The Brass Pedagogue

The Brass Pedagogue

Welcome to The Brass Pedagogue! Where we cover the lives and Histories of some of the brass world's pioneers in performance and pedagogy.

Stardust a cappella trumpet

Stardust a cappella trumpet

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  • @fido652
    @fido6522 сағат бұрын

    Wynton tweaks his pitch and sings with different timbres and tones that mediate that golden sound. If a musician has technique at that level as Marsalis does then I respect their artistic choices.

  • @NimaBlaydz
    @NimaBlaydz3 сағат бұрын

    Wynton is a museum curator, Miles was a musican…

  • @andreagargiulo6230
    @andreagargiulo62303 сағат бұрын

    Louis Satchmo Armstrong, the greatest of all time!! Mr Armstrong= Mr Jazz❤

  • @butchmitch731
    @butchmitch7313 сағат бұрын

    Mìĺes said it as nicely as it could be said ❤ We all know

  • @realrockomaniac4212
    @realrockomaniac42124 сағат бұрын

    If Wynton Marsalis plays dirty notes they sound superclean. Good for a classical concert.

  • @markhenderson4001
    @markhenderson40018 сағат бұрын

    all 3 of those guys could play this on Bb trumpet; but why play this on Eb trumpet? it sounds even better on Bb trumpet just asking cos most guys would just play it on what they got: a cheap ass conn or selmer, and if they put in the work from when theyre 6yrs old to 17 they can play this no problem. its bcos the smaller instrument is faster? and it sounds smaller? Like soprano sax players .. faster is not better. than ask chuck mangione in his prime to plsy it on flugelhorn!? my guess no problem. God i wish i couldve met Don Smithers tho.

  • @petenrita
    @petenrita9 сағат бұрын

    The guy was on that very special level.

  • @ChuckParDueMusic
    @ChuckParDueMusic9 сағат бұрын

    I keep my Wynton Marsalis records right next to my Miles Davis records. Oh wait...I don’t own any Miles Davis records! (Or Wynton!)

  • @Brainer-pf9xw
    @Brainer-pf9xwКүн бұрын

    My dream is playing the trumpet as Wynton does … nothing else …

  • @firstlast4874
    @firstlast4874Күн бұрын

    Like Freddie Hubbard said, “Wynton don’t play no hip shit”

  • @GordonLF
    @GordonLFКүн бұрын

    Right on point 40 years ago. Nowadays he could have found more and nicer ways to opine about Wynton.

  • @DavidFobare
    @DavidFobareКүн бұрын

    Miles has a point. At this point in their respective careers I thought of Wynton as the soul of technique and Branford as inhabiting the technique of soul.

  • @KenWesaw-up5wf
    @KenWesaw-up5wfКүн бұрын

    Miles Davis loved white people

  • @liamsandal6360
    @liamsandal6360Күн бұрын

    Wrong. In one interview with a magazine, he said that his dying wish was to choke a White person to death. The man was a sick dog - and a lousy trumpet player. Awesome band, though.

  • @mortenfriis4688
    @mortenfriis4688Күн бұрын

    Miles was good.. but became arrogant, a pompous ass. He survived a lot, like Navarro, Lee Morgan, Clifford Brown.. Dizzy was a funny guy and thus not as cooool as Miles with his big glasses and ABBA inspired clothing and red trumpets.. Miles, with Jazz, made some of my favorite recordings mid-late 1950 ies.. later on.. its not jazz, really.. nothing wrong with it, personal taste obviously.. but he acts like he was the only one.. and thats really wrong

  • @ElMcMeen1a
    @ElMcMeen1aКүн бұрын

    C'mon Miles! Saying Winton is "a good trumpet player" is like saying Beethoven could compose a little or that Horowitz could sort of tickle the ivories. Really, man!

  • @rcortez911
    @rcortez9112 күн бұрын

    I understand what he is saying…,Wynton is too “military” and needs some groove

  • @robnickelsen6650
    @robnickelsen66502 күн бұрын

    Loved his autobiography

  • @stuartdryer1352
    @stuartdryer13522 күн бұрын

    It was true in 87, and far more true now.

  • @Nikkithedog-t6b
    @Nikkithedog-t6b2 күн бұрын

    K

  • @torreyintahoe
    @torreyintahoe2 күн бұрын

    Miles had an attitude that was far too inflated for lowly trumpet player. If you've heard one of his songs you've heard them all. Dude acts like he's Eddie Van Halen but doesn't have his talent or the modesty.

  • @rongreen8962
    @rongreen89622 күн бұрын

    You compared Eddie Van Halen to Miles Davis, I suppose with a straight face. “…heard them all.” ??

  • @composerguy100
    @composerguy1002 күн бұрын

    This interview of Miles Davis was nearly 40 years ago when Wynton was establishing himself as a major force. Now, things have changed. Nobody writing their comments here (including me) can hold a candle to Wynton because only a few on the planet can hang at his level. Here's proof: kzread.info/dash/bejne/aGmaj8-sYKrUpJs.html

  • @BradBolin
    @BradBolin2 күн бұрын

    I agree with Miles. The greatest artists have 😊something more than technical ability. It's a pronounced, original perspective or something. Marsalis doesn't have it; he is a maintainer, not an innovator. Technical ability is secondary, in fact. Think of Bob Dylan's vocals. Miles Davis has a forceful personality and perspective. He is a great artist.

  • @rondunn4336
    @rondunn43362 күн бұрын

    Marsalis co/ wrote "The History of Jazz" which included only one white player. What does that tell us?

  • @rondunn4336
    @rondunn43362 күн бұрын

    Apparently only blacks can play jazz, is that not a scream? Laughs in abundance.

  • @chrishill5511
    @chrishill5511Күн бұрын

    In the 1930's Paul Whiteman, a white man, was described in the main stream media as "the King of Jazz". What does the tell us about 1930's America?

  • @grouchosays
    @grouchosays3 күн бұрын

    I made up a joke. What’s the difference between a Wynton Jazz concert and a Wynton classical concert? The audience.

  • @straceshow3212
    @straceshow32124 күн бұрын

    I agree with Miles but add that I quickly get bored listening to Wynton.

  • @1sttvbn
    @1sttvbn4 күн бұрын

    Miles said he wanted to die with his hands around a white mans neck.

  • @jasperchance3382
    @jasperchance33824 күн бұрын

    So talks the man who was told by Bird to use a mute because his tone was ridiculous. Good thing he chose to innovate.

  • @production58
    @production585 күн бұрын

    Miles Davis had great imagination and everything that he played whether you liked it or not.. he proved that decades.. Winton plays with just a jazz sensibility.. and like Miles says he’s a good trumpet player.. when he did the album black code from the underground there was a spark of that creativity that could’ve been.. but he turned his back on it.. and that I believe was his mistake..

  • @JonathanRZeko
    @JonathanRZeko5 күн бұрын

    I enjoyed the first two in terms of performances. The last one by Wynton Marsalis has the best audio the first one. It’s too much reverb. The second one has marginal rhythm. It takes a very good player to nail the piece.

  • @waltersmith7156
    @waltersmith71565 күн бұрын

    If Miles Davis critiques your musical abilities, listen and learn. It should be that simple.

  • @jamesrawlins735
    @jamesrawlins7354 күн бұрын

    well - when he calls Oscar Peterson just a technician who used the same bag of tricks over and over, I'm sorry I have major disagreement with.

  • @waltersmith7156
    @waltersmith71564 күн бұрын

    @@jamesrawlins735 It’s possible to disagree, listen and learn although most people wont listen and learn once they disagree

  • @rioace3953
    @rioace39535 күн бұрын

    Basically the Ponzy scheme financier said, Marsalis was an academic (which mind you by and in itself a real achievement). While to him accounting is art

  • @dwaneyocum1718
    @dwaneyocum17186 күн бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/g6KXutaFnM_Vc9I.html

  • @Will_Moffett
    @Will_Moffett6 күн бұрын

    I mean, you can't argue with Mile's take and you have to appreciate that he didn't chomp on the bait to inflame some kind of perceived rivalry. The difference between Miles and Wynton follows the differences between a pioneer and an expert, respectively. Experts get trapped in theory and are limited by what they think is understandable or traceable. Miles just followed beauty and didn't care to understand the metaphysical of it.

  • @BMerker
    @BMerker6 күн бұрын

    Looks like Davis' fame has gone to his head! Painful to watch...

  • @joelouis-arena4061
    @joelouis-arena40617 күн бұрын

    Miles Davis took no prisoners 😶

  • @PhuccjooMann
    @PhuccjooMann7 күн бұрын

    The Wynton disrespect in the comments is crazy.

  • @sotheresthat7882
    @sotheresthat78827 күн бұрын

    Wynton complained a lot about Miles, apparently not realizing that he was basically stealing his style.

  • @MichaelEdelman1954
    @MichaelEdelman19547 күн бұрын

    Miles is one of the most innovative jazz musicians of his age, and created one of the best Jazz albums ever recorded- Kind of Blue. Maybe the best. Marsalis is an excellent classical trumpet player.

  • @morganneher8643
    @morganneher86437 күн бұрын

    I you know Miles, him repeatedly calling Wynton a good trumpet player means he’s telling the truth and it’s a sign of respect. Miles would not say someone was good if they weren’t. It’s more about willingness to go outside the box which Wynton does not favor and Miles lived for. Miles knew Wynton was good because, Wynton is really good, Miles didn’t throw false compliments around. It’s two schools of approach to music and we needed them both for the art to advance 👍

  • @thekarmafarmer608
    @thekarmafarmer6087 күн бұрын

    If I was Wynton, I`d take that. This is a huge compliment coming from Miles.

  • @loilt5091
    @loilt50917 күн бұрын

    Respectfully, what I know about Wynton…Miles assessment is correct. Perhaps that’s his classical training or just his nature. Personally, I’ve always preferred players willing to take chances, especially live. Even throw out the odd clinker, but push the envelope to unexpected heights! 🇨🇦

  • @MK-qm8xq
    @MK-qm8xq8 күн бұрын

    Miles was a great musician. He should be taken seriously while he's playing music. It's best to leave it at that.

  • @andrewhunter5037
    @andrewhunter50378 күн бұрын

    He's saying Wynton didn't have his own sound. From what I've heard of Wynton, he's most interesting when he's playing either Dixieland or classical, but not Bebop.

  • @barryweston4887
    @barryweston48878 күн бұрын

    One of the coolest cats of all time

  • @mb7196
    @mb71969 күн бұрын

    This isn't very long after the infamous Vancouver Jazz fest incident. When I saw the title of this video I was expecting much worse...haha.

  • @ArmenChakmakian
    @ArmenChakmakian9 күн бұрын

    At this point in his life, Miles Davis said he was bored with jazz. Marsalis is obviously a fantastic horn player. Stylistically though, it wasn’t Miles’s cup of tea.

  • @workingTchr
    @workingTchr9 күн бұрын

    Marsalis's precision is kind of off putting to me, but "Black Codes" and "J-Mood" are equal to "Kind of Blue" in terms of their emotional effect and musical fluency. I think Miles is showing a little jealousy here.

  • @christiankrueger2330
    @christiankrueger23308 күн бұрын

    One of those is the most famous jazz album and the other two I've never heard of

  • @workingTchr
    @workingTchr7 күн бұрын

    @@christiankrueger2330 "Black Codes from the Underground" was Marsalis's first jazz lp. It was followed by "J-Mood". Don't go by "fame" unless that's what you're into. Listen to the _music_ and let that be your guide.

  • @Tony_Williams_Right_Hand
    @Tony_Williams_Right_Hand2 күн бұрын

    ⁠​⁠@@christiankrueger2330casual

  • @haroldbranch7971
    @haroldbranch79719 күн бұрын

    Wynton is a great Trumpet player. not good as Miles says here. he's great

  • @user-sk2fh5cl8y
    @user-sk2fh5cl8y9 күн бұрын

    I saw Miles and Wynton play together in 88 in New Orleans. Miles was an arrogant ass to the audience and his fellow musicians. Shoving them around the stage and playing with his back to the audience. Hey Miles, there’s a lot more to being great than just playing the trumpet.

  • @DavidSmith-kz8lr
    @DavidSmith-kz8lr9 күн бұрын

    sounds like MIles is Jealous..!