Aww man ...this is too funky! By the time I was watching Avery playing those last few bars of his solo, I had the real "stank face" on 😆 Outstanding! Thanks for this. PEACE
I wonder if McCoy practiced on classical pieces, he certainly had the chops for it. He's an indispensable presence in jazz history. Now Freddie Hubbard... whoa.
If fact he wrote many classical pieces in his later years. He had a great left…right up there with Oscar Peterson and Art Tatum who were very accomplished classical pianists.
@@waltgdrums1 Joe Henderson not with us?!? When??? I'm going to look that up!😳 Wow I missed that entirely. Where the hell was I at??? Henderson's sound is one of several of the Tenor Giants I emulate in my performance.
I was at.Blue Note we had a couple of releases in the 70’s that were unreal completely. different than anything I’d ever heard. One Cover looked like a National Geographic Magazine Cover he plays all over the Piano. The other was Expansions. He recorded for many Labels one later Fantasy Lp ( I think free. As the Wind). I am amazed at your background and experiences amazing !!!! Contrary to your assessment you speak intelligently and fluently describing experiences I would never even have heard about. You are an experienced scholar and Jazz freak, Never quit I learn everyday. Do you have a blog? Thanks Peace Michael
Appreciate the kind words, Michael. Extensions is the Blue Note release with tne National Geographic cover. It's great, with Alice Coltrane, Wayne Shorter and Gary Bartz. No blog for me, it's all here on RU-vid. Stay tuned, the best is yet to come.
This video finds McCoy Tyner, Joe Henderson, Freddie Hubbard, Avery Sharp, and Louis Hayes in very find form. As my Jegna (Keeper of the Culture) , Bilaal Opio Oba used to say, "They got the pot on the front burner and they cookin' ".