Hyperlocrian

Hyperlocrian

KZread channel of the music blog HYPERLOCRIAN.COM

Impressum:
Markus Brandstetter
Am Steinberg 14
13086 Berlin
E-Mail: [email protected]
fon: 01522-9674068
www.hyperlocrian.com

Пікірлер

  • @babyirene3188
    @babyirene31888 күн бұрын

    No Line OTH? ????? The Thinking Room did not get used enough! .)

  • @underthecoverswithjeff9893
    @underthecoverswithjeff98939 күн бұрын

    They really should’ve done a proper album with Gilby… yeah, he’s in TSI but that’s all covers

  • @GoingMoog
    @GoingMoog17 күн бұрын

    Good on Mike for getting out as the US had (has?) genuinely turned into some kind of insane circus. Hope he’s found some peace and tranquility in Spain.

  • @kevinhall3449
    @kevinhall344927 күн бұрын

    Awesome, thx Miss J, it was a concert highlight of my life to hear the Jeff Beck group live in Edmonton AB, Canada in 1999. 2200 seat Auditorium, yup, that were me in the 4th row loving it. Fabulous playing by all 4 musicians.

  • @RitaRos
    @RitaRosАй бұрын

    Love Jennifer and Michael!🙏🌍⭐⭐💔💝🌻🌸🖤🤍🎵🎶🎼🌞

  • @fifabobplay6982
    @fifabobplay6982Ай бұрын

    The best of guitar 💯

  • Ай бұрын

    28:25 I watched that same tapping instructional series, it's really good

  • @AntoineMikhtarian
    @AntoineMikhtarianАй бұрын

    Thanks a lot for having me 💚🙏 Such a great pleasure talking with you. You're a wonderful host!

  • @hyperlocrian
    @hyperlocrianАй бұрын

    thank you so much, the pleasure was all mine!

  • @silkelafrentz7998
    @silkelafrentz7998Ай бұрын

    Happy 🎉 to find this interview with all your informations about the hel trio ❤

  • @hyperlocrian
    @hyperlocrianАй бұрын

    glad you enjoyed it!

  • @MrZootalores
    @MrZootalores2 ай бұрын

    the MJ & Jenn performances are fun to watch,the crazy costumes but i can see why she is so proud to have played with Jeff Beck. and have him drop his hands off his guitar & point at her after she simply killed it!Jennifer's an inspiration to all musicians & she's still with us,still playing great!

  • @guitarmixvids
    @guitarmixvids2 ай бұрын

    “The Gospel Truth” is my favorite new rock album . And I think its Gilby’s best record to date!

  • @tavastian3288
    @tavastian32883 ай бұрын

    half a million dollars a week to keep us on the road, expenses like bus drivers.. ah yes the bus drivers, those damn money sinks

  • @victorherrero4790
    @victorherrero47904 ай бұрын

    Cool guy, great vibe, solid performer and nice voice.

  • @AlainNavasDrama
    @AlainNavasDrama4 ай бұрын

    dam to have such a huge tour on the road, and only have to perform 2-3 shows a week is a luxury....Its so expensive to tour that musicians have to do shows EVERY night just to make a profit....MJ had 2-3 days off in between while still making huge profits, what a time ..

  • @jaeen7665
    @jaeen76654 ай бұрын

    She's literally cemented in history, on stage with some of MJ's most iconic performances. In a hundred years from now, people will watch Dirty Diana at Wembley, and there she'll be. Running around on stage with the legend, the King of Pop.

  • @moveonmotortrainingenj-p1384
    @moveonmotortrainingenj-p13845 ай бұрын

    I saw these two most exquisite musicians 3 days ago at the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, performing songs from Where You Wish you Were and new songs. It was the most intimate experience you can have in a concert hall.

  • @FLAME-XIII
    @FLAME-XIII5 ай бұрын

    Gilby is a great replacement for Izzy, pretty sad that he was fired bt Axl

  • @pacman3556
    @pacman35566 ай бұрын

    50 songs from the GNR catalog.... but GNR also plays a lot of cover songs live also he probably had to learn.

  • @FdViv
    @FdViv6 ай бұрын

    👍🏻

  • @thomaspkratz
    @thomaspkratz6 ай бұрын

    Sting can play without WW3 going on over his shoulder. Love it😂

  • @dolphy1978
    @dolphy19786 ай бұрын

    He's just jealous that Sting left him for jazz musicians.

  • @silviocrespo4329
    @silviocrespo43297 ай бұрын

    And I was looking to find out who the guy was who reedited the police songs for the documentary!

  • @annamariam1077
    @annamariam10777 ай бұрын

    Will never forget the Bad & Dangerous concerts I attended in Sweden. Jennifer was absolutely amazing and unforgettable. Bless her and her integrity, and her respect for Michael. 🙏

  • @NinossoniN
    @NinossoniN7 ай бұрын

    I attended the HIStory tour in Sweden, let me know if you have any memorbillia you could sell me :) /from gbg

  • @1984Lazarus
    @1984Lazarus7 ай бұрын

    She's so cool!

  • @claudiaputtin287
    @claudiaputtin2877 ай бұрын

    Beautiful Jennifer❤

  • @adenihil
    @adenihil8 ай бұрын

    Man I just love Stew! …Every interview he gives from the Sacred Grove, he gets up and starts walking around. Stew’s the kind of guys you have to tie down on a chair if you want him to sit. 😂 …Or put a drumset in front of the chair.

  • @3393guy
    @3393guy11 ай бұрын

    Awesome to hear and learn from these two on how they made this album. Thank you for sharing this!

  • @raynizzle143
    @raynizzle143 Жыл бұрын

    She rocked the civic circle in Longview, Washington last night.

  • @garyphelps9123
    @garyphelps9123 Жыл бұрын

    i still love dawgs rag especially the call and response between daryl and david.we had a festival in bakersfield on the bill was newgrass,doc watson,hot rize

  • @garyphelps9123
    @garyphelps9123 Жыл бұрын

    steve goodman hung around jethro and was good friends

  • @garyphelps9123
    @garyphelps9123 Жыл бұрын

    been listening to goat sessions

  • @garyphelps9123
    @garyphelps9123 Жыл бұрын

    i believe i could be wrong old an in the way is the biggest selling bluegrass album in history

  • @garyphelps9123
    @garyphelps9123 Жыл бұрын

    tony rice ,david grisman not bad influence

  • @garyphelps9123
    @garyphelps9123 Жыл бұрын

    it started with old and in the way

  • @garyphelps9123
    @garyphelps9123 Жыл бұрын

    grisman aha great

  • @garyphelps9123
    @garyphelps9123 Жыл бұрын

    mike what is a lloyd loar 1924 in great condition worth ball park

  • @rickpearlstein6421
    @rickpearlstein64214 ай бұрын

    If it's real (there were many knockoffs tagged as Loars) I've seen values ranging from 50k to over 100k.

  • @COTG666
    @COTG666 Жыл бұрын

    Jennifer Batten is a legend.

  • @pedronmonteiro
    @pedronmonteiro Жыл бұрын

    He wishes he could play jazz but all he can do is rip off some reggae beats. This man should thank God for Sting every day of his life.

  • @willowwale2000
    @willowwale2000 Жыл бұрын

    Agreed

  • @chrisfurius
    @chrisfurius Жыл бұрын

    Please tell me you're trolling. You must be trolling. I guess it's possible someone can be so monumentally ignorant of his drumming(and drumming in general), but I still believe you're trolling.

  • @shanecabbage2187
    @shanecabbage2187 Жыл бұрын

    People need to see this interview. I hope the YT algorithm gets this in front of people. Thanks for the post.

  • @asamiyashin444
    @asamiyashin444 Жыл бұрын

    Pathetic clickbait. He only trash jazz for one minute, and not so much. I came here for 20 minutes of jazz trashing and I got disappointed 😅.

  • @_6079SMITH
    @_6079SMITH Жыл бұрын

    That must have been a spine tingling moment when Stewart and Andy really heard Sting's voice for the first time.

  • @dj.sobxrbe
    @dj.sobxrbe Жыл бұрын

    the power of michael jackson

  • @adityatyagi4009
    @adityatyagi4009 Жыл бұрын

    Stewart is just jealous that he can't swing worth a damn and can't play jazz.

  • @andrewsuryahartono829
    @andrewsuryahartono829 Жыл бұрын

    Can you play better than stewart?

  • @adityatyagi4009
    @adityatyagi4009 Жыл бұрын

    Along with a zillion other drummers, I can play jazz much better than Stewart. Can I play The Police songs better than Stewart? No.

  • @willowwale2000
    @willowwale2000 Жыл бұрын

    @@adityatyagi4009 Man,you don't have to answer this guy.

  • @willowwale2000
    @willowwale2000 Жыл бұрын

    That's correct

  • @nomandad2000
    @nomandad20009 ай бұрын

    @@adityatyagi4009have you ever heard Stewart Copeland play Jazz before?

  • @thereseember2800
    @thereseember2800 Жыл бұрын

    I wonder what they were profiting per week if they were spending $500,000 per week?

  • @sarppaleffat
    @sarppaleffat Жыл бұрын

    Not necessarily that much, because the tour is not necessarily a business in itself, but a part of the whole business of the artist. It might be, that the tour can be considered kind of as a marketing expense in the whole business of the artist. Tour does create revenue, but when talking about such a massive artist as MJ was, it probably wasn't important whether the tour broke even, the investment in the tour would return in some other form. Most of the money anyway is not in touring, back in the day it was in the album sales, not sure how now in the digital era, but even more so in other business deals, such music or the artist persona used in other popular culture products, like commercials, movies, products, and of course the music being played on the radio or on tv. All that is made possible partially by making the artist desirable to the public by for example bringing the artist to your city to perform, in other words by touring. :) For smaller bands and artists the economical side of the tour can be much more important, MJ at the time was an artist that probably had to say no to a lot of business proposals and was still able to make a very good profit as basically a global phenomena.

  • @LivingForce
    @LivingForce Жыл бұрын

    The profit in the 80s for tours was in the merch + album sales. For a global icon like MJ, 500k a week is like us putting gas in our car, a deductible expense that will generate more profit in ways of music sales and radio spins...Which more than made up for an negative losses...

  • @Michael-jw6et
    @Michael-jw6et Жыл бұрын

    @@sarppaleffat The tour was absolutely making over 500,000 a week. Didn't you hear Jennifer? They were regularly playing in front of 50,000 people plus. Let's say the Michael Jackson tickets were: $100 dollars (which I am sure they were or maybe more) if they played a 50,000 sold out show, that is 5 million dollars for one night. They were doing that three nights a week. They were no doubt grossing several millions dollars a week.

  • @globalcitizenn
    @globalcitizenn7 ай бұрын

    @@Michael-jw6et No the tickets were $20 - $30. MJ kept tickets affordable so everyone could attend. Victory your was considered expensive at $35

  • @TheAtomC
    @TheAtomC Жыл бұрын

    Good interview. Stewart Copeland along with Neil Peart were two of my favorite influences growing up, but I disagree with him on some of his jazz comments.

  • @horstlippitsch
    @horstlippitsch Жыл бұрын

    Legende!!👌

  • @mistersylliboy2690
    @mistersylliboy2690 Жыл бұрын

    Jennifer and John Moffett (the drummer) were the heart of the band.

  • @aperson2943
    @aperson29436 ай бұрын

    Don't forget about Greg Philiganes on keyboard. He was like the maestro

  • @mrdave4714
    @mrdave4714 Жыл бұрын

    This album had so much potential, it just lacked the ball grabbing hits!

  • @AraliaFresia
    @AraliaFresia Жыл бұрын

    I turned down a music student with an afro thinking he’d be down for some jazz improvisation with me, but it turns out he had parents that loved jazz and hoped he’d become a jazz musician. They gave him the best of the teachers, ear training, suzuki method but now he just wants what i had, rote learning and emphasis classical music. Bach to me is what i am rebelling from. Anyone rebelling from jazz is mental. Go seek counseling and learn to separate jazz from your parents. Stewart abuses his power because everything was set up for him and he has no concept of merit. The most entitled-acting celebrity who tries to kill the very music genre he joyfully narrates about in his inauthentic, virtue-signaling documentaries.

  • @asamiyashin444
    @asamiyashin444 Жыл бұрын

    "Anyone rebelling from jazz is mental", seriously!? I hate jazz and I didn't grow up with my parents or my culture pushing it on me. I don't have any mental problem, I just don't like it. It is too random and abstract to my tastes. And there are a lot of people like me. Why are there so many jazz fans insulting, belittling and gaslighting people who don't like jazz? I don't see that abusive and narcissistic attitude in many other genres. Why that obsession with imposing jazz on everybody? Don't you realize that it is disrespectful? I would say that you, people who need to belittle who don't like jazz, are the ones with mental problems. In fact, I see many comments from jazz fans in the internet which match cluster B personality disorders such as narcissism or border line. Back off.

  • @Msln-ju3xo
    @Msln-ju3xo Жыл бұрын

    Thank u for posting this. Great album......🎄🙏😇

  • @markusbrandstetter
    @markusbrandstetter Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the comment! I love "No Line On The Horizon" - and especially "Moment of Surrender", such an underrated gem!