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bruni2711
Приєднався 18 лис 2009
Buddy Rich & The Boston Pops COMPLETE! May 15 1981
Drummers and music lovers rejoice. Here is the complete Buddy Rich with the Boston Pops; May 15, 1981. Strike Up the Band AND the entire West Side Story medley. Enjoy and you are very welcome. RIP to the greatest drummer ever.
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Відео
Tommy (5) at White Sox Academy 11-18-09
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Tommy (5) at White Sox Academy 11-18-09
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏 Fantastic
If I'm not mistaken , this was about 4 mos. after his quadruple bypass heart surgery.❤
I LOVE the sound of that Ludwig Bronze Super Sensitive S.D. Saw one up on EBAY about 8 yrs. ago. Didn't bid on it. Haven't seen another one come up since. 😡😡
Look Ma , one hand !!! B.R. THE G.O.A.T !!!!
The conductor was blown away !!!
Una Grande Orchestra da Colonna Sonora da Film, il Direttore Spettacolare. Buddy Ha Suonato TUTTI GENERI MUSICALI, TALENTO JAZZISTICO FENOMENALE PER SEMPRE !!! Non legge nessuna partitura tutto a memoria !!! GENIO !
WSS arr Tommy Newsome
16:53 "I can drum with one arm tied behind my back."
🙏❤🌹 Buddy 🌹❤🙏
JW seems like a kindhearted guy.
Anyone know the name of his kickass bass player?
Wayne Pedziwater who played bass for the group Blood Sweat and Tears.
Wow 🔥🔥🔥🔥
The best master there ever was I mean perfect hands A very sick mind that u couldn’t get in
You have an interest in Magic as well? I was seeing your comment on another site...
👍👍👍
My favorite part of this magnificent recording, is when the camera catches genius composer and conductor John Williams shaking his head in utter amazement at what he's witnessing on the drums. 16:30
GOD. FUCK U IF U DONT AGREE
0
A LUDWIG bronze Supersentitive..?
Loved this...Buddy is absolutely a team player here...and if he played a better West Side Story the first time with gum...boo hoo...I hope it becomes available...but I absolutely loved it when Buddy dropped his right hand and flew with his left stick around the drum kit for a moment...simply death defying I must say !!! Look for it at the very last chapter of his solo coming to a close...and I once worked inside sales for HAL LEONARD Corporation and got to take a order from John Williams himself one day around early 2001...
My God that snare, utter and complete control and Wayne P on bass , monsters
Could you imagine Buddy SCREAMING AT THE BOSTON POPS ORCHESTRA??? THAT WOULD BE EPIC!
BUDDY: "You call THAT, Tuba playing?!" lol.
THE BUS TAPES!!!!!
Great 👍
The Greatest drummer in all eternity A gift from God
So, they told him chewing gum was unacceptable, well I ll take it a step further than Buddy, who said he would try to listen to tge Boston Pops and reject Chet Atkins...well, I ll listen to Buddy somewhere else. They act as though their "traditions" go back before colonialism or something....just lackeys of the Crown In England, who pretend they rule over here
I still come back to this video every once in a while, one hell of a concert to say the least
WOW, I've never seen this before!!!
Чёткий чувак. Светлая ему память.
At 19:55 I turn to talk to my girlfriend .this is amazing to see 😂
Sax section please? Thank you
Not sure of the tenor player but on alto, that was Dave Chapman. May he RIP.
Buddy’s playing his beautiful brass SupraPhonic Super-Sensitive snare. It sounds amazing !
Is that Ludwig?
@@arame29 Yes !
This concert was a private, closed to the public concert taping. The audience were graduating students of Berklee College of Music May 16, 1981, and their parents and families. As part of the graduating class, we were invited to the taping, sometime during the day of the 15th. There were several takes of each tune and because the house was not full, they moved groups of us around the hall during pauses in the taping so that cameras could catch the audience shots. What a thrill to know this video exists and I was there and would be graduating from Berklee the next day! Larry James, Berklee College of Music 1981
I didn’t go to Berklee, Ulowell- where Fred Buda was teaching...he gave us tickets, what an amazing day that was..
How awesome!!!
Bass player slays here
Must have been a high point in Mr Rich' career to have preformed with th great Boston Pops and John Willams. Wow 40 years ago. Magnificent!
Buddy is missing a mic for his bass drum
Buddy fired the orchestra after the gig.
Lol.
LOL
Wayne Pedzwater on bass. Excellent.
After the show he let them have it on the bus. It was a big bus
What’s the Ludwig snare .. Bronze Supersentitive ?
Buddy was playing a Supraphonic "Supersensitive" at that time.
@@MJ2420 Looks bronze. 🥁
Too bad HD wasn't a thing back then.
when Buddy Rich performed, he did look like he was fighting a battle to win..and all his thousand of shows were like that , the energy he brought to the stages was absorbed by the audiences
9 in
At times the solo sounds like a storm! He was a force of nature!!!
At the 16min 3 sec mark, the rude, bored look from the pompous idiot in the background.
What a gem, thank you for uploading!
How did you do the speed correction? This is the first time I've heard this without the wow and flutter. Thank you. The press roll with modulated pitch did sound so cool though...if somebody could actually play that (like Art Tatum and the piano roll...)
Ringo made Ludwig even more famous, but no one ever played them better than Buddy.
never Buddy is woundrous,the unique all over the world.
I wonder what Leonard Bernstein would have thought of this.
that bass player at 13:00 is bad ass
When this was first on TV, I had seen BR a couple of times in person, and I was really struck by the adjustments in style he made to fit in with the orchestra. When he hit that first break (1:39), I was totally blown away by the perfect taste of it. All that build up from the orchestra, over to time on the hi-hat, then the loud CRACK of the snare drum on beat one of the fourth bar. So simple and tasteful. I still love that fill!
Buddy as featured performer, and Buddy as bandleader were very different from one another. Leading his own band, Buddy was In Charge, but playing under another leader as he does here, he takes direction as faithfully as any other member of the ensemble. Not only a great musician, but a great team player.
Fred Patton - superbly described.