Kenji Bunch Videos
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2024-05-04
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Live Master Class 11.22.17 - Two of the Melodic Minor Modes Played a bunch of tunes, made a bunch of mistakes but had a great time hanging with everyone! Visit (http•••) for more information about some of the best jazz guitar lessons on the internet! Barry Greene has been a leading instructor of jazz guitar for more than 20 years. Currently a professor of jazz studies at the University of North Florida, Barry has an extensive background in performance and instruction. He has played all over the United States and Europe and has garnered praise from some of the most influential guitar players in the world. Take the opportunity to study with one of the finest educators of jazz guitar.
Jar Bunch Heilbron 1767 1898 1979
How in the world did a glass of water shock anyone? Welcome to the crazy story of the invention of the Leyden jar: a powerful electric device that was invented by accident! We've got electrifying hundreds of people for the King's pleasure and a bunch of masochistic (and sadistic) adrenalin junkies with some really difficult names to pronounce! Check it out! You can find more information on the history of the Leyden Jar from: Benjamin, P "A History of Electricity" (1898) pp. 514-536 Heilbron, J "Electricity in the 17th and 18th Centuries" (1979) pp. 313-320 Priestly, J "History and Present State of Electricity" (1767) pp. 84-97 Correction: Leyden is in the Netherlands not Germany. Sorry As usual, the music in the beginning and the end is from the fabulous Kim Nalley. ps. if you want to make your own Leyden jar it's easy, just take a bottle of water and stick a metal stick in it (I used a metal skewer). It works even better if you add some tin foil on the outside! That is it. To charge it up you can rub a tube with cloth or fur and then rub the tube against the metal stick. Or, you could do what I did and make an electricity machine with a plastic lid on a drill rubbed against rabbit fur. Remember that the outside must be grounded (connected to the ground). Have fun :P
From Newbery Medal-winning author Matt de la Peña and bestselling illustrator Loren Long comes a story about the strongest bond there is and the diverse and powerful ways it connects us all. According to the New York Times Book Review, "Everything that can be called love – from shared joy to comfort in the darkness – is gathered in the pages of this reassuring, refreshingly honest picture book." The episode is hosted by Amy Haroldson and features musician and composer Kenji Bunch. This video is the final episode of Symphony Storytime Season Two, which features 16 new videos of diverse stories (12 English, 4 Spanish) with orchestra musicians playing a variety of musical instruments. Watch all episodes, including Season One, for free at orsymphony.org/storytime
Terry Plumeri Bunch Maupin Harden Lotus 1904 1969 1971 1974 1975 1976 2006
``He Who Lives in Many Places, reissued in 2006, comes from an earlier session still, a 1971 recording that didn't see initial release until 1976 and features an equally impressive line-up of Abercrombie, Herbie Hancock, Eric Gravatt and Michael Smith. Smith will be the least-known of the bunch, but at the time of this recording he was an astutely intuitive drummer who would ultimately play with a laundry list of well-known artists before his career tragically cut short in 2006 at the age of fifty-nine. He Who Lives' five tracks are Plumeri's, but despite their compositional substance, there's plenty of freedom to go around. There are unmistakable reference points. Smith's persistent high hat at the start of "Underwater" is similar to Miles Davis' "Shhh/Peaceful" on In a Silent Way (Columbia, 1969), but things soon open up, more akin to Weather Report's 1971 eponymous Columbia debut. And while Plumeri's expressively singing Arco is a defining element, he's equally strong when he puts down the bow and hooks Smith hand-in-glove, creating a firm but pliant foundation for solos by Abercrombie and Hancock. Abercrombie's voice was already unmistakable by this time, [...] Here he demonstrates the unique lyricism soon to emerge more audibly with a string of consistently outstanding albums on ECM. He Who Lives's ethereal approach to free play would have been a perfect candidate for ECM. Even when things turn decidedly propulsive on the irregular funk of "Timeworn" and fiery free-bop of "Bees," Plumeri's overall musical landscape might have easily coexisted alongside Bennie Maupin's The Jewel in the Lotus (ECM, 1974). He Who Lives in Many Places is an album that could very well have become a classic had it received widespread distribution and promotion. It's ripe with stylistic references to other recordings of its era, but with Plumeri's singular Arco voice pushing the envelope of his instrument, it's an album possessing its own distinct complexion, acknowledging the best albums of its time without being the least bit imitative.`` Terry Plumeri – He Who Lives In Many Places Label: Airborne Records – ARC1 Format: Vinyl, LP, Album Country: US Released: 1975 Genre: Jazz Style: Modal, Free Improvisation, Fusion Tracklist A1 Underwater 0:00 A2 He Who Lives In Many Places 9:56 A3 Timeworn 12:51 B1 Dayspring America 19:04 B2 Bees 24:57 B3 Soft Colored Lightstream 34:49 Credits Acoustic Guitar – Paul Martin (53) (tracks: B3) Artwork [Cover Drawing] – Daphne-Harden Bass, Composed By – Terry Plumeri Coordinator [Consulting] – Tony Taylor Drums – Michael Smith Electric Piano, Piano – Herbie Hancock Engineer [Remix] – Bill McElroy (tracks: A3, B1, B2) Guitar – John Abercrombie Liner Notes – PSTrupp Percussion – Eric Gravatt Producer – Michael Bialek, Michael Smith (9), Terry Plumeri Recorded By – Kurt Wittig (tracks: B3), Rudy Van Gelder (tracks: A1-B2) #vinylrip
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- Zeitleiste: Komponisten (Nordamerika). Interpreten (Nordamerika).
- Indizes (in alphabetischer Reihenfolge): B...