Essa apresentação é surreal. A disciplina dos músicos. A homogeneidade dos trombones, sax barítono e contrabaixo. Os trompetes harmonizados. O solo do Trombonista meu Deus é de outro mundo. Tudo é bom.
Maynard had a knack for finding and displaying young talent. Well now, talk about a rock ém and sock ém solo by Steve Weeks. Incredible sound! I thought Randy Purcell had the goods while with the BOSS, but this performance is insane by Steve. RIP Maynard.
Steve Wiest is amazing. He has the screaming fat high range, fat low range, fat midrange. He sounds great in every register, has great technique and commitment to time and he knows how to excite an audience with his solos. For any one learning to play trombone, I would tell them Steve is the guy to emulate. This was probably Maynard's best trombone section, and it's just two guys.
submit it in the highest quality. For some reason they always come out best if the audio track is compressed into MP3 when you upload. If you make your upload HD resolution (even if it really isn't and just upscaled), the audio tracks on those are 192 kbps. and for some reason the regular video it shows before you click HD is clearer as well.
Muito bommm e acho que é assim que tem que se tocar o instrumento de metal....eu como trompetista toco assim nessa técnica usando a língua como o terceiro lábio e digo que funciona mesmo....sylas xavier no Brasil é o melhor prof a ensinar...
I don't know the exact brand or size, but I'm pretty sure he used an older style of mouthpieces. Instead of being cups, like modern mouthpieces, his mouthpiece had a V shape to the throats. But as useful as a new mouthpiece can be, it doesn't do jack shit without a decent player behind it. New, cheater mouthpieces work great for a while, but can do more harm than good.
Sorry, but there's no way even a good recording old capture the impact of this band sitting in the crowd LIVE. All the pitch imperfections were irrelevant at that SPL.
Denis DiBlasio, Nelson Hill and Daniel Jordan on Sax, Matt Bissonette bass and Dave Mancini, drums. I'm not sure about the keyboard, but it seems about the right time to be Ron Pedley. Steve Wiest and (I think) Chris Braymen (sp?) on bone. Stan Mark I recognize, but an not sure about the other two trumpets. Maybe Alan Wise and Hoby Freeman? Apologies to those I'm not sure about. Put that personnel together with the blue tour shirts, and I'm fairly sure this is 1982.