I was in this audience. Chuck was my brother's trumpet teacher until 1969 and my entire family attended this concert. Also starring Tony Levin, Steve Gadd, Bat McGrath, Don Potter, Stanley Watson and Gap Mangione.
I fell in love with this when it first came out. I lived in Columbus, Ohio, and they would play it regularly on WHAM, one of the early fifty thousand watt FM radio stations near Rochester. Later on, I had the good fortune to share a graduate class at OSU with the daughter of Mangione's manager. Thought I had died and gone to heaven.
I gave up my nursing career for an opportunity to listen to Chuck and Esther prep for an upcoming concert in Hamilton Ontario. I arrived at Mohawk college for my 2 hour interview and could hear his music coming from the auditorium. I was going to his concert that night and was drawn to the music. I walked into the auditorim and sat mesmerized for the 2hour practice. I met a very humble Chuck and band once there were finished and shook his hand and said, I just love all your music. Best thing that came out of a 17year old mouth as I was star struck. 60 years later and no regrets as i ended up with a teaching career working with special needs kids. He is on all my playlists and this just makes me smile and tear up at that memory.
The best song ever. It still gives me goose bumps everytime I hear it. Thanks Mr. Mangione for a true experience in music. You are the best thing to ever come out of Rochester, New York.
Music is still music. The only difference is that today is that the more authentic styles like jazz, classical, blues, and rock'n'roll don't get a look in on the radio much. A lot of new musicians now promote their music on bandcamp, TH-cam, Fandalism.
I can't possibly tell you how much this means to me.I grew up in Ithaca,n.y. and had privilidge of seeing and studying with some of these muscians.My record is almost unplayable as it has lasted almost 40 years.For those of us that lived in upstate .n.y. in the 70's and 80's, this album is a source of pride.There is and was incredible music being played in Ithaca,Rochester,Syracuse,Buffalo,Elmira,Utica,etc.thank you for sharing
This song and this style of music can me described in one word: timeless. A young Steve Gadd, fresh out of the military and headed into a legendary career. Chuck was King.
Growing up in Rochester, NY I had the privilege of not only listening to this great music, but also playing with some of these fantastic musicians. A percussionist since 4 years old, I loved the local scene and as I got older was able to jam out in places around the city. To this day, some 50 years later, I still have fond memories of these days. Bless those who are still with us! ~ John Guchone
After this came out, if you were in drum and bugle corps, you had to play this, or your show was nothing to talk about! This arrangement is so crisp, so clean, man, it doesn't get done like this anymore! Chuck is a genius!
This was the basis of the Blue Devils' re-entry in '76 and '77. One of so many fantastic Mangione tunes adapted for drum corps. He was such a huge influence on DCI of the mid-70's.
I know age has nothing to do with genius but chuck was just about 30 years young when he conducted this phenomenal piece in 1970 & that’s why till today, arguably, America is one of the greatest nations when it comes to producing music where the standards of excellence is at its highest … Steve gadd, Gerry Niewood, Tony Levin, Bat McGrath, Don Potter, Stanley Watson, Gap Mangione & the whole Rochester Philharmonic… phenomenal ….
I'm with you. What an incredible piece of music. I'm 71 now and I remember when this came out. My brother kept playing the record. We both listened intently at all the different instruments and sections like we were about to take an exam about it. To this day, I "know" all the notes being played (shocked because some of my memory is starting to fade). We absolutely love this and still listen to the recording.
This came out when i was a senior in high school, when all young musicians I knew at the time were conditioned to think that musical validity began & ended with Hendrix and Zepplin..Then this guy shows up playing a horn no one recognized in front of a symphony orchestra & proceeds to create a musical nuclear detonation---Heard on top forty radio!!...CM handed a new generation a set of new musical concepts that were unprecidented for the time.
@@drummerup0012 Zappa definitely had a similar effect on musical sensibilities in the time. Both brought incredibly awesome players to the masses of younger people, with remarkably rich original compositions. Though primary arrangement styles were not the same, both absolutely occupied a common space approached from separate desperate paths. Frequently when one is in my playlist the other shows up as well.
I first heard this song, as a lead in to the news on a top 40 radio station! Fortunately for me, at the time, I was a popular drummer, dating the number on d.j. at that station in Fort Worth, and he got me the name of the tune. I thanked him profusely!!!!!
The Mangione Quartet + Philharmonic concerts on PBS transformed me from a kid digging rock to a young bass player wanting to transcribe all the cool parts on the first record.
I was and undergrad at U of Rochester at the time of this concert and I brought a date. We got in for a few bucks with our student ID. What a concert especially having Chuck conduct the philharmonic. I’m 70 now and I remember the sights and sounds of that night like it was yesterday.
I love how Chuck swings that entire aggregation, especially near the end. Great great music beyond the categories as Duke would say. Gerry Niewood was always great on soprano. Amazing, reading the comments, to see how many people were touched by this piece, which is truly for the ages.
I've been a huge fan of this tune for decades and just discovered this video for the first time. I couldn't love it more. Thank you so much for sharing it.
Great piece. I was 16, driving through country of Washington state with Mount Rainier in the windshield and hooked on rock, Led Zep, The Who. And this song came on KJR radio out of Seattle. They never played jazz. It nearly had me in tears, mainlined right into my soul. Music doesn't quite do that to me. I've never forgotten. Bought a lot of his vinyl. This morning I had a dream, a girl was asking me about the best jazz music and I told her, in my dream, Hill Where the Lord Hides, Chuck Mangione. Why would I dream that after all these years? Got up before making coffee and found it here on You Tube. Feels so good.
Borned the same year as Feel so good. Been listening the song all my life. My phone ringtone since mobile phone support mp3 for ringtone. One day my son told me my phone ringing. But it was song played in Doctor Strange movie (while he perform surgery). Feel so good. Haha
i saw him many times,,,gerry too...im from ROCHESTER and grew up with these guys,,,,POTTER and McGRATH i used to see in a small place called the wine press,,,man those were great times! R.I.P.GERRY....
@@joebloggs4754 I too grew up in Rochester. These guys are Rochester! Lots of great memories from the Eastman School of Music, and with Don & Bat (RIP)
It’s 2024, and this 1970 performance of this masterpiece still gives me goosebumps for its beauty and majesty as when I first heard/viewed this back then. Really hope a recording/film enthusiast will edit this in HD as a legacy for future generations to enjoy.
First Time I heard this was mid 70s at Ontario Place in Toronto. (Just across Lake Ontario from Rochester)They had a new-for-its-time, a 16-channel recording played back on a custom 16 channel tape machine that was somehow interlocked in-sync to the large wrap-around film picture screen. I was really impressed! I know they were using data recorders at the time for a high track count and Cinerama and Todd-AO had used multiple 35MM Magnetic "sprocket" machines but this was all new to me at the time. And having the sound follow the action on the screen was cool. And I'll never forget THIS MUSIC TRACK played in this format! I still luv it. Chuck's best!
When this concert happened I was in 8th grade , my music teachers (Fairport Schools) were Eastman School of Music grads, so we would go there and perform sometimes. So happens we were there at the time this concert was in rehearsals , one of my teachers saw Chuck and brought him by to conduct our select band on a couple of numbers, Very, Very Cool ! we all thought we were the luckiest kids on the planet !! This album was a staple in most Upstate NY households, it's no wonder. In 2013 or 14 they did a reunion concert of this show, same cast , same fantastic show, wish both could be available , for all to listen to and enjoy, thanks to all who made this great music !
God, I really loved Gerry Niewood on Soprano Saxophone! I was just totally "blown away" even as a 10 Year Old child way back in the day! It is how a Soprano Sax is truly supposed to sound like! Sadly, he was of those killed in that horrific plane crash in Western New York a number of years ago.
The irony of Gerry Niewood's death in the plane crash was he was travelling to Rochester for a reunion concert of Friends & Love. The concert never took place.
Yes! Gerry Niewood was a master of soprano & tenor saxophones, and of flute and alto flute, and a masterful improviser. His premature death was a great loss to the music scene.
A great guitarist named Coleman Mellett was on that flight as well, he and Gerry were traveling to that gig together. R.I.P. Gerry and Coleman, we’ll never forget either of you
I played the drums in a huge Disco back in the 70's and we opened every night with this masterpiece. I have very fond memories of my attempts to emulate the great, Steve Gadd.
Another holiday, this time THANKSGIVING 2015, and Chuck and his friends and family still fill the house. I am the son of Nanette, one of the Merlino sisters that grew up with Chuck and Gap in Rochester, NY. And just as Mom brought this music into my house growing up, I now bring it into the hearts, soul, and lives of my own children today. Timeless. Thank you.
I love the orchestrations for this piece. I first found out about Chuck Mangione in 1974 when someone in my college dorm was playing The Land of Make Believe album. I was instantly hooked. Saw him perform in Central Park when they used to hold concerts at the Wolman Rink. Esther Satterfield sang. What an awesome experience. When Feels So Good came out even my mom got into his music.
+John Dittrich I also was lucky enough to see this performed in Utica, NY at the Stanley Theater. It opened my eyes and ears to the jazz and classical I really enjoy today!
+John Dittrich I was lucky enough to see the full concert at the Eastman Theater when they bused some of us students from Fairport High School and other local High Schools in to watch the afternoon rehearsal before the evening concert.
This song meant a lot a young musician from the Buffalo area...not too many people remeber Chuck's early years. To me they were his best... I have searched far and wide for this copy of Hill Where the Lord Hides...its his best one
I had this album way back in the 70s! We used to listen to the radio at night when we were supposed to be asleep on school nights, back when radio DJ's had actual personalities. This was one of my favorites and even though I owned a copy of the LP, I always listened to the whole thing when the late-night DJ's played it. I miss those nights, it's wonderful to hear the music again.😊
I am from Rochester, NY and Chuck is the biggest "hometown boy makes good" story my hometown has had since Mitch Miller. And it all started with this song from the massively successful local hit album "Friends and Love." I remember the 45 RPM single of the song being the #1 hit in Rochester on most radio stations. Seven years later, "Feels So Good" came out and confirmed what we "Rochesterians" knew all along.
When I was maybe 13 and starting to play drums, I heard this song on the radio and it immediately grabbed me and I said “ I don’t know who the drummer is, but he played what I felt in my heart. Years later, I discovered my teacher and his instructor at Eastman were good friends: it was Steve Gadd fresh out of the army. Side note…my High School music teacher knew Jerry Niewood very well. Was a small world but such a hot bed for music in western NY.
Legendary album! My mum and dad used to play it to me a lot when I was a child in the early 70's. I just wish that Universal Music would re-issue it on CD as well as download for the younger generations who are getting into Chuck's music.
what an Orchestrator...besides a brlliant solo flugelhorn player, beautiful melodies from a beautiful soul...melodies from heaven for us on earth through chuck mangione and the musicians...
Steve Gadd on drums, Don Potter on guitar and the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra. With Additional Personnel: GERRY NIEWOOD soprano and alto saxophone, flute Al Porcino: Trumpet Larry Covelli: Tenor Sax Tony Levin: Electric Bass Bill Reichenbach: Trombone Ned Corman:\tab Flute, Alto Flute, Baritone Saxophone Vincent Di Martino: Trumpet Robert Becker: Percussion Chris Vadala: Tenor Saxophone MARVIN STAMM trumpet
How can anybody not appreciate this! July 9 2019! What a talent! 10 stars! I’m lucky to own the vinyl and my sweer brother bought me this from Amazon! Love you, Dave! Play that Flugelhorn, Chuck!
Hill Where The Lord Hides is a beautiful piece of music from Chuck Mangione. It is a healing piece of music.Hey Chuck did you know you are a doctor? Yes man!
Guitarist Don Potter is now a Christian minister and prophet and he talks at length in some videos as to why music has healing properties. Very interesting guy. :)
I wish iTunes would offer this version for sale. I recall the thrill of watching this on PBS when it happened in 1970. I have the vinyl, still, however I would love to play this in my car. This version of "Hill Where The Lord Hides" should be available to all. Wonderful!
A number of years ago I converted all my vinyl, cassette tapes, CDs, and reel to reel tapes to .mp3 files to put on my iPod which I can play in my car. It really isn't that difficult.. just time consuming but a labor of love as I listened to music I hadn't heard in a while.
My old high school band director conducted like Chuck. My sophomore year we performed Land of Make Believe as part of a marching piece and it was quite the challenge. Thanks for the wonderful music Mr. Mangione and thanks for the memories Mr. P.
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My last six months in the Air Force, I spent a lot of time pulling CQ at night in the hanger where I worked. Would have my little radio with me and I'd hear this song being played by some station from Dallas, or Oklahoma City, or maybe Chicago. Then after I left Abilene TX to drive to my home in CT, this song would come on the radio from different radio stations along the way. It kind of followed me home. Have always loved it.
The great and MAGICAL Gerry Niewood. Discovering him remains very special to me. I was, maybe, 13-14 years old when I purchased the double lp, 'Friends and Love'. I've heard the soprano played by many musician at that point, but never experienced the instrument utilized in arrangements like Chucks..I'm almost 60 and I still can hum most of his more popular solos when with Mangione-- including that beautiful solo on 'Joy' when he was with Time Piece. R.I.P. , sir. What a rare treat this video is! I can sing/hum almost every single note on the entire 'Best of Mangione' double album-- including the 20+ minute 'Friends in Love' arrangement. Great to FINALLY see footage from the ACTUAL concert! Also, RIP to the great Bat McGrath. He and Don Potter really pulled the heart-strings on this particular project.
The ending is absolutely orgasmic!!! I love how the flute player looks like she might explode in delight!!!!! To have been playing that night would have been an unforgettable experience!!!
I love this, I always have. This song was literally in my dreams in the early 70's when I was a young teen. It was a recurring dream of driving fast in the mountains with the wind in my hair and this music playing. I do not recall having ever heard it before the dream, but I must have, somehow. Later I actually did hear it on the radio one evening, and as it turned out, I was driving fast on this big hill on this winding road, and all my windows were open. Talk about De Ja Vu! I had to stop the car! I was so blown away. Many years later I talked someone into doing a cover of it on his album. But as awesome as that turned out, nothing is as amazing as this original piece. Thank you Chuck Mangione
I attended the concert Chuck put together with the Rochester Philharmonic in 1969, "Kaleidoscope". My reason for going? My drum teacher, Vinnie Ruggiero, was Chuck's drummer in his local gig at the time, The Chuck Mangione Quartet. Vinnie was on the drumset for the performance "Kaleidoscope" was a musical success; it wasn't a financial one. However, it served as the springboard for "Friends & Love" . That concert launched Chuck into the national spotlight with a Grammy nomination for "Hill Where The Lord Hides".
My brother Jim was a first-year student at the University of Rochester and was at that concert as well. He came home and raved about the event to our parents. So when Chuck's Friends & Love concert tickets went on sale, our Dad got them minutes after the box office opened. Great concerts. Wish that Kaleidoscope was recorded.
Almost 2023 here from the Netherlands. I was 12 and we did this performance play back on last primary school year. This was in 1982. Listen to 'llive at the Hollywood ball' ever sinterklaas. Still magic💫
Lots of people didn't knew that the drummer in this Video is Steve Gadd, I had the album when i was living in SJ Puerto Rico and got it right after it was recorded…always have been a follower of great music and great musicians…-aa
Alex...your sort of a legend also...wish I could meet you at a PASICs or such. I'm was from western NY during this period. My High School teacher worked with Jerri Niewood a lot and my instructor John Roland--Buffalo Philharmonic) and John Beck (Steve's instructor at Eastman) were good friends. This recording changed my direction in music entirely. If it wasn't for the video I would have never figured out the 16th note HH action.
Alex Neciosup-Acuna Greetings to you, Mr. Neciosup-Acuna!! I am honored to be in the same 'room' with you here. Much respect to your amazing talent and you as a gentleman. The world is better for your having been in it.
Alex Neciosup-Acuna the other drummer on this side was the late, Ron Davis, who was also on other Mangione records. Nice to know you were listening to Chuck and Steve like us. I've followed your career, also. You and Abe Laborial on Ella's She's a Carioca still floors me !
+Alex Neciosup-Acuna One thing I can say, you played in one of my favorite song, The Greatest Love, and then you turned the tables in Don Grusin Dakar Daughter. I usually think people like you don't listen with us on You Tube.
We had this when I was a junior in High School, I bought the Album "Friends and Love" at the end of the concert and had the band members all sign it. I didn't have to beg my parents for the $15 to get it either, so it must have been in the '72 to '73 range when I had a job. The Band did some recording at our school, we weren't allowed to bring any recorders or cameras to the concert. That burned me up because there was no way to record this event in our yearbooks, or in personal collections. But it was a great concert. Not on the order of Woodstock 1and 2 or James Taylor or the Dead concert I attended, but not bad. I have since abandoned NY State because it became a cultural sinkhole or "dead space" for decent bands in the 80's and 90's! I am a hopeless "rocker" with no reason to change.
My oldest brother introduced me to Chuck Mangione when I was probably 16 years old. that was back in 1979 or 80. I have seen him twice in my life. Once at Red Rocks Amphitheatre and one at the House of Blues in Las Vegas Nevada. I wouldn't trade one second of either concert. Although, most of my friends and family around me would not ever understand that. Being a country music drummer, most of my learning was from his "Records and Cassettes"...lol
I was at this concert!!!!! Loved it then and love it now!!!!
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Back in 1971, I'd hear this song while on CQ duty in the hanger on my Air Force base in Abilene, TX. Then when I left the base to go home, this song seemed to follow me all the way across the states to Connecticut. Always loved it.
My band director did too. I think an entire generation of high school and college band directors fell in love with Chuck's music and passed it on to their students like us!
I just love the "living hell" out of Gerry Niewood's Soprano Saxophone Solo in this composition...and I always have every since my late Dad brought it home back in the 1970s.
@@marySebastiani Oh, My Goodness! You're the Flautist (Flute Player) on that recording! God Bless You! Thank You so very much for replying to my comments...that song ALWAYS brings me to tears as my late Dad played it alot! While I'm a Saxophonist myself, I always like to listen to the greats, and Gerry Niewood was one of them! Mary, Thank You so much! I guess I can say this now, have a Happy Thanksgiving, and Happy Holidays ahead! Goodness they came up FAST this year! Are you on Facebook? My name is William Christopher Mitchell (Sax)
we went to the same high school, (Gates Chili) thus he used to come & do free concerts every now & then, used to see/listen to him & his brother over the years...loved this song when it came out & still love it 50 some years later! thanks Chuckie!
Cannot count the number of time I listened to this on my way to and from my Analyst---that is before he died on me. And I live on and so does my love for this music. So glad i now have You Tube to fill my heart with joy!!! Wow are they great or what!!!!
I first heard this piece as an into to the news on a popular AM radio station in Fort Worth, Texas. Well I was dating the DJ's daughter, and she was in the car with me. Although I will never regret being tuned in that day. BLEW ME AWAY!!!! I called the station and dropped the appropriate name to find out what that outrageous piece of music was. Not your normal 1971 AM music fare. I was instantly addicted. Stave Gadd is such a monster!
He played at Mohawk College, a small, nowhere venue in 1968? Blew our minds!!!!!! Same venue, Gordon Lightfoot played.....in Hamilton.....very blessed to see them in their prime....
I drove a little Fahrvergnugen that had no air conditioning so I drove all over Dallas with my windows down blaring this song 🎶 everywhere I went. My parents just passed away and I came across my(worn out) album. I had bought a different recording which, of course, is good. Just slightly different. I haven’t unpacked my album yet but I sure hope it didn’t get left behind. Three seconds into this recording made my heart ❤️ skip a beat. I was never a “groupie” but oh! That song….
This song just keeps popping into my feed every few days, and I just have to listen to it yet again. The dynamics are massive. The last 3 minutes are almost orgasmic!!!!!!
¡¡Caracoles!! Esto si que fue un super conciertazo con sinfónica y toda la cosa, no cabe duda que la gente de excelencia siempre hará cosas que trasciendan no solo fronteras y ya no digamos lenguas y culturas, a mi en lo particular siempre me encantaron sus melodías allá por 1978 cuando lo conocí en radio, y mas adelante cuando en los ochentas compre sus primeros albunes, en fin gracias CHUCK MANGIONNE por dejarnos este tipo de espectáculos, caray no tengo palabras , pero de algo si estoy bien seguro que seguiré escuchándote ahora en 2018 , recuerdo la película de Los hijos de Sánchez en 1979 y la música también era tuya, ya que lo bueno y trascendental jamas pasara de moda, ya lo decía hace rato cuando en mi juventud me acompañaste tanto con tus hermosas melodías, gracias por subirlo a TH-cam ya que yo no sabia que existiese este vídeo, gracias por compartirnozlo , gracias amigos muchas gracias a todos... Saludos desde MÉXICO, mi patria...
TROPPO BELLO !!! Grandissime emozioni, grandiosi musicisti che non tramonteranno mai e con cui ho avuto la fortuna di scambiare una corrispondenza scritta e telefonica amichevole, oltre ai nostri dischi. Ciao da Alghero (Sardegna) Italia
Es interesante leer opiniones de Chuck y al mismo tiempo escuchar sus interpretaciones, no sin reconocer que lo admire por mucho tiempo y me parece haber logrado tener gran parte de su obra de trabajo. De manera firme deseo reconocerle su aportacion . Dios te cuide Chuck...
RC, I can't tell you how THRILLED I am to find not only the music here but also the video of the performance!! Back in 1980?? I recorded this cut from Chicago radio station WSDM. Didn't know the name of the cut nor whose music it was--I was simply mesmerized by it. Since then I've hoped to identify it. Shazam wasn't able to help when I tried it with my '80 cassette recording. Finally, Feb. 2013, I took my cassette to a record shop & the owner identified the cut and Mangione. Hallelujah!
Fall of 1971, I had just started my first year at RIT in Rochester, NY, being a trumpet player myself, and the college brought in Chuck and his quartet for a concert, what a treat!
Thank you so much for the posting. For 42 years I had wondered if Steve Gadd had done the drums on this recording or Joey LaBarbara whom I had seen on a PBS broadcast in Buffalo, NY. Now I can rest. Many don't realize that this was a defining moment in contemporary "jazz." Thank you again, you have done a great service esp. to the western NY musicians.
Chuck Mangione = one of the greatest bandleaders and composers or our generation. This performance may be his Magnum Opus :-O I do wonder why he needed a conductor score when he is the composer and soloist :-S
I remember first hearing this gem of music on AM radio back in the Spring of 1971 and have loved it ever since! If I recall, this was recorded live at Nazareth College outside of Rochester NY. This is perhaps the best version of the song (compared to the studio version or the Hollywood Bowl version).
Grace Willan HILL WHERE THE LORD HIDES HAS ALWAYS BEEN A CHUCK MANGIONE FAVORITE OF MINE IT SOUNDED FAMILLIAR WHEN I FIRST HEARD IT ON A CHUCK MANGIONE RECORDING
I remember when Don Potter and Bat McGrath had their place up on Ridge Rd. They encouraged people to bring their instruments and jam with them. I dragged my bass guitar and ended up on stage with the Mangione's, Gerry Niewood, and Tony Levin ( bassist in King Crimson and a million others) I just talked to Tony a few weeks ago when he played here with his brother, Pete. I was totally thrilled and felt so lucky. I'm 70 now, and I recall that night like it was yesterday. I eventually gave up the bass, but not my love of the music and the people I met.
I've been a appreciator of jazz ever since my teen years when my older brother took me to a Chuck Mangione concert. This song in particular was one of my first remembrances into the genre...a classic in every sense!
I play with him when I was a musician in the Navy. My greatest thrill was meeting Chris Vadala.
When you come from Rochester NY and Chuck Mangione's orchestra plays your high school senior ball. Yeah, that was living large 1971.
Whoah!! That must have been awesome!
Really? Omg!! I saw him at the Kodak theater 1973? His brother had a band and played at Xerox Square
Rochester ain't jack, now.
@@keithsy75 yet it's the best little town in nys. Yes the prettiest little city in the USA.
@@keithsy75 < You "ain't jack" now, never were and never will be, Goober. lololool
I was in this audience. Chuck was my brother's trumpet teacher until 1969 and my entire family attended this concert. Also starring Tony Levin, Steve Gadd, Bat McGrath, Don Potter, Stanley Watson and Gap Mangione.
Buen comentario
Well cool Cathy Agnello I really like this song
So cool! Thanks for clarification I thought it was Steve Gadd and was.
@@yellowquantum4240 the entire gig in the album "Together: A New Chuck Mangione Concert" (1971)
I fell in love with this when it first came out. I lived in Columbus, Ohio, and they would play it regularly on WHAM, one of the early fifty thousand watt FM radio stations near Rochester. Later on, I had the good fortune to share a graduate class at OSU with the daughter of Mangione's manager. Thought I had died and gone to heaven.
I gave up my nursing career for an opportunity to listen to Chuck and Esther prep for an upcoming concert in Hamilton Ontario. I arrived at Mohawk college for my 2 hour interview and could hear his music coming from the auditorium. I was going to his concert that night and was drawn to the music. I walked into the auditorim and sat mesmerized for the 2hour practice. I met a very humble Chuck and band once there were finished and shook his hand and said, I just love all your music. Best thing that came out of a 17year old mouth as I was star struck. 60 years later and no regrets as i ended up with a teaching career working with special needs kids. He is on all my playlists and this just makes me smile and tear up at that memory.
52 years ago? Not possible! But it will live on in the annals of great music. Mangione is a genius.
One of the greatest musical arrangements ever.
The best song ever. It still gives me goose bumps everytime I hear it. Thanks Mr. Mangione for a true experience in music. You are the best thing to ever come out of Rochester, New York.
When music was truly music. One of Mangione's masterpieces.
Music is still music. The only difference is that today is that the more authentic styles like jazz, classical, blues, and rock'n'roll don't get a look in on the radio much. A lot of new musicians now promote their music on bandcamp, TH-cam, Fandalism.
@@dariowestern late night TV ain't jack. I feel for the musicians under the network pin heads.
@@dariowestern nn
True, although "Land of Make Believe", wasn't too shabby either!!!
@genewilliams617 Yes, The Land of Make Believe is fantastic, especially the extended vocal version.
I can't possibly tell you how much this means to me.I grew up in Ithaca,n.y. and had privilidge of seeing and studying with some of these muscians.My record is almost unplayable as it has lasted almost 40 years.For those of us that lived in upstate .n.y. in the 70's and 80's, this album is a source of pride.There is and was incredible music being played in Ithaca,Rochester,Syracuse,Buffalo,Elmira,Utica,etc.thank you for sharing
So many days coming home from school and Mom is blasting this album..
Thanks Mom!!
Cool Mom👌
This song and this style of music can me described in one word: timeless. A young Steve Gadd, fresh out of the military and headed into a legendary career. Chuck was King.
Growing up in Rochester, NY I had the privilege of not only listening to this great music, but also playing with some of these fantastic musicians. A percussionist since 4 years old, I loved the local scene and as I got older was able to jam out in places around the city. To this day, some 50 years later, I still have fond memories of these days. Bless those who are still with us! ~ John Guchone
After this came out, if you were in drum and bugle corps, you had to play this, or your show was nothing to talk about!
This arrangement is so crisp, so clean, man, it doesn't get done like this anymore!
Chuck is a genius!
I agree Paul. What corps did you March with?I marched with Fantasia III and the Bayonne Bridgemen.
There's nothing in this world like a well-performed piece at DCI, esp. if the piece is this one.=D
This was the basis of the Blue Devils' re-entry in '76 and '77. One of so many fantastic Mangione tunes adapted for drum corps. He was such a huge influence on DCI of the mid-70's.
I know age has nothing to do with genius but chuck was just about 30 years young when he conducted this phenomenal piece in 1970 & that’s why till today, arguably, America is one of the greatest nations when it comes to producing music where the standards of excellence is at its highest … Steve gadd, Gerry Niewood, Tony Levin, Bat McGrath, Don Potter, Stanley Watson, Gap Mangione & the whole Rochester Philharmonic… phenomenal ….
I'm with you. What an incredible piece of music. I'm 71 now and I remember when this came out. My brother kept playing the record. We both listened intently at all the different instruments and sections like we were about to take an exam about it. To this day, I "know" all the notes being played (shocked because some of my memory is starting to fade). We absolutely love this and still listen to the recording.
This came out when i was a senior in high school, when all young musicians
I knew at the time were conditioned to think that musical validity began & ended with Hendrix and Zepplin..Then this guy shows up playing a horn no one recognized in front of a symphony orchestra & proceeds to create a musical nuclear detonation---Heard on top forty radio!!...CM handed a new generation a set of new musical concepts that were unprecidented for the time.
Zappa
@@drummerup0012 Zappa definitely had a similar effect on musical sensibilities in the time. Both brought incredibly awesome players to the masses of younger people, with remarkably rich original compositions. Though primary arrangement styles were not the same, both absolutely occupied a common space approached from separate desperate paths. Frequently when one is in my playlist the other shows up as well.
And still genius today!!!!
I first heard this song, as a lead in to the news on a top 40 radio station! Fortunately for me, at the time, I was a popular drummer, dating the number on d.j. at that station in Fort Worth, and he got me the name of the tune. I thanked him profusely!!!!!
The Mangione Quartet + Philharmonic concerts on PBS transformed me from a kid digging rock to a young bass player wanting to transcribe all the cool parts on the first record.
I was and undergrad at U of Rochester at the time of this concert and I brought a date. We got in for a few bucks with our student ID.
What a concert especially having Chuck conduct the philharmonic.
I’m 70 now and I remember the sights and sounds of that night like it was yesterday.
My husband and I were at this concert…memorable! A once in a lifetime experience…
My mom and dad were there on date night they said it was such an exciting evening
I love how Chuck swings that entire aggregation, especially near the end. Great great music beyond the categories as Duke would say. Gerry Niewood was always great on soprano. Amazing, reading the comments, to see how many people were touched by this piece, which is truly for the ages.
I've been a huge fan of this tune for decades and just discovered this video for the first time. I couldn't love it more. Thank you so much for sharing it.
Discovered 6/17/2024 😎 Nice 👍👍
Discovered today 👍👍😎🫡🇺🇸
Great piece. I was 16, driving through country of Washington state with Mount Rainier in the windshield and hooked on rock, Led Zep, The Who. And this song came on KJR radio out of Seattle. They never played jazz. It nearly had me in tears, mainlined right into my soul. Music doesn't quite do that to me. I've never forgotten. Bought a lot of his vinyl. This morning I had a dream, a girl was asking me about the best jazz music and I told her, in my dream, Hill Where the Lord Hides, Chuck Mangione. Why would I dream that after all these years? Got up before making coffee and found it here on You Tube. Feels so good.
Daniel Cobb x Woke up today feeling so good today, I had to listen to Chuck.found out it's his birthday today! He's 75, and the best ever!
Its predicting dream
Borned the same year as Feel so good. Been listening the song all my life. My phone ringtone since mobile phone support mp3 for ringtone. One day my son told me my phone ringing. But it was song played in Doctor Strange movie (while he perform surgery). Feel so good. Haha
i saw him many times,,,gerry too...im from ROCHESTER and grew up with these guys,,,,POTTER and McGRATH i used to see in a small place called the wine press,,,man those were great times! R.I.P.GERRY....
@@joebloggs4754 I too grew up in Rochester. These guys are Rochester! Lots of great memories from the Eastman School of Music, and with Don & Bat (RIP)
It’s 2024, and this 1970 performance of this masterpiece still gives me goosebumps for its beauty and majesty as when I first heard/viewed this back then. Really hope a recording/film enthusiast will edit this in HD as a legacy for future generations to enjoy.
First Time I heard this was mid 70s at Ontario Place in Toronto. (Just across Lake Ontario from Rochester)They had a new-for-its-time, a 16-channel recording played back on a custom 16 channel tape machine that was somehow interlocked in-sync to the large wrap-around film picture screen. I was really impressed! I know they were using data recorders at the time for a high track count and Cinerama and Todd-AO had used multiple 35MM Magnetic "sprocket" machines but this was all new to me at the time. And having the sound follow the action on the screen was cool. And I'll never forget THIS MUSIC TRACK played in this format! I still luv it. Chuck's best!
When this concert happened I was in 8th grade , my music teachers (Fairport Schools) were Eastman School of Music grads, so we would go there and perform sometimes. So happens we were there at the time this concert was in rehearsals , one of my teachers saw Chuck and brought him by to conduct our select band on a couple of numbers, Very, Very Cool ! we all thought we were the luckiest kids on the planet !! This album was a staple in most Upstate NY households, it's no wonder. In 2013 or 14 they did a reunion concert of this show, same cast , same fantastic show, wish both could be available , for all to listen to and enjoy, thanks to all who made this great music !
God, I really loved Gerry Niewood on Soprano Saxophone! I was just totally
"blown away" even as a 10 Year Old child way back in the day! It is how a Soprano Sax is truly supposed to sound like! Sadly, he was of those killed in that horrific plane crash in Western New York a number of years ago.
That sax solo rocks! I heard about Gerry a while ago, and was really sad to hear about his death.
The irony of Gerry Niewood's death in the plane crash was he was travelling to Rochester for a reunion concert of Friends & Love. The concert never took place.
Yes! Gerry Niewood was a master of soprano & tenor saxophones, and of flute and alto flute, and a masterful improviser. His premature death was a great loss to the music scene.
A great guitarist named Coleman Mellett was on that flight as well, he and Gerry were traveling to that gig together. R.I.P. Gerry and Coleman, we’ll never forget either of you
I played the drums in a huge Disco back in the 70's and we opened every night with this masterpiece. I have very fond memories of my attempts to emulate the great, Steve Gadd.
Another holiday, this time THANKSGIVING 2015, and Chuck and his friends and family still fill the house. I am the son of Nanette, one of the Merlino sisters that grew up with Chuck and Gap in Rochester, NY. And just as Mom brought this music into my house growing up, I now bring it into the hearts, soul, and lives of my own children today. Timeless. Thank you.
I love the orchestrations for this piece. I first found out about Chuck Mangione in 1974 when someone in my college dorm was playing The Land of Make Believe album. I was instantly hooked. Saw him perform in Central Park when they used to hold concerts at the Wolman Rink. Esther Satterfield sang. What an awesome experience. When Feels So Good came out even my mom got into his music.
I was there at Eastman Theater when this was recorded. It was a phenomenal concert!
I am so jealous.
John Dittrich Me too. I was only 10, and my mom dressed me up and brought me. I remember it like it was yesterday.
+John Dittrich I also was lucky enough to see this performed in Utica, NY at the Stanley Theater. It opened my eyes and ears to the jazz and classical I really enjoy today!
+John Dittrich I was lucky enough to see the full concert at the Eastman Theater when they bused some of us students from Fairport High School and other local High Schools in to watch the afternoon rehearsal before the evening concert.
SO WAS I!
The late, great Gerry Niewood and a very young Steve Gadd! What an amazing concert!
This was most definitely a Kodak moment, given the Rochester Philharmonia Orchestra, the venue, and the film effects.
This song meant a lot a young musician from the Buffalo area...not too many people remeber Chuck's early years. To me they were his best... I have searched far and wide for this copy of Hill Where the Lord Hides...its his best one
I had this album way back in the 70s! We used to listen to the radio at night when we were supposed to be asleep on school nights, back when radio DJ's had actual personalities. This was one of my favorites and even though I owned a copy of the LP, I always listened to the whole thing when the late-night DJ's played it. I miss those nights, it's wonderful to hear the music again.😊
😭😭
I am from Rochester, NY and Chuck is the biggest "hometown boy makes good" story my hometown has had since Mitch Miller. And it all started with this song from the massively successful local hit album "Friends and Love." I remember the 45 RPM single of the song being the #1 hit in Rochester on most radio stations. Seven years later, "Feels So Good" came out and confirmed what we "Rochesterians" knew all along.
Lou Gramm
Philip Seymour Hoffman did alright too
Good on you for remembering those two for me. I only meant that when I became aware of him he was my next hometown hero.
Lou Graham
When I was maybe 13 and starting to play drums, I heard this song on the radio and it immediately grabbed me and I said “ I don’t know who the drummer is, but he played what I felt in my heart. Years later, I discovered my teacher and his instructor at Eastman were good friends: it was Steve Gadd fresh out of the army.
Side note…my High School music teacher knew Jerry Niewood very well. Was a small world but such a hot bed for music in western NY.
can't play this enough on my hifi at home, work, car, ect.... if anyone turns up thier nose to a performance like this, then you are not human.
Legendary album! My mum and dad used to play it to me a lot when I was a child in the early 70's. I just wish that Universal Music would re-issue it on CD as well as download for the younger generations who are getting into Chuck's music.
재지팩트 always awake로 온 사람 없냐
I've listened to this performance for forty years...this is the first time i've seen the video...awesome...
what an Orchestrator...besides a brlliant solo flugelhorn player, beautiful melodies from a beautiful soul...melodies from heaven for us on earth through chuck mangione and the musicians...
They played the entire video of this concert endlessly on PBS at the time. Great stuff.
Steve Gadd on drums, Don Potter on guitar and the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra. With Additional Personnel:
GERRY NIEWOOD soprano and alto saxophone, flute
Al Porcino: Trumpet
Larry Covelli: Tenor Sax
Tony Levin: Electric Bass
Bill Reichenbach: Trombone
Ned Corman:\tab Flute, Alto Flute, Baritone Saxophone
Vincent Di Martino: Trumpet
Robert Becker: Percussion
Chris Vadala: Tenor Saxophone
MARVIN STAMM trumpet
I've played with Di. Marvin Stamm is awesome. The whole lineup is star power USA!
Who’s that woman doing flute she’s good!
Gerry Niewood, nice guy, met him at a venue in Tahoe when Mangione played. One of my all time favorite sax players. Love his albom, "Share My Dream".
@@colrely57 I was told she was part blind!!!!
Holy smokes
How can anybody not appreciate this! July 9 2019! What a talent! 10 stars! I’m lucky to own the vinyl and my sweer brother bought me this from Amazon! Love you, Dave! Play that Flugelhorn, Chuck!
I feel so lucky to know this music. It has affected me, my life . . . . brought me such pleasure, such hope. It's deep within my New York core.
Incredible memories growing up in Rochester, NY. Never goes away.
Hill Where The Lord Hides is a beautiful piece of music from Chuck Mangione. It is a healing piece of music.Hey Chuck did you know you are a doctor? Yes man!
Ain't that the truth.
Guitarist Don Potter is now a Christian minister and prophet and he talks at length in some videos as to why music has healing properties. Very interesting guy. :)
Therapy.
I wish iTunes would offer this version for sale. I recall the thrill of watching this on PBS when it happened in 1970. I have the vinyl, still, however I would love to play this in my car. This version of "Hill Where The Lord Hides" should be available to all. Wonderful!
A number of years ago I converted all my vinyl, cassette tapes, CDs, and reel to reel tapes to .mp3 files to put on my iPod which I can play in my car. It really isn't that difficult.. just time consuming but a labor of love as I listened to music I hadn't heard in a while.
Discovered Chuck's music in the mid-1970s. Who can forget Legend of the One-Eyed Sailor, Bellavia etc
My old high school band director conducted like Chuck. My sophomore year we performed Land of Make Believe as part of a marching piece and it was quite the challenge. Thanks for the wonderful music Mr. Mangione and thanks for the memories Mr. P.
My last six months in the Air Force, I spent a lot of time pulling CQ at night in the hanger where I worked. Would have my little radio with me and I'd hear this song being played by some station from Dallas, or Oklahoma City, or maybe Chicago. Then after I left Abilene TX to drive to my home in CT, this song would come on the radio from different radio stations along the way. It kind of followed me home. Have always loved it.
Don Potter still blows me away with his playing and singing!!!
The great and MAGICAL Gerry Niewood. Discovering him remains very special to me. I was, maybe, 13-14 years old when I purchased the double lp, 'Friends and Love'. I've heard the soprano played by many musician at that point, but never experienced the instrument utilized in arrangements like Chucks..I'm almost 60 and I still can hum most of his more popular solos when with Mangione-- including that beautiful solo on 'Joy' when he was with Time Piece. R.I.P. , sir. What a rare treat this video is! I can sing/hum almost every single note on the entire 'Best of Mangione' double album-- including the 20+ minute 'Friends in Love' arrangement. Great to FINALLY see footage from the ACTUAL concert! Also, RIP to the great Bat McGrath. He and Don Potter really pulled the heart-strings on this particular project.
Yes! I love the solo from 'Joy'. I grew up in Rochester and found the Timepiece album in an used record store in Pittsford. What a great find.
. . . and after all these years, still beautiful, soul lifting, orgasmic!
The ending is absolutely orgasmic!!! I love how the flute player looks like she might explode in delight!!!!!
To have been playing that night would have been an unforgettable experience!!!
I love this, I always have. This song was literally in my dreams in the early 70's when I was a young teen. It was a recurring dream of driving fast in the mountains with the wind in my hair and this music playing. I do not recall having ever heard it before the dream, but I must have, somehow. Later I actually did hear it on the radio one evening, and as it turned out, I was driving fast on this big hill on this winding road, and all my windows were open. Talk about De Ja Vu! I had to stop the car! I was so blown away. Many years later I talked someone into doing a cover of it on his album. But as awesome as that turned out, nothing is as amazing as this original piece. Thank you Chuck Mangione
My parents introduced me to this. One of many things I'm grateful for👍👍
Mine too
That ending………….man……..bring you to tears man…..
I attended the concert Chuck put together with the Rochester Philharmonic in 1969, "Kaleidoscope".
My reason for going?
My drum teacher, Vinnie Ruggiero, was Chuck's drummer in his local gig at the time, The Chuck Mangione Quartet.
Vinnie was on the drumset for the performance
"Kaleidoscope" was a musical success; it wasn't a financial one.
However, it served as the springboard for "Friends & Love" .
That concert launched Chuck into the national spotlight with a Grammy nomination for "Hill Where The Lord Hides".
My brother Jim was a first-year student at the University of Rochester and was at that concert as well. He came home and raved about the event to our parents. So when Chuck's Friends & Love concert tickets went on sale, our Dad got them minutes after the box office opened. Great concerts. Wish that Kaleidoscope was recorded.
The Live at the Hollywood Bowl album was epic, not a note was missed live on stage....pure musical perfection, especially this song
So true. I just can't believe an event like that was not filmed in any way.
Almost 2023 here from the Netherlands.
I was 12 and we did this performance play back on last primary school year. This was in 1982. Listen to 'llive at the Hollywood ball' ever sinterklaas. Still magic💫
Haven't heard this since the late 70's. So many memories flooding back....
Miss you Chuck! Thank you for the memories.
Yeah, that soprano saxophone solo is one kick as* solo ! He's grooving & into it as well. Chuck & every musician in this is kicking butt !
This tour was my first concert ever. Saratoga Performing Arts Center.
Lots of people didn't knew that the drummer in this Video is Steve Gadd, I had the album when i was living in SJ Puerto Rico and got it right after it was recorded…always have been a follower of great music and great musicians…-aa
Alex...your sort of a legend also...wish I could meet you at a PASICs or such. I'm was from western NY during this period. My High School teacher worked with Jerri Niewood a lot and my instructor John Roland--Buffalo Philharmonic) and John Beck (Steve's instructor at Eastman) were good friends. This recording changed my direction in music entirely. If it wasn't for the video I would have never figured out the 16th note HH action.
mat4410
Cool Yes I will be in PASIC in November doing a clinic, come by and say hi please.
Blessings. -aa
Alex Neciosup-Acuna Greetings to you, Mr. Neciosup-Acuna!! I am honored to be in the same 'room' with you here. Much respect to your amazing talent and you as a gentleman. The world is better for your having been in it.
Alex Neciosup-Acuna the other drummer on this side was the late, Ron Davis, who was also on other Mangione records. Nice to know you were listening to Chuck and Steve like us. I've followed your career, also. You and Abe Laborial on Ella's She's a Carioca still floors me !
+Alex Neciosup-Acuna One thing I can say, you played in one of my favorite song, The Greatest Love, and then you turned the tables in Don Grusin Dakar Daughter. I usually think people like you don't listen with us on You Tube.
I want to live on the hill where the Lord hides.
We had this when I was a junior in High School, I bought the Album "Friends and Love" at the end of the concert and had the band members all sign it. I didn't have to beg my parents for the $15 to get it either, so it must have been in the '72 to '73 range when I had a job. The Band did some recording at our school, we weren't allowed to bring any recorders or cameras to the concert. That burned me up because there was no way to record this event in our yearbooks, or in personal collections. But it was a great concert. Not on the order of Woodstock 1and 2 or James Taylor or the Dead concert I attended, but not bad. I have since abandoned NY State because it became a cultural sinkhole or "dead space" for decent bands in the 80's and 90's! I am a hopeless "rocker" with no reason to change.
My oldest brother introduced me to Chuck Mangione when I was probably 16 years old. that was back in 1979 or 80. I have seen him twice in my life. Once at Red Rocks Amphitheatre and one at the House of Blues in Las Vegas Nevada. I wouldn't trade one second of either concert. Although, most of my friends and family around me would not ever understand that. Being a country music drummer, most of my learning was from his "Records and Cassettes"...lol
I was at this concert!!!!! Loved it then and love it now!!!!
Back in 1971, I'd hear this song while on CQ duty in the hanger on my Air Force base in Abilene, TX. Then when I left the base to go home, this song seemed to follow me all the way across the states to Connecticut. Always loved it.
Got a chance to see Chuck a couple of times. Still love his music. Played live at the Hollywood Bowl about 2 million times.
My 2 Band directors (Frank Fuller and Byrlon Lamb) introduced me to Chuck's Music in the 70's -- I'm still a huge fan today! Thanks for Posting!
My band director did too. I think an entire generation of high school and college band directors fell in love with Chuck's music and passed it on to their students like us!
I just love the "living hell" out of Gerry Niewood's Soprano Saxophone Solo in this composition...and I always have every since my late Dad brought it home back in the 1970s.
It's still my #1 in my CD playbook! And it's 2014.
...and his solo on "Land Of Make Believe", as well...just wonderful!
@@Harveycartoonlvr11 --- treasure it dearly-- Gerry Niewood was tragically lost in the Flight 3407 crash near Buffalo approx 2009--sad!!!
@@marySebastiani Oh, My Goodness! You're the Flautist (Flute Player) on that recording! God Bless You! Thank You so very much for replying to my comments...that song ALWAYS brings me to tears as my late Dad played it alot! While I'm a Saxophonist myself, I always like to listen to the greats, and Gerry Niewood was one of them! Mary, Thank You so much! I guess I can say this now, have a Happy Thanksgiving, and Happy Holidays ahead! Goodness they came up FAST this year! Are you on Facebook? My name is William Christopher Mitchell (Sax)
Jerry also performed a brutal solo on Legend of the One Eyed Sailor.
What a video! A legitimate blessing to the universe this performance was captured on film for us to see
The song of my life!
we went to the same high school, (Gates Chili) thus he used to come & do free concerts every now & then, used to see/listen to him & his brother over the years...loved this song when it came out & still love it 50 some years later! thanks Chuckie!
Cannot count the number of time I listened to this on my way to and from my Analyst---that is before he died on me. And I live on and so does my love for this music. So glad i now have You Tube to fill my heart with joy!!! Wow are they great or what!!!!
I first heard this piece as an into to the news on a popular AM radio station in Fort Worth, Texas. Well I was dating the DJ's daughter, and she was in the car with me. Although I will never regret being tuned in that day. BLEW ME AWAY!!!! I called the station and dropped the appropriate name to find out what that outrageous piece of music was. Not your normal 1971 AM music fare. I was instantly addicted. Stave Gadd is such a monster!
He played at Mohawk College, a small, nowhere venue in 1968? Blew our minds!!!!!! Same venue, Gordon Lightfoot played.....in Hamilton.....very blessed to see them in their prime....
I drove a little Fahrvergnugen that had no air conditioning so I drove all over Dallas with my windows down blaring this song 🎶 everywhere I went. My parents just passed away and I came across my(worn out) album. I had bought a different recording which, of course, is good. Just slightly different. I haven’t unpacked my album yet but I sure hope it didn’t get left behind. Three seconds into this recording made my heart ❤️ skip a beat. I was never a “groupie” but oh! That song….
They certainly had a top drummer. That's Steve Gadd! Awesome.
This song just keeps popping into my feed every few days, and I just have to listen to it yet again. The dynamics are massive. The last 3 minutes are almost orgasmic!!!!!!
¡¡Caracoles!! Esto si que fue un super conciertazo con sinfónica y toda la cosa, no cabe duda que la gente de excelencia siempre hará cosas que trasciendan no solo fronteras y ya no digamos lenguas y culturas, a mi en lo particular siempre me encantaron sus melodías allá por 1978 cuando lo conocí en radio, y mas adelante cuando en los ochentas compre sus primeros albunes, en fin gracias CHUCK MANGIONNE por dejarnos este tipo de espectáculos, caray no tengo palabras , pero de algo si estoy bien seguro que seguiré escuchándote ahora en 2018 , recuerdo la película de Los hijos de Sánchez en 1979 y la música también era tuya, ya que lo bueno y trascendental jamas pasara de moda, ya lo decía hace rato cuando en mi juventud me acompañaste tanto con tus hermosas melodías, gracias por subirlo a TH-cam ya que yo no sabia que existiese este vídeo, gracias por compartirnozlo , gracias amigos muchas gracias a todos... Saludos desde MÉXICO, mi patria...
I m front Brasil, faço de minhas palavras exatamente o que falaste. Grato pela sua bela narrativa. Forte abraço fraterno!
TROPPO BELLO !!! Grandissime emozioni, grandiosi musicisti che non tramonteranno mai e con cui ho avuto la fortuna di scambiare una corrispondenza scritta e telefonica amichevole, oltre ai nostri dischi. Ciao da Alghero (Sardegna) Italia
As Chuck would introduce this song saying and now we're gonna play a song that helped us get out of Rochester New York once in a while
Es interesante leer opiniones de Chuck y al mismo tiempo escuchar sus interpretaciones, no sin reconocer que lo admire por mucho tiempo y me parece haber logrado tener gran parte de su obra de trabajo. De manera firme deseo reconocerle su aportacion . Dios te cuide Chuck...
RC, I can't tell you how THRILLED I am to find not only the music here but also the video of the performance!! Back in 1980?? I recorded this cut from Chicago radio station WSDM. Didn't know the name of the cut nor whose music it was--I was simply mesmerized by it. Since then I've hoped to identify it. Shazam wasn't able to help when I tried it with my '80 cassette recording. Finally, Feb. 2013, I took my cassette to a record shop & the owner identified the cut and Mangione. Hallelujah!
I first heard this on a Manila underground jazz fm station DZUW in 1973. Awesome. Thank you for the chance to see this live recording.
Fall of 1971, I had just started my first year at RIT in Rochester, NY, being a trumpet player myself, and the college brought in Chuck and his quartet for a concert, what a treat!
Thank you so much for the posting. For 42 years I had wondered if Steve Gadd had done the drums on this recording or Joey LaBarbara whom I had seen on a PBS broadcast in Buffalo, NY.
Now I can rest.
Many don't realize that this was a defining moment in contemporary "jazz."
Thank you again, you have done a great service esp. to the western NY musicians.
One of the most amazing pieces of music written in this lifetime!!!!@
Chuck Mangione = one of the greatest bandleaders and composers or our generation. This performance may be his Magnum Opus :-O
I do wonder why he needed a conductor score when he is the composer and soloist :-S
Great 👍 Performance
Estamos Bien Representados.
I remember first hearing this gem of music on AM radio back in the Spring of 1971 and have loved it ever since! If I recall, this was recorded live at Nazareth College outside of Rochester NY. This is perhaps the best version of the song (compared to the studio version or the Hollywood Bowl version).
Eastman Theater, May 1970
Fully agree!
Boy does this bring back meories
Could ANY song be better? Doubting it. What a thrill to be able to listen to this.
Grace Willan HILL WHERE THE LORD HIDES HAS ALWAYS BEEN A CHUCK MANGIONE FAVORITE OF MINE IT SOUNDED FAMILLIAR WHEN I FIRST HEARD IT ON A CHUCK MANGIONE RECORDING
I remember when Don Potter and Bat McGrath had their place up on Ridge Rd. They encouraged people to bring their instruments and jam with them. I dragged my bass guitar and ended up on stage with the Mangione's, Gerry Niewood, and Tony Levin ( bassist in King Crimson and a million others) I just talked to Tony a few weeks ago when he played here with his brother, Pete. I was totally thrilled and felt so lucky. I'm 70 now, and I recall that night like it was yesterday. I eventually gave up the bass, but not my love of the music and the people I met.
One of my favorite Chuck Mangione songs I first heard this the mid 1970s from some movie but not the entire tune
I've been a appreciator of jazz ever since my teen years when my older brother took me to a Chuck Mangione concert. This song in particular was one of my first remembrances into the genre...a classic in every sense!
I remember listening to this back in 1973 when I was 10 years old, never forget man such an inspiration for me I'm a bass player now
Same here! The first Quartet album is the first non-rock record I transcribed.
Awesome display of music. I listen to this every day.