I was really touched by this RARE chance to actually here my UNCLE speak. I grew up hearing his MUSIC but never heard him SPEAK..!!! He died when I was 2 yrs old. Also to hear him mention the birth of my cousin, his son...!!! This actually brought tears to my eyes. Thanks "logudorian".
I am a little envious. I had never thought what it would be like for descendants of famous people to see film of them. What I wouldn't give for some film of say, my mother as a young woman or of my grandmother the youngest of 15 kids a hundred years ago. BTW, I have been a fan of your uncle for over 50 years.
Sad he died at such a young age. Probably would have gone down as the greatest jazz trumpeter of all time. He is my favorite trumpeter of all time. I have just about every album he put out.
Also I have this Clifford Brown t shirt I bought on Ebay last year. It's from the blue note 1526 memorial album cover. A must have for Clifford Brown fans. Stay safe and be well.
Priceless footage of Clifford Brown. Soupy Sales was a huge jazz fan and had many famous jazz musicians on his show including Duke Ellington, Coleman Hawkins, Louis Armstrong, Billie Holiday, Charlie Parker, Stan Getz and Miles Davis (6 times). I grew up watching his show.
He lived too clean - no booze, drugs, hookers, or even cussing - so his life isn’t “interesting” enough. Instead we get biopics about Miles and Chet Baker
A stunning post. I don't think there's any musician I'd rather listen to than Clifford Brown. Actual music on the TV in 1955-56? I was born 5 months after Clifford died in the car accident. Amazing.
There’s no telling how famous Clifford would have become. He seems in this short clip like a humble modest man. The world lost someone special that day.
spot on the money good doctor.shame Clifford left so soon along with many of our jazz stars.i remember in the very early50s when scott la faro frightened us young bop players to death then bang gone in a breath.i thank them all for enriching my life with there great talent.many thanks.
@@da11king Miles, Lee, & Brownie all played up to G above high C in their solos - none of those 3 had an upper register as strong as Dizzy, Fats Navarro, Charlie Shavers, or Maggie tho
A great, great musician whose life and career was brutally curtailed by that terrible car accident in June 1956. No Lee Morgan, Freddie Hubbard, Wynton etc without him. From all accounts, he was a very nice man. Nobody had a bad word to say about him, even after sixty years. His best tribute is the glorious music he left behind.
Comment les médias peuvent ils laisser dans l'oubli un artiste de cette dimension quelle honte quand on voit toutes les chèvres qui sont portées aux nues dans les chaînes télévisées. C'est totalement coupable de laisser les gens dans l'ignorance d'une telle beauté artistique et d'un tel génie Chapeau bas pour Mr Brown !
This "Soupy show" originated in Detroit. The band was composed of the Detroit cats. There were 2 Soupy shows, the lunchtime kids show and the late night Soupy show before Shock Theater. This was all live from Detroit. Oh and my dad Don Palmer was the bassist (also doubling on violin) on staff at WXYZ ABC's affiliate. The house band had 3 horns, guitar, bass, piano, drums, and accordion. Joe Messina the fine guitarist spoke of learning his style from horn players like Clifford Brown. When the top musicians toured through Detroit, they usually also played the Soupy Show! Occasionally I got to go to the station where the show was aired. but then I was 5 when this was recorded. But to see how Clifford handled the trumpet around the jazz structures is quite a treat.....And I've never seen this before! Thanks Logudorian!!
Clifford Brown unlike other jazz musicians didn't do drugs or drink. Sonny Rollins was so amazed that Clifford could play that good without doing DRUGS. Sonny Rollins credits Clifford with saving his life. He stopped using drugs and is still alive and is 90.
That rumour that Jazz musicians thought that they could play like Charlie Parker if they just took heroin like Bird did, I don't know if it's true or not. Either way, that stuff affected a lot of guys & ladies.
Just learned about Mr. Brown today... what a player! Even better, there's footage of him doing his mastery! Of all the jazz trumpeters I've heard, Brown is the best, period!
One of my all-time favorite TV personalities with one of the greatest jazz trumpeters of all time. Both have provided lots of pleasure to audiences over the years. This must have been around 1953-4, years before Soupy left Detroit for New York.
I saw him first in 1959 in Detroit when I was about 10. He later went to NYC and had a Saturday noon and then a later show show, where he had celebs have a pie thrown in their face among other skits. Finally there was the daily show at about 4 PM. Loved him and Frank Nastasi as the guy at the door and White Fang/Black Tooth. One of the funniest shows ever on TV.
Awesome sauce, the sweetest tone of all time. SO wonderful to have visuals of Brownie for us who were too young to have ever seen him. Thanks for posting.
Oh man, this was great. It's always a treat to see the old masters on video. My dad left me his great jazz collection and CB has a sound and has become one of my favorites
@speakeasynyc Clifford was and is a national treasure. He was taken to give Gabriell a rest. His playing on "With Strings" is angelic and will never be matched.
9 ปีที่แล้ว +13
85th ANNIVERSARY HIS BIRTH TODAY!!! CLIFFORD BROWN (October 30, 1930 - June 26, 1956), aka "Brownie", was an American jazz trumpeter. He died at the age of 25 in a car accident,
In every autobiography I've read on Jazz musicians they all state that Cliffords passing was one of the biggest losses both personal and professional. In listening to him play I can see why. If you can hear this "Brownie" play us a tune would you.
2:13 Clifford fills a tragic category among 20th Cr try giants… undoubtedly the greatest loss of potential I’ve ever imagined. Not many virtuosos could straddle bop, pre bop, and just about anything else with his kind of acumen. It is to cry over a half century later and will be in another half century. Maybe forever.
I always like to revisit the virtuosity of the great Clifford Brown. This is one of the very few films of Clifford playing live. He also makes a cameo appearance in the film "Carmen Jones" during the Max Roach scene on stage.
I agree Brews, Theodore "Fats" Navarro was pinancle in Cliffords development. He did get some lessons from "Fats" before he passed in 1950.. Booker has Amazing Compositions & playing and to think he passed at age 23!! . Lee Morgan, again great player & Composer and as the rest died very young. Booker being the youngest..I play Trumpet and I cannot name one favorite. I'd name at least 10 Trumpeters because that's a tough question..imo
pseudokowski ...Saul "Sonny" Berman (April 21st, 1925 - January 16th, 1947) was only twenty-one years old when he left us due to an overdose of heroin on his first and last time. He was the youngest trumpeter to die in the history of jazz. Sonny was also a member of the Woody Herman band at the time of his death.
Redbox code DVD night It's very Cool that Soupy Sales had jazz music on his show. You know he was a jazz lover and in his glory having Clifford Brown on his show! What great footage this is. thank you for Posting it.
A little sad to hear that he just became a father, knowing that he wouldn't be with his son very long. At least he had the joy of fatherhood for the rest of his short life. I love listening to him play, and listening to the interview.
You man k is by now but it's called, "Brownie Speaks" featuring his family and friends including the sax player Lou Donaldson who played with him during the Night at Birdland gig with Art Blakey.
@@wilgreenstreet ...Brownie replaced Little Benny Harris. The gig was in Philadelphia, PA circa May 1951, shortly after Brownie's long hospitalization from car accident in Maryland on June 3, 1950. There aren't any recordings of this event. Roy Haynes was the drummer. Clifford Benjamin Brown was in a body cast during his long hospitalization.
My trumpet playin' friend and small group member Dan in '63 said he liked Clifford Brown's trumpet playing better than Diz's. Sure can see why. From Fats to Brown to Dorham passes the baton. Good to see my man doin' so well! And in Detroit too! "nuff of these depressing album covers sometimes.
Brownie is STILL the gold standard for trumpet players. I don't say that just because he and I are from the same town. But all the trumpeters that came on the scene in the 60's wanted to play like him. I saw Freddie Hubbard once and heard him say that Brownie was the reason he started to play the trumpet. While all those players -- Hubbard, Lee Morgan, Blue Mitchell, Woody Shaw -- were also listening to Miles while growing up, they ALL wanted to play like Brownie. He didn't start to play the trumpet until he was in high school and just 6 years later started his recording career. He only recorded for 4 years but is on TONS of records...his own with Max Roach, Sarah Vaughn and Dina Washington used him a lot on their recordings. There was no one like Brownie. If you haven't yet, be sure to check out "Clifford Brown With Strings". Man...so lyrical.
One of the most amazing documents of youtube! Awesome. See Brownie talk .... and know further that it was a giant in stature, but a normal person! Thank you, thank you for this video. From Buenos Aires ..
CLIFFORD BENJAMIN "BROWNIE" BROWN, SR. (October 30th, 1930 - June 26th, 1956): When I first saw this video, I couldn't hold back the tears. Just listening to Brownie's short conversation with Soupy left me awestruck. My mother has three LPs by The Clifford Brown-Max Roach Quintet: CLIFFORD BROWN AND MAX ROACH (EmArcy MG 26043), STUDY IN BROWN (EmArcy MG 36037) and CLIFFORD BROWN AND MAX ROACH AT BASIN STREET (EmArcy MG 36070). She also has DINAH JAMS Featuring DINAH WASHINGTON (EmArcy MG 36000), JAM SESSION (EmArcy MG 36002), SARAH VAUGHAN (EmArcy MG 36004) and JAZZ OF TWO DECADES (EmArcy DEM-2). My Uncle Harold had JAY JAY JOHNSON SEXTET Featuring Clifford Brown (Blue Note BLP 5028), NEW FACES - NEW SOUNDS: LOU DONALDSON QUINTET Featuring Clifford Brown And Elmo Hope (Blue Note BLP 5030), NEW STAR ON THE HORIZON: CLIFFORD BROWN (Blue Note BLP 5032), A NIGHT AT BIRDLAND WITH THE ART BLAKEY QUINTET Featuring Clifford Brown/Volumes 1, 2 and 3 (Blue Note BLP 5037, BLP 5038 and BLP 5039), BROWN AND ROACH, INC. (EmArcy MG 36008), CLIFFORD BROWN AND MAX ROACH (EmArcy MG 36036), STUDY IN BROWN (EmArcy MG 36037) and CLIFFORD BROWN AND MAX ROACH AT BASIN STREET (EmArcy MG 36070). He also had ARRANGED BY MONTROSE Featuring THE BOB GORDON QUINTET [Side 1] and THE CLIFFORD BROWN ENSEMBLE [Side 2] (Pacific Jazz PJ-1214) [released as a reissue twelve-inch LP, in February 1956] and JAZZ WEST COAST: AN ANTHOLOGY OF CALIFORNIA MUSIC (Pacific Jazz JWC-500). My Uncle Walter, Jr. had CLIFFORD BROWN WITH STRINGS (EmArcy MG 36005) and CLIFFORD BROWN AND MAX ROACH (EmArcy MG 36036). My Uncle Jim had CLIFFORD BROWN AND MAX ROACH (EmArcy MG 36036), STUDY IN BROWN (EmArcy MG 36037) and JAZZ OF TWO DECADES (EmArcy DEM-2). They all bought these classic LPs during Brownie's lifetime. I was almost three years old when the latter left us. As a matter of fact, Brownie was in Europe with the Lionel Hampton Orchestra featuring Quincy Jones, Art Farmer, Jimmy Cleveland, Gigi Gryce, Anthony Ortega, Clifford Solomon, Monk Montgomery, Alan Dawson, etc. when I was born.
oh my god that is so sad. he died so young. best jazz player in history in my opinion. he was so happy about his new baby boy. i mean just look at his face. little did he know he would only be with him for a year
Drivethebeat listen to him playing Donna Lee from the Beginning and The End album, if you haven’t! (It was thought to be his last recording, but it was recorded a year before he died)
Great to see this video on youtube again...this is, to my knowledge THE ONLY KNOWN video footage of Clifford Brown...I would love to be proved wrong on this...there were some audio phone conversations with a fan club member, and some audio snippets of Clifford practicing (warming up) here on youtube but I"m not sure they are still posted...BTW the estate of Clifford Brown is very dogged in their pursuit of copyright infringement and anything they can have removed they will.
the estate does not own the Soupy Sales tv franchise, so that is a ridiculous statement; secondly - YT is FULL of Brown music - probably every note he ever released
Amazing solo on OhLadyBeGood. Lots of time he does sound like the best trumpet player ever. Went to a Sunday matinee show @theModernJazz Room in Chicago in '56 when I was 12 to see Max Roach Quintet. Don't know if this was the gig Brownie was headed to cause nobody said anything - just know that I got Kenny Dorham & Billy Wallace's autographs & not Brown's & Powells. Max Roach signed the table card 'Best Wishes Always' & I glued his picture over his autograph cause was a wannabe drummer then.
I was really touched by this RARE chance to actually here my UNCLE speak. I grew up hearing his MUSIC but never heard him SPEAK..!!! He died when I was 2 yrs old. Also to hear him mention the birth of my cousin, his son...!!! This actually brought tears to my eyes. Thanks "logudorian".
I am a little envious. I had never thought what it would be like for descendants of famous people to see film of them. What I wouldn't give for some film of say, my mother as a young woman or of my grandmother the youngest of 15 kids a hundred years ago. BTW, I have been a fan of your uncle for over 50 years.
Every day spent listening to Mr Clifford is a blessing and a real thrill, a fantastic. Musician 😍 🎶 👏 👏 💕 🎺 🇮🇪
Sad he died at such a young age. Probably would have gone down as the greatest jazz trumpeter of all time. He is my favorite trumpeter of all time. I have just about every album he put out.
Also I have this Clifford Brown t shirt I bought on Ebay last year. It's from the blue note 1526 memorial album cover. A must have for Clifford Brown fans. Stay safe and be well.
Amazing man, he is our godfather and our greatest teacher 🎺 all the highest level of love to you and your family man, absolute pleasure xxx
The greatest trumpeter that ever laid his lips on a trumpet: Clifford Brown
Clifford was pure talent.His bell was out of sight
Priceless footage of Clifford Brown. Soupy Sales was a huge jazz fan and had many famous jazz musicians on his show including Duke Ellington, Coleman Hawkins, Louis Armstrong, Billie Holiday, Charlie Parker, Stan Getz and Miles Davis (6 times). I grew up watching his show.
Why there isn't a movie made in honor of this giant of jazz? Unparalleled musicianship and trumpet genius
You know how hard it is to get funding for a film on well known Jazz artist? Brown is only known to people who really listen to Jazz.
He lived too clean - no booze, drugs, hookers, or even cussing - so his life isn’t “interesting” enough. Instead we get biopics about Miles and Chet Baker
@tomasarmon3005 wow I didn't know that . I wonder what happened to his wife and kids
@@da11king They had one son, Clifford Jr.
th-cam.com/video/DsczIbe1ZDE/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared
A stunning post. I don't think there's any musician I'd rather listen to than Clifford Brown. Actual music on the TV in 1955-56? I was born 5 months after Clifford died in the car accident. Amazing.
There’s no telling how famous Clifford would have become. He seems in this short clip like a humble modest man. The world lost someone special that day.
Humble and most man dosent matter. The realy important is that guy play better them everyone
@@JL-bu8bz and that’s why I commented on how special he was and how famous he could’ve become.
@@JL-bu8bz Yes it does, it's why you could hear his beautiful soul in every note he played. Think about it.
When I was a kid my drum teacher quoted to me the common saying: when Clifford got to Heaven Gabriel was out a job.
Binker ...Now, that's what you call "Respect!"
Perfect like floating through the clouds. No one sounds like that. Amazing
A true Virtuoso. Taken from this Earth way too young. RIP
An absolutely limitless fountain of musical ideas and absolutely no barriers between his musical mind and his instrument. The G.O.A.T.
spot on the money good doctor.shame Clifford left so soon along with many of our jazz stars.i remember in the very early50s when scott la faro frightened us young bop players to death then bang gone in a breath.i thank them all for enriching my life with there great talent.many thanks.
The only thing is he never had a wide range
@@da11king
You really are kidding right? How can you say that. It's literally patently untrue.
@@dr.kevinmoore8889 I don't mind being wrong at all...I love Clifford...didn't he have the same range as miles or lee Morgan?
@@da11king Miles, Lee, & Brownie all played up to G above high C in their solos - none of those 3 had an upper register as strong as Dizzy, Fats Navarro, Charlie Shavers, or Maggie tho
Perfection itself, so lyrical, so pretty, great tone and great ideas. Nobody came close not then, not now.
Louis.
best trumpet tone ever
A great, great musician whose life and career was brutally curtailed by that terrible car accident in June 1956. No Lee Morgan, Freddie Hubbard, Wynton etc without him.
From all accounts, he was a very nice man. Nobody had a bad word to say about him, even
after sixty years. His best tribute is the glorious music he left behind.
th-cam.com/video/zeeXQjR9xDc/w-d-xo.html
trully agree but don't forget to say he was young, kind and innocent. Only 26 years old and no one reach the perfection like him.
@@tistefouClifford was 25
So fantastic. One rare document of a trumpet god.
A trumpet improvisation god.
Comment les médias peuvent ils laisser dans l'oubli un artiste de cette dimension quelle honte quand on voit toutes les chèvres qui sont portées aux nues dans les chaînes télévisées.
C'est totalement coupable de laisser les gens dans l'ignorance d'une telle beauté artistique et d'un tel génie
Chapeau bas pour Mr Brown !
Happy 90th Birthday, Brownie.
This "Soupy show" originated in Detroit. The band was composed of the Detroit cats. There were 2 Soupy shows, the lunchtime kids show and the late night Soupy show before Shock Theater. This was all live from Detroit. Oh and my dad Don Palmer was the bassist (also doubling on violin) on staff at WXYZ ABC's affiliate. The house band had 3 horns, guitar, bass, piano, drums, and accordion. Joe Messina the fine guitarist spoke of learning his style from horn players like Clifford Brown. When the top musicians toured through Detroit, they usually also played the Soupy Show! Occasionally I got to go to the station where the show was aired. but then I was 5 when this was recorded. But to see how Clifford handled the trumpet around the jazz structures is quite a treat.....And I've never seen this before! Thanks Logudorian!!
@funkymusic2k138 ...The show was called "Soupy's On!"
Whoever found this gem...thank you for Brownie AND Soupy Sales!
Clifford Brown unlike other jazz musicians didn't do drugs or drink. Sonny Rollins was so amazed that Clifford could play that good without doing DRUGS. Sonny Rollins credits Clifford with saving his life. He stopped using drugs and is still alive and is 90.
That rumour that Jazz musicians thought that they could play like Charlie Parker if they just took heroin like Bird did, I don't know if it's true or not. Either way, that stuff affected a lot of guys & ladies.
Surreal experience to actually see the man play, like peeking into another dimension. That tone is immortal. Thanks for posting 🙏
So very rare of an incredible performance! Thank you so much!
Just learned about Mr. Brown today... what a player! Even better, there's footage of him doing his mastery! Of all the jazz trumpeters I've heard, Brown is the best, period!
One of my all-time favorite TV personalities with one of the greatest jazz trumpeters of all time. Both have provided lots of pleasure to audiences over the years. This must have been around 1953-4, years before Soupy left Detroit for New York.
interesting. did you actually have the privilaget of watching soupy on tellevision or have you discovered him later ?
I saw him first in 1959 in Detroit when I was about 10. He later went to NYC and had a Saturday noon and then a later show show, where he had celebs have a pie thrown in their face among other skits. Finally there was the daily show at about 4 PM. Loved him and Frank Nastasi as the guy at the door and White Fang/Black Tooth. One of the funniest shows ever on TV.
+James F he died in 56.
Hadn't heard this one before, but it fits my plans to release a tribute album to Clifford Brown. Him blowing his nose would produce a 5-star album!
Awesome sauce, the sweetest tone of all time. SO wonderful to have visuals of Brownie for us who were too young to have ever seen him. Thanks for posting.
The one and only..........Clifford Brown, ladies and gentlemen; in this legendary clip.
Oh Mr. Brown you were always good! Happy Birthday and God Bless You!
Extremely humble. Gone way too soon!
Holy smokes that man could play
Oh man, this was great. It's always a treat to see the old masters on video. My dad left me his great jazz collection and CB has a sound and has become one of my favorites
Thank you Soupy for showing us such musical masters.
I would have seen this. As a grammar school kid I was a Soupy Sales knucklehead. No wonder I love and play jazz 60 some odd years later
ブラウンの映像があるんですか~😮🎺🎶🙏🙏感動しかありません😢
@speakeasynyc Clifford was and is a national treasure. He was taken to give Gabriell a rest. His playing on "With Strings" is angelic and will never be matched.
85th ANNIVERSARY HIS BIRTH TODAY!!!
CLIFFORD BROWN (October 30, 1930 - June 26, 1956), aka "Brownie", was an American jazz trumpeter. He died at the age of 25 in a car accident,
+Ivo Ponduša Thanks mr. Wikipedia....... - _ - Great insight.
Clifford's lip is tired and still he kicks so much butt.I wish I played this good when my lip goes bang bang .long live Clifford Brown.
This is the most surreal thing I’ve ever watched
Wow, thanks to the up-loader for this rare video gem of Brownie....had no clue that Soupy was a jazz fan.
I would drop everything , everyday for lunch with Soupy....this is why..the music. Four years old and it was about the music!!
From Soupy’s On! At WXYZ in Detroit, hosted by Soupy Sales. Thanks for sharing.
In every autobiography I've read on Jazz musicians they all state that Cliffords passing was one of the biggest losses both personal and professional. In listening to him play I can see why. If you can hear this "Brownie" play us a tune would you.
Which ones?
Which autobiographies?
I LOVE YOU CLIFFORD
THE MOST AMAZING TRUMPET PLAYER I KNOW !!!!
Two geniuses, Clifford Brown and Soupy Sales..
Brown and White Fang.
Check out that dance. Soupy is my hero!
In heaven. Mean & Clifford. Chills.
The greatest, Clifford Brown. Wonderful melody feelnng Truly one of the most progressive tp. players of all time. Thanks for the memories.
感慨深い〜♥︎︎∗︎*゚◡̈︎*♚︎‧*˚✩︎‧₊˚
アップ有り難うございます💖
this is the sound that I wanted, and after more than forty years of playing, am still not there. Very lyrical. The man Himself, Brownie
Clifford Brown = Wynton Marsalis....So many similarities. Awesome technique and then the blues. Not to mention a beautiful sound.
Wynton is unbelievable and I LOVE is playing a lot but Clifford is untouchable!
Cant put those two names together my friend~!
@@MrHillelSalem ...I concur, totally! Wyn isn't anywhere near Brownie!
2:13 Clifford fills a tragic category among 20th Cr try giants… undoubtedly the greatest loss of potential I’ve ever imagined. Not many virtuosos could straddle bop, pre bop, and just about anything else with his kind of acumen. It is to cry over a half century later and will be in another half century. Maybe forever.
Love this. Rip maestro
貴重な映像有難うございます。
sou do Brazil, e Clifford foi meu primeiro idolo
Muito bom encontrar um comentário do Brasil! Viva o Jazz! Abraço.....
Would have loved to see him and Lee Morgan on stage. Two of the greats.
これ程素晴らしいトランペット吹きは今だにいません。
Wonderful
I always like to revisit the virtuosity of the great Clifford Brown. This is one of the very few films of Clifford playing live. He also makes a cameo appearance in the film "Carmen Jones" during the Max Roach scene on stage.
Skippy Zeiger ... That was bassist Curtis Counce.
I didn't see Clifford in carmen Jones
A diamond in the rough. Thanks for posting.
RIP Clifford Brown, taken away on that fateful night, at just 26. The cleanest musician in the business, whose only vice was chess playing.
I agree Brews, Theodore "Fats" Navarro was pinancle in Cliffords development. He did get some lessons from "Fats" before he passed in 1950.. Booker has Amazing Compositions & playing and to think he passed at age 23!! . Lee Morgan, again great player & Composer and as the rest died very young. Booker being the youngest..I play Trumpet and I cannot name one favorite. I'd name at least 10 Trumpeters because that's a tough question..imo
pseudokowski ...Saul "Sonny" Berman (April 21st, 1925 - January 16th, 1947) was only twenty-one years old when he left us due to an overdose of heroin on his first and last time. He was the youngest trumpeter to die in the history of jazz. Sonny was also a member of the Woody Herman band at the time of his death.
Redbox code DVD night It's very Cool that Soupy Sales had jazz music on his show. You know he was a jazz lover and in his glory having Clifford Brown on his show! What great footage this is. thank you for Posting it.
And thanks again.
A little sad to hear that he just became a father, knowing that he wouldn't be with his son very long. At least he had the joy of fatherhood for the rest of his short life. I love listening to him play, and listening to the interview.
Soupy Sales, a great friend of Jazz
Just saw a documentary on this great player...magnificent!
Care to give the name of the documentary?
You man k is by now but it's called,
"Brownie Speaks" featuring his family and friends including the sax player Lou Donaldson who played with him during the Night at Birdland gig with Art Blakey.
Commemorating this jazz great, the City of Wilmington, DE. celebrates a yearly Jazz Festival in his name.
Brownie Lives !
finally have a chance to watch that humble giant thank yu very much for postin
Este material es una belleza, una joya, hablar de Clifford Brown .
Great tone,great phrasing
CLIFFORD BROWN . Fantastic !!!!!!
素晴らしいを越えて、
なんとも言葉がありません。
/Como eu amo esse gênio...
Thanks for this one. Clifford Brown, one of the greatest or the greatest!
I remember Clifford.
I wonder what it would be like if Clifford played I remember Clifford
Excellent comment. Bravo!!!
Wonderful - Thank You
Forgot to say, "Thank you, up-loader." My apologies for something which is greatly appreciated
Beautiful. Thanks for posting.
what great tone clifford had he didnt need to switch horns he had it all
Brownie, Bird and Tatum should have played, and recorded together.....imagine that!!
Wil Greenstreet ...Brownie and Yard did play together!
@@brucescott4261 Was it recorded then?
@@wilgreenstreet ...Brownie replaced Little Benny Harris. The gig was in Philadelphia, PA circa May 1951, shortly after Brownie's long hospitalization from car accident in Maryland on June 3, 1950. There aren't any recordings of this event. Roy Haynes was the drummer. Clifford Benjamin Brown was in a body cast during his long hospitalization.
Only uncultured, unwoke swine will give this a thumbs down. Love this clip!
Happy Birthday Clifford !
My trumpet playin' friend and small group member Dan in '63 said he liked Clifford Brown's trumpet playing better than Diz's. Sure can see why. From Fats to Brown to Dorham passes the baton.
Good to see my man doin' so well!
And in Detroit too! "nuff of these depressing album covers sometimes.
his tone sounds so warm and full
sad that this is the only footage of clifford playing but amazing that it was discovered after being lost for 40 years
Thanks for posting. Great document.
Brownie is STILL the gold standard for trumpet players. I don't say that just because he and I are from the same town. But all the trumpeters that came on the scene in the 60's wanted to play like him. I saw Freddie Hubbard once and heard him say that Brownie was the reason he started to play the trumpet. While all those players -- Hubbard, Lee Morgan, Blue Mitchell, Woody Shaw -- were also listening to Miles while growing up, they ALL wanted to play like Brownie. He didn't start to play the trumpet until he was in high school and just 6 years later started his recording career. He only recorded for 4 years but is on TONS of records...his own with Max Roach, Sarah Vaughn and Dina Washington used him a lot on their recordings. There was no one like Brownie. If you haven't yet, be sure to check out "Clifford Brown With Strings". Man...so lyrical.
One of the most amazing documents of youtube! Awesome. See Brownie talk .... and know further that it was a giant in stature, but a normal person! Thank you, thank you for this video. From Buenos Aires ..
CLIFFORD BENJAMIN "BROWNIE" BROWN, SR. (October 30th, 1930 - June 26th, 1956): When I first saw this video, I couldn't hold back the tears. Just listening to Brownie's short conversation with Soupy left me awestruck. My mother has three LPs by The Clifford Brown-Max Roach Quintet: CLIFFORD BROWN AND MAX ROACH (EmArcy MG 26043), STUDY IN BROWN (EmArcy MG 36037) and CLIFFORD BROWN AND MAX ROACH AT BASIN STREET (EmArcy MG 36070). She also has DINAH JAMS Featuring DINAH WASHINGTON (EmArcy MG 36000), JAM SESSION (EmArcy MG 36002), SARAH VAUGHAN (EmArcy MG 36004) and JAZZ OF TWO DECADES (EmArcy DEM-2). My Uncle Harold had JAY JAY JOHNSON SEXTET Featuring Clifford Brown (Blue Note BLP 5028), NEW FACES - NEW SOUNDS: LOU DONALDSON QUINTET Featuring Clifford Brown And Elmo Hope (Blue Note BLP 5030), NEW STAR ON THE HORIZON: CLIFFORD BROWN (Blue Note BLP 5032), A NIGHT AT BIRDLAND WITH THE ART BLAKEY QUINTET Featuring Clifford Brown/Volumes 1, 2 and 3 (Blue Note BLP 5037, BLP 5038 and BLP 5039), BROWN AND ROACH, INC. (EmArcy MG 36008), CLIFFORD BROWN AND MAX ROACH (EmArcy MG 36036), STUDY IN BROWN (EmArcy MG 36037) and CLIFFORD BROWN AND MAX ROACH AT BASIN STREET (EmArcy MG 36070). He also had ARRANGED BY MONTROSE Featuring THE BOB GORDON QUINTET [Side 1] and THE CLIFFORD BROWN ENSEMBLE [Side 2] (Pacific Jazz PJ-1214) [released as a reissue twelve-inch LP, in February 1956] and JAZZ WEST COAST: AN ANTHOLOGY OF CALIFORNIA MUSIC (Pacific Jazz JWC-500). My Uncle Walter, Jr. had CLIFFORD BROWN WITH STRINGS (EmArcy MG 36005) and CLIFFORD BROWN AND MAX ROACH (EmArcy MG 36036). My Uncle Jim had CLIFFORD BROWN AND MAX ROACH (EmArcy MG 36036), STUDY IN BROWN (EmArcy MG 36037) and JAZZ OF TWO DECADES (EmArcy DEM-2). They all bought these classic LPs during Brownie's lifetime. I was almost three years old when the latter left us. As a matter of fact, Brownie was in Europe with the Lionel Hampton Orchestra featuring Quincy Jones, Art Farmer, Jimmy Cleveland, Gigi Gryce, Anthony Ortega, Clifford Solomon, Monk Montgomery, Alan Dawson, etc. when I was born.
oh my god that is so sad.
he died so young. best jazz player in history in my opinion.
he was so happy about his new baby boy. i mean just look at his face. little did he know he would only be with him for a year
Check out Soupy doing the Soupy Shuffle. LOL!!!
my god. BEAUTY!!
Was listening to the Memorial Album yesterday wanted to see some live footage of him and discovered Soupy Sales had a show like this!
Drivethebeat listen to him playing Donna Lee from the Beginning and The End album, if you haven’t! (It was thought to be his last recording, but it was recorded a year before he died)
Great to see this video on youtube again...this is, to my knowledge THE ONLY KNOWN video footage of Clifford Brown...I would love to be proved wrong on this...there were some audio phone conversations with a fan club member, and some audio snippets of Clifford practicing (warming up) here on youtube but I"m not sure they are still posted...BTW the estate of Clifford Brown is very dogged in their pursuit of copyright infringement and anything they can have removed they will.
Maria G Ochoa It's a shame if they do because the more who become familiar with him, the better for them.
the estate does not own the Soupy Sales tv franchise, so that is a ridiculous statement; secondly - YT is FULL of Brown music - probably every note he ever released
Brian Hammer, he’s talking about footage. Wind your neck in.
O maior trompetista de todos os tempos! Imaginaram se não tivesse morrido tão jovem?
Lourimar
That's love making there
Amazing solo on OhLadyBeGood. Lots of time he does sound like the best trumpet player ever. Went to a Sunday matinee show @theModernJazz Room in Chicago in '56 when I was 12 to see Max Roach Quintet. Don't know if this was the gig Brownie was headed to cause nobody said anything - just know that I got Kenny Dorham & Billy Wallace's autographs & not Brown's & Powells. Max Roach signed the table card 'Best Wishes Always' & I glued his picture over his autograph cause was a wannabe drummer then.