major with a b flat
At about 42 seconds, the bassist is Orin O'Brien, the first woman in the NY Philharmonic!
0:42
Awsome! I was in Mr. Levinson studio for 5 years and got to meet Mrs. O'Brien. Very tall and kind woman! Thanks for posting this footage of music history being made!
Yes, and I believe that's actually called a double bass, more akin to a cello.
@@tity4100¿No tiene para usted ningún interés lo que hace Bernstein?
As Oliver Messiaen said: "Excuse me, I have a composer's voice"
"Now boys and girls, you might recognize this melody called 'Meat Hook Sodomy' by a little group called Cannibal Corpse. It goes something like this. And Ah 1, 2 ,3, 4 -"
Also in Mixolydian.
Clark Feeley really?
what am i listening to
@@evanpyne4426 death fucking metal
Lol 12 34 RAZOR SHARP HOOKS IMPLANTED IN YOUR RECTUM!!!
There are few things more life-affirming than seeing someone so enthusiastic and excited about music.
Composer. Conductor. Teacher. Inspiration. Music never had a better friend.
And a huge fan of poetry. He could recite Robert Frost s by heart.
And pianist.
but not exactly singer...
And pianist.
I was ten. My mother came into my room and said in her wonderful southern accent, "Leonard Bernstein said Cream is brilliant..."
I recall thinking: Damn that's MY music. But then knowing in Marietta, GA in 1968, I probably had the only adult relative who knew that and who cherished the accompanying insight. I'm still a very lucky daughter.
Much credit and appreciation to him for his own appreciation for rock n' roll. And not for being a snob about it...
I think another reason why so many jazz and classical composers had little appreciation to rock and roll was due to how much more popular it was to their own music. For example, often in the past and in modern times, pop music is so simplistic musically. However, even though its true its so simplistic, I think what irks these people is how well known it is compared to their own music
@@TheSyconerd yes true and be well
You can tell how Bernstein is trying to bring theory to a younger generation through most of these pieces ... notice how the audience lights up at 1:08. What he was trying to do worked. This is probably one of the reasons he is well remembered today. He was one of a few who was able to straddle the line between popular music and classical composition.
Lenny always said of his "composer voice" that he would give it all up if he could just sing beautifully on stage for 15 minutes ...
What composer voice?
He'd do a good Tom Lehrer cover.
@@MiloMcCarthyMusic composers are said to sing blandly
@@laminebaazi6418 of course, there was Samuel Barber to break that stereotype
¿"Lenny? ¿Fue usted amigo personal de Bernstein?
I would kill to be able to hear him live. We need more people like him, with these 'Young People's Concerts'.
I Think Chilly Gonzales is the closest thing to a modern day Bernstein in that regard.
Try Benjamin Zander.
You find him here on CZcams.
Michael Tilson Thomas is the rock star conductor. Performed with Metallica and James Brown
@@DarrenGauthier yet you don't hear about him. Rock (Metal, funk, etc) bands with classical orchestra accompaniment won't help with popularising classical music. The orchestras are out of spotlight when it comes to playing with huge bands like this. People mostly go to see the band, not the orchestra. Both have their qualities, but let's be real, most folks wouldn't check out the orchestra just because they played with Metallica. And even with pop bands using excerpts from classical works (Pachelbel's canon in D in Maroon 5's Memories) will go right above people's heads (myself included).
Who?
Doesn’t he know that he might get a copyright strike?
No matter who you are, when you hear Beatles music you become instantly happy and the mania sets in. Even the maestro had the Beatle mania. You just can't help it.
Lennie is awesome, but there's one thing you can tell he wished he could do better: SING
That's probably because he smoked 40 a day!
The Kinks smoked 8 packs a day each. It was England, the 1960's and young boys were desperate to get out xD
David Harrison That's 160 cigarettes a day. An average cigarette takes about 7 minutes to smoke. So you're telling me that they spent 18 hours a day smoking?
Stjepan Medaković Well they would spend that amount on a studio. But who's to say they didn't smoke 3 cigarettes each at the same time? xD
David Harrison Do you smoke? I do, and there are no serious smokers who smoke 2 at the same time, let alone 3. There's no pleasure in it
He has the band teacher singing voice. Which is beautiful in its own right.
his boogie woogie gave me chills
hes the proof a true classicist is still a musician at heart
I wish he had played the Boogie Woogie a bit longer in this clip....a pleasure to listen to ! You could immediately notice it in the faces of the young viewers.
Leonard Bernstein was not only a musical genius, he was the greatest music educator that ever lived. Nobody in history wanted people to understand and appreciate instrumental music more than he did. That is the problem with music education today. Music educators do not care at all if anyone understands or appreciates instrumental music. They only care about how many plaques and trophies their students win and about their reputation among their peers. They don't want to waste any precious rehearsal time teaching their students to respect and appreciate the music they perform. When those students become adults, they do not appreciate instrumental music and they do not support instrumental music education. Music education is suffering and dying because of a lack of support, even from adults who themselves participated in school music ensembles. Music "educators" are killing music education with their selfishness.
Thank you!
Fortunately, there are exceptions. My youngest son studied for 10 years at a music academy that was housed in a Lutheran church. His teacher was probably paid very little. She put in so much of her own time teaching him. She knew of a church with a magnificent pipe organ and arranged for him to play "Rhapsody in Blue" there. I feel lucky that we met her.
Yes. There are very rare exceptions. But, not enough of them to stop instrumental music and music education for disappearing.
Yes, MDW, I like to think of Leonard Bernstein as the Richard Feynman of music!
I agree with you that Bernstein was a genius & a fantastic educator. However the technical standard of playing at the elite level is higher now than it has ever been. Today I would have trouble even gaining a place at the music conservatory I graduated from back in the 1980's.
It's possible that music education among the wider population may be deteriorating, but i'm certain that depends on where in the world you live.
i love seeing young musicians surpass the efforts of my generation, & i see it all the time.
An example of how the best musicians are the ones that don’t discount other, newer genres
Absolutely. It gets on my nerves when people say "music used to be better back in year x" and dismiss the amazing wealth of musical talent that exists in every generation. And they'll go "would you just LISTEN to this trash they play on the radio these days" as if that's a new phenomenon. There was always trash on the radio, but we don't hear those songs from back then because they didn't stand the test of time. The greats of today will be remembered decades or centuries from now - at which point we will again see people point out how music from today was much better than whatever will be popular by then.
There is a maestro hier in Brazil who study music history and once he said that Bernstein was not only a great man but a super musician too. In fact, a real genius.
I was lucky enough to have Mr. Bernstein come give a Young People's Music program at my grade school in Manhattan. Years later. waiting with my friends on line to get into a Grateful Dead Concert at the Fillmore East, Bernstein and his family got out of a limo, Billy Graham personally escorted them inside. He loved rock & roll, and especially the Beatles.
Wait. That Billy Graham?
The World Renown Preacher?
No, I think he is referring to the rock manager.
@@irish66 No, the Bill Graham originally named Wulf Grajonka.
@@soaringvulture Ah. Right. It was the "Billy" that threw me.
1:30 "My baby does the hanky panky ... mixolydian!" :-)
He's actually using pop music of the time to teach the "Modes". Scales that do not start with "Do" but rather another note as a tonic.
Very brilliant way to teach it, and the way my music teacher taught it as well.
Bernstein was a real musician and he loved good music of all styles, he was great!
Talent beyond boundaries!!!
He came to lecture student conductors at Juilliard. 1985.
Undoubtedly the greatest musical educator of the 20th century, his televised Young People’s Concerts inspired a generation of music lovers and musicians. At a time when Rock music was disrespected, he elevated it and presaged today when its taught in college courses. Bernstein was a genius way ahead of the times.
Leonard Bernstein was the best music teacher I ever had!
Lenny was a total musician-a genius in all areas of the endeavor, including music appreciation (the one exception, of course, being his singing...).
¿Why "Lenny"?
@@opale1572 "Lenny" was Bernstein's affectionate nickname.
I watched all these episodes on tv as a child on Sunday nights. It was wonderful. He had such a gift for teaching and finding joy in all music to share and connect with people across all ages, all styles, all cultures, and to make it simple and understandable for everyone. Thank you.
man, Lenny knew how to stay in touch with the pop scene of his times and be able to hold his solid career in the classical music biz. A true inspiration to all musicians, wether classical or not.
It’s wonderful to see Lenny boogie woogie. He was killing it!
Listen to him playing Rhapsody in Blue. He does it quite well.
¿Conoció usted a Bernstein? ¿Fue amigo suyo?
This was such a gifted, inspired and open minded Dude. It‘s so wonderful we can still listen to some of his teachings thanks to modern media.
TRULY A RENAISSANCE MAN. ONE OF THE GREATS.
LOVE IT !!! MY RESPECT FOR MR BERNSTEIN. INCREASES WITH EVERY VIDEO.
This is monumental .... what an amazing talent !!
You got that right, hoss, and while I've admired many famous and not-so-famous musicians that have passed away during my lifetime of nearly 60 years, I still mourn his passing most of all.
I don't know what the context was, but in one show he used The Beatles "And I Love Her" and the kids just screamed, like they knew EXACTLY what he was talking about, course he couldn't sing it as well but he showed how he knew what he was talking about and how to make it relate to these kids.
I remember watching the episode in which LB discussed modes and played "You Really Got Me" by The Kinks. The image/scene has stuck with me all these years.
Amen ta that, brother! I'm so sad I never got to meet him.
Bless him. Great conductor, great musician.
Master Class.
In music, Bernstein was, is and will forever be, the man.
"Along Comes Mary", by a band called The Association
Wonderful Man!
One of the greatest musicians/composers of his time and the greatest music educator of all time.
so cool! just love him
Help! is actually quite complex, when you really listen to it. Singing over each others parts and so on.
And the way the echo comes first.
I was going to say he should've tried ELP Tarkus, but at the end he played Honky Tonk Train Blues which was covered by Keith Emerson himself, I think that's good enough.
I should have liked to have heard him play Tarkus.
a true lover of music
Talent without end!
He has a better voice than Bob Dylan. He could have been the keyboard player for some rock band. After all, he has the lyrics memorized, can play the piano at the same time, and is able to have eye contact with the audience as well. He is getting applause even before he is finished. He really knew how to connect with the youth. They smiled when he played. It could have been a back-up plan in case the symphonic conducting didn't pan out. Or maybe a moonlighting job. I am trying to be comical, but in all seriousness, it is inspiring to see him use rock songs to explain music theory in ways that would interest them. It reminds me of Mr. Holland's Opus, where Richard Dreyfus plays Lover's Concerto for the class.
I really love Lenny!
Awesomeness.
What a great guy.
Was a beast of a musician and one heck of a teacher
I'm missing "A Day in the Life" what he used as an example for major scales are not always sounding happy.
maraboo72 just because it's in Ionian mode doesn't mean it's got to be happy.
@@georgeb.wolffsohn30 its that I to iii progression, sounds sad
He was definitely a Beatles fan.
WOW !!!
God I love this genius.
A Giant!
@rockclimber21 with extensions ‘by licence’ up to a′ and even down to e. In addition to the final, the note d′ - the tenor of the corresponding seventh psalm tone - was regarded as having an important melodic function in the fifth church mode.
In the Renaissance the term ‘Mixolydian’ was sometimes applied to polyphony. In modally ordered collections, pieces ending on G in cantus durus are usually divided into two groups using different clefs.
To quote THE ASSOCIATION makes him a connaisseur de luxe!
Those songs were the pop songs of those years
The OG professor of music
Those were the days!
Ele sabe ser estrela!!! você sempre Será imbatível!!!
Pure talent
@TimboBandit, one of the 7 Church Modes! I love incoporating the modes into music composition.
R.I.P Leonard Bernstein
@rockclimber21 It's what you call the collection of whole steps and half steps you get when you start the Major scale from the fifth degree
The modes aren't "different" scales, as much as they're just different ways to think about the major scale
The fact that one of the greatest, most talented composers, musicians, conductors of all time did love all that popular music should tell us something...
What does that tell you ?
That he knew good music when he heard it!
Bernstein loved all kinds of music. There wasn't anything he couldn't play!
this guy could play anything :)
Oh, I loved those programs as a young person! He influenced me SO much. (And, yes, I became a professional musician!)
He was the best.
@rockclimber21 It is the fifth degree of the major scale,
like G7 In The Key of C!
If you are in C major you just start on the fifth note "G" and play up an octave and stop on the note G and you have played the G mixolydian scale!
When you REALLY understand the meaning of 5 to 1 you will have the key to the diatonic harmonic system!
It is pure musical mathematic magic!
Super
From a number of different "Young Peoples' Concerts..."
With the possible exception of Robert Greenberg (who could only be tied with him for first place), Bernstein was the greatest musical educator who has ever lived.
With the possible exceptions of Benny Goodman, Wynton Marsalis, and Yo-Yo Ma (and they could only be tied with him for first place), no "concert" musician has ever been so comfortable with, so embracing of so many other musical styles.
thx
The kick I get from these shows is the way the kids dressed. All the boys wore suits & all the girls wore dresses. Nowadays if you went to a concert like this you'd wear jeans & a collared shirt. It's like going to certain Churches. Some people even wear shorts & T-shirts.
I miss getting more dressed up than I do now.
+coreycox2345 Then dress up more.
You are correct. If I miss dressing with more thought, I should do it again. You are not the first person to suggest this.
It's easy to get lazy about it if everyone else isn't putting as much thought into it, or you may feel awkward looking like you have dressed up too much for something. But there are always ways to do it subtly rather than ostentatiously.
I am somewhat competent at this when feel like doing it. Although I like the way you encourage others to be their best, you are quite bossy. Maestro_T does not work for someone dancing to her own tune.
What a treasure! I can't help but wonder, where are today's Bernsteins?
Leonard Bernstein was also a big fan of Michael Jackson...man, he really had a fine taste in every genre!
That's because he didn't need an image to sell it to him, he could hear what they were doing.
The last one is the best :D
paulostroff99 Also a great communicator. He was a one-off. Huge amount of energy and talent.
kempff-He was also a great composer. West Side Story and much more.
“ also”?! I m not sure he would like to be remembered for being “ also “ a composer!
In addition to the huge success of West Side Story , there were the Chichester psalms, Candide , On the town, Wonderful Town and his Mass , among his celebrated works. Of course, he was a terrific conductor too - and knew how to charm audiences, both adults, and - as seen here- young kids.
@rockclimber21 The common name for the seventh of the eight church modes, the authentic mode on G. In the Middle Ages and Renaissance the Mixolydian mode was described in two ways: as the diatonic octave species from g to g′, divided at d′ and composed of a fourth species of 5th (tone-tone-semitone-tone) plus a first species of 4th (tone-semitone-tone), thus g-a-b-c′-d′+ d′-e′-f′-g′; and as a mode whose FINAL was g and whose AMBITUS was f-g′,
@darkprose
Absolutely, absolutely true.
Nice 😁
Genius
@rockclimber21 For example, in Palestrina's second book of Madrigali spirituali (1594), nos.24-7 use CHIAVETTE to represent the higher (authentic) Mixolydian mode, while nos.28-30 use normal soprano, alto, tenor and bass clefs to represent the lower (plagal) Hypomixolydian.
-Oxford Dictionary of Music
TimboBandit is right, that's exactly how we use it today but by coincidence I just happen to be looking at the history when I came across this video so why not paste it in...
Modes... good episode!
Reminds me of the scene in "Airplane" where the nun plays Aretha Franklin's "Respect" to induce vomitting.
life must be difficult to supermen like Leonard. If he only lived to see and hear for example, Arcturus album called "La masquerade infernale"
1:33 Mixolydian.
Wow! Great boogie woogie!
@rockclimber21 Yes, they are the things which Anakin Skywalker had in such high numbers that it made him the Chose One.
Moj omiljeni dirigent ! ! !
bolji nego nacist karajan.
Was für ein weitgefächerter Geist, was für ein Musiker!
Das hätten wir uns auch in Deutschland gewünscht, einen Karajan (der zumindest genauso gut aussah), der uns und unseren Kindern Klassik und Jazz erklärt hätte!"
@rockclimber21 haha, take any major scale and lower the leading tone (7th) a half step, and thats mixolydian. example, g major with f natural, or c major with a b flat
It would have been cool to hear him wax on Yes and Genesis...
Yeah but he was used to classical music which is Even more complex, the most complex of all músic
Yes! I would have loved to hear him talk about Supper’s Ready, Cinema Show or The Musical Box, or And You And I, Close To The Edge, etc.
@RS1Comedy1Vids bernstein loved all music. he's playing these for educational purposes
1:50 - "You wanna do it again, don't you?" 😎