Just read an old letter from my father, a jazz buff, deceased at age 87, 2 years ago. He wrote, "one number that blew me away was performed by only two cats, Ray Bauduac and Bobby Hackett. I just listened. It blew me away and brought my dad back home. Nirvana
Glad this reconnected you with your Dad. I met Mr Haggart when I was a kid. He was still playing the jazz parties and festivals on bass into the early 1990s.
Mr Bobby Hackett Jazz big band multi instrumentalist legend who blew horn powerful n smooth He also played guitar.. His playing was very distinctive .. you hear it, You know it's HIM!!! peace be too all
The stick solo on the bass strings near the end was amazingly well coordinated. It's next to impossible to finger in time with someone else playing your strings, especially at that speed. And they made it look effortless. Very cool, a timeless classic.
I call this masterpiece music. It never gets old. It sounds just as great as it did many years ago. You delivered a classic like this back in those big band days. You heard every note. No super loud amps or special mikes and lights. You played your heart out and produced a classic
Read in a short bio of the late Spencer Dryden (Jefferson Airplane, N.R.P.S.), that his father took him to Jazz clubs in Los Angeles when he was a kid. He said he used to sit next to the stage and watch Ray Bauduc. Now I know where his style came from and who inspired him. Spencer had a similar flair on the drums, even playing in such a different genre. Two masters here....making so much music! Perfect.
My grandfather would whistle this whistle when calling for us. We literally called it the family whistle and always knew it was someone from our family because it was unique. No one except my grandfather knew what song it was from and never found out before he passed away. I listened to a big band station for 10 years before I heard it played.
This tune was featured brilliantly in an episode of the Marvelous Mrs. Maisel when she runs from studio to studio to record radio commercials. Brilliant tune performed my 2 cool cats.
I’ve never seen a drummer accomplish so much while looking so utterly relaxed. It’s like he just casually flicks his wrists a little and yet hear how much he does.
Ray Bauduc on drums looked like a cross between Mel Blanc and character actor from the Jack Benny Show-- Frank Nelson. Ray was a fantastic player. A great showman to be sure, but a well trained, superb drummer with great technique and a terrific feel. Bob Crosby was a fantastic all-around bassist and composer. Fabulous performance here.
When ' visiting ' TH-cam need a regular ' fix ' of watching this over and over again.Pure genious,in my all time Top 20 , never tire of this masterpiece !
I never heard this song until I became one of the disc jockeys at Radio 83, KUGR, Cuesta Community College north of San Luis Obispo, California and the instrumental was an all-time favorite of Ron Finn, the radio’s technical director and my favorite mentor. He would play the 45 rpm record when he manned the turntables during the summer months when classes were not in session. His program would be tape-recorded and played when the station was otherwise shut down and us students were doing summer jobs to raise some serious tuition money. When I hear “Big Noise From Winnetka”, I think of Ron Finn who went to the radio station in the sky back in 1989. Rest In Peace, good buddy and enjoy the tune.
The original and still the best. Baudac (drums) and Haggart (bass) composed this piece. Some good drummers and bassists have performed it, but none have matched the light-hearted approach and effortless skill of these two... Thanks for posting this JUSTASITTINANDAROCK. A jazz classic, often imitated but never equalled.
YA GOTTA LOVE DAT BIG NOISE!!! And we're NOT talkin' Winnetka, California, in the San Fernando Valley, either!! The Late, Great Henry Mancini wrote a KILLER arrangement of this song, which was featured on an episode of his long-forgotten syndicated TV show of the late '60's, "The Mancini Generation", which featured some of the best sidemen his Big Band ever had (and I was lucky enough to play with some of them, thanks to the GREAT Paul Keen, who was then a member of the U.S. Air Force Reserve Band of Southen California, (who referred to themselves as "THE FORCED AIR BAND")... ALL of whom were Professionals in their own right, and many of them had GREAT Jazz solo LP's available at record stores evarywhere. If you've ever heard of Saxophone players who had names like Fred Selden (Alto Sax player and Arranger for Mancini) or Jon Clarke (Baritone Sax Player for Mancini), to name but two (and THAT was only TWO members of the SAX SECTION!!), THEY WERE IN THE MANCINI BIG BAND OF THAT TIME, (not to mention OTHERS of Mancini's bands) AND WHOM I WAS LUCKY ENOUGH TO SIT IN WITH when I was a mere lad of 16 years. These men were kind enough to show both myself and my contemporaries a few things we NEVER could have learned any other way. Many of these men had Albums in General Release (at a record store near you, at the time) and if I hadn't been so blown away by the opportunity to actually PLAY with these amazing musicians, I should have asked them for promo copies of their records when the Great Paul Keen just happened to ALSO be Director of the Redondo Beach Youth Band at the time. He had arranged for a number of us then-students to play in concert with these amazing men. Paul was the official KING of LOW BRASS (bass trombone, tuba, and baritone horn, to name but a few) and some of HIS amazing work STILL airs on places like MeTV and Antenna Television, to name two. Paul Keen was on call 24/7 to EVERY MAJOR TV and MOVIE STUDIO IN "HOLLYWOOD" (a term I use loosely), and Paul wore a Pager even BEFORE MOST DOCTORS did... and you must remember the times - back in the 1960's and early 1970's... and this was before the advent of the Cellular Phone! Now, the few remaining musicians in Paul's enviable then-position (so much of what he did is now handled by Synthesizers and Samplers) carry Cell Phones wherever they go, and ANSWER the PERSON trying to reach them IMMEDIATELY, unlike in the old days. But I digress... EVERY one of us kids learned more in that few Summer weeks that year than we did in SEVERAL YEARS of our regular Big Band and standard music classes in school, and that summer WE EARNED THE BRAGGING RIGHTS to be able to say WE HAD PLAYED WITH HANK MANCINI'S BOYS!!! THAT, my friends, is something which most likely will NEVER happen again. And one cannot BUY an experience like THAT!! Every one of us owes all that to NO ONE but Hollywood's King Of Low Brass, His Majesty, Paul Keen.
When my Jewish, drugstore cowboy father met my Arkansas-rooted mother dealing 21 in Reno, he courted her by whistling "Big Noise" as he sauntered through the casino where she worked each night. . . without the drums, of course!
My mom got up on stage in Cincinnati, Ohio when she was 19 and sang a tune with Bob Crosby and his orchestra. They let her do the whole tune because Mr. Crosby said she was "cool" !
Listen to it once, get it stuck in your head FOREVER!!! My apologies to all the co-workers who had to listen to me whistle this idly to myself over the years. Some of you got to know it so when you'd whistle along back, which I can't tell you how much that means to me.
I was just in a thrift store and found this for $3. I was so excited I almost squealed. I have wanted this song ever since I heard it on the movie Radioland Murders.
just love this ....first saw it on TV programme broadcast in New Zealand in the early 60's "Jazz Scene USA" with Oscar Brown Jnr ...please feel free to correct me if my memory has it wrong. Have loved it ever since.The Gene Krupa version is of course brilliant as well. Am I right in remembering a version where the drummer moves across the stage and keeps the beat going on various stage props ?? can't find it if so...
+Mike Hogan I think the vintage clip of a drummer moving from behind the drums and playing on chairs, etc., is a clip of Barrett Deems. It's on TH-cam. Cheers!
The story goes ... My uncle, by marriage, Bobby Haggart (bass), wrote this about my Dads younger brother, J B. He and his loud friends would come to hear the (Bob Crosby and the bobcats) band play at the Pump Room in Chicago. When he would show up uncle Bobby would say here comes the “big noise from Winnetka!”
Bob Corsby's band, as you can see and hear, has two fourths of one of the best rhythm sections in the band business, bassest Bob Haggart and drummer Ray Bauduc.
Dude they didn't have any of that electronic crap back then, or at least no popular people used them until the 60s area. They really didn't have a choice, but I do have to agree with you.
+Andrei Porojanu wtf? Wrong anyone can play an instrument just like anyone can make electronic music. To be good at playing and to make good music are two different things however.
+Andrei Porojanu simple and stable? You're just ignoring everything that can be done with pitches. I'd say you have more control on the sound with electronic music allowing you to spend more time on arrangements rather than practicing your intonation
You clearly don't understand these things, so, even though I'm not gonna tell you to keep your opinions for yourself, I will tell you that you are wrong.
The song that inspired Ed, Edd, n Eddy's theme! Definetly a classic! We need classy songs like this nowadays.
I came here straight from Ed Edd n Eddys wikipedia page
i came for this comment
Love how the drummer makes it look so effortless. What a cool cat.
They both make it look SO EASY. I'm floored.
Fantastically cool! 😎
Ray Bauduc !
He's a Bobcat!
He's got a China cymbal on the bass drum. Trend setter.
Effortlessly cool, no grandstanding and neither one trying to take away from the other. These were real musicians.
Just read an old letter from my father, a jazz buff, deceased at age 87, 2 years ago. He wrote, "one number that blew me away was performed by only two cats, Ray Bauduac and Bobby Hackett. I just listened. It blew me away and brought my dad back home. Nirvana
Bob Haggert on bass/whistling.
Bobby Haggard on bass! 👏
Glad this reconnected you with your Dad. I met Mr Haggart when I was a kid. He was still playing the jazz parties and festivals on bass into the early 1990s.
Mr Bobby Hackett Jazz big band multi instrumentalist legend who blew horn powerful n smooth He also played guitar.. His playing was very distinctive .. you hear it, You know it's HIM!!! peace be too all
Brings my sisters back to me, too. Great memories through my tears.....
that drummer is having way too much fun :D
The stick solo on the bass strings near the end was amazingly well coordinated. It's next to impossible to finger in time with someone else playing your strings, especially at that speed. And they made it look effortless.
Very cool, a timeless classic.
Simply amazing!!
I came because of the Ed-boys, but ended up blown away by the musicianship. I used to play drums (never this well), so this is right up my alley.
I call this masterpiece music. It never gets old. It sounds just as great as it did many years ago. You delivered a classic like this back in those big band days. You heard every note. No super loud amps or special mikes and lights. You played your heart out and produced a classic
1:47 That's some creativity.
The guy in the drums is having a really good time here.
Marcianito 100% real no fake
@@kekz71 NUNCA ME FALTES!
NUNCA ME ENGAÑES!
QUE SIN TU AMOR,
YO NO SOY NADIE!
Why do I love you tube? Because of treasures like this!
@Alan Brando Yes, this one, and my wife's.
I hate YT except music. Otherwise they’re censorship is disgusting.
I am... deeply impressed by the high degree of relaxation in the drummer.
Ray Bauduc was from New Orleans, where the attitude is more laid-back
Read in a short bio of the late Spencer Dryden (Jefferson Airplane, N.R.P.S.), that his father took him to Jazz clubs in Los Angeles when he was a kid. He said he used to sit next to the stage and watch Ray Bauduc. Now I know where his style came from and who inspired him. Spencer had a similar flair on the drums, even playing in such a different genre. Two masters here....making so much music! Perfect.
No matter how many times I watch this, it still knocks me out.
My grandfather would whistle this whistle when calling for us. We literally called it the family whistle and always knew it was someone from our family because it was unique. No one except my grandfather knew what song it was from and never found out before he passed away. I listened to a big band station for 10 years before I heard it played.
This tune was featured brilliantly in an episode of the Marvelous Mrs. Maisel when she runs from studio to studio to record radio commercials. Brilliant tune performed my 2 cool cats.
Very few people today realize how truly great Ray Bauduc was. Never got the recognition he deserved
Never seen or heard anyone play both sides of the symbols much less play the bass fid. w/sticks. Wow.
There drummer looks like Walt Disney.
Thanks Loved did listening to Ray and my Daddy “Biff “ Clifford Play this song When Houston Tx Honored Ray Bauduc for Jazz Month Years ago!!!!
Ed Edd n' Eddy theme song inspiration!
ayeee
Feel old yet?
yes i helped them write it
Whitefright do you watch 107 facts about Ed, Edd n Eddy before you watched this video????
White
I’ve never seen a drummer accomplish so much while looking so utterly relaxed. It’s like he just casually flicks his wrists a little and yet hear how much he does.
You know you made a great song when your whistle and the overall vibe of said song inspired a legendary 90s cartoon series.
This kinda makes me wanna sit and cry about the good old days of me and my drummer friend, cause we had this kinda chemistry when we played..
Ed Edd and Eddy! :) OMG, fucking looked for this song for so long. Thank goodness for the internet! :3
I'm having goosebumps all over my body, this is epic
that is some serious talent!
Plenty of practice for sure. No time for Fortnite.
YEAH!!!! This is So great - Ray Bauduc (and this fine bassist) deserve wider recognition.
Absolutely wonderful virtuosos.
I was looking for this video from years! wanderfull !!
One of my favorite Gene Krupa songs from the Verve album of his hits that I had as a kid. This is just as amazing! Effortless and natural!
My mom had this record (78), at age 5 circa 1957 I sat on it. She never let me forget it. 😅
Ray Bauduc on drums looked like a cross between Mel Blanc and character actor from the Jack Benny Show-- Frank Nelson. Ray was a fantastic player. A great showman to be sure, but a well trained, superb drummer with great technique and a terrific feel. Bob Crosby was a fantastic all-around bassist and composer. Fabulous performance here.
When ' visiting ' TH-cam need a regular ' fix ' of watching this over and over again.Pure genious,in my all time Top 20 , never tire of this masterpiece !
Brilliant stuff. Gotta love those old jazz drummers. Metal drummers may have the strength, but jazz drummers have the style!
This playing is very much advanced for its time. Lots of talent on both their parts.
How? Seems about right for its time
@@solrac4512Exactly. What a dumb comment that was.
Just the absolute coolest thing I have ever seen....sits alongside (neither above or below) Krupa's version. Love them both
Love this - my mom played the bass in high school and I enjoy this piece every time.
Does your mom works at Channel Federator?
this. this is just... DAPPER. love it
Back when popular music was always good music, and said artist would try as hard as they could.
indeed. and tried to hone their talents not just yell about their "geniocity"
+Tanky Banky Popular music is popular for a reason. It's always good.
Gene Krupa once said one of his early influences was Ray Bauduc featured on the drums
My dad’s favorite drummer was Bauduc!
I never heard this song until I became one of the disc jockeys at Radio 83, KUGR, Cuesta Community College north of San Luis Obispo, California and the instrumental was an all-time favorite of Ron Finn, the radio’s technical director and my favorite mentor. He would play the 45 rpm record when he manned the turntables during the summer months when classes were not in session. His program would be tape-recorded and played when the station was otherwise shut down and us students were doing summer jobs to raise some serious tuition money. When I hear “Big Noise From Winnetka”, I think of Ron Finn who went to the radio station in the sky back in 1989. Rest In Peace, good buddy and enjoy the tune.
Stunningly superb - love it !.
The original and still the best. Baudac (drums) and Haggart (bass) composed this piece. Some good drummers and bassists have performed it, but none have matched the light-hearted approach and effortless skill of these two...
Thanks for posting this JUSTASITTINANDAROCK. A jazz classic, often imitated but never equalled.
YA GOTTA LOVE DAT BIG NOISE!!! And we're NOT talkin' Winnetka, California, in the San Fernando Valley, either!! The Late, Great Henry Mancini wrote a KILLER arrangement of this song, which was featured on an episode of his long-forgotten syndicated TV show of the late '60's, "The Mancini Generation", which featured some of the best sidemen his Big Band ever had (and I was lucky enough to play with some of them, thanks to the GREAT Paul Keen, who was then a member of the U.S. Air Force Reserve Band of Southen California, (who referred to themselves as "THE FORCED AIR BAND")... ALL of whom were Professionals in their own right, and many of them had GREAT Jazz solo LP's available at record stores evarywhere. If you've ever heard of Saxophone players who had names like Fred Selden (Alto Sax player and Arranger for Mancini) or Jon Clarke (Baritone Sax Player for Mancini), to name but two (and THAT was only TWO members of the SAX SECTION!!), THEY WERE IN THE MANCINI BIG BAND OF THAT TIME, (not to mention OTHERS of Mancini's bands) AND WHOM I WAS LUCKY ENOUGH TO SIT IN WITH when I was a mere lad of 16 years. These men were kind enough to show both myself and my contemporaries a few things we NEVER could have learned any other way. Many of these men had Albums in General Release (at a record store near you, at the time) and if I hadn't been so blown away by the opportunity to actually PLAY with these amazing musicians, I should have asked them for promo copies of their records when the Great Paul Keen just happened to ALSO be Director of the Redondo Beach Youth Band at the time. He had arranged for a number of us then-students to play in concert with these amazing men. Paul was the official KING of LOW BRASS (bass trombone, tuba, and baritone horn, to name but a few) and some of HIS amazing work STILL airs on places like MeTV and Antenna Television, to name two. Paul Keen was on call 24/7 to EVERY MAJOR TV and MOVIE STUDIO IN
"HOLLYWOOD" (a term I use loosely), and Paul wore a Pager even BEFORE MOST DOCTORS did... and you must remember the times - back in the 1960's and early 1970's... and this was before the advent of the Cellular Phone! Now, the few remaining musicians in Paul's enviable then-position (so much of what he did is now handled by Synthesizers and Samplers) carry Cell Phones wherever they go, and ANSWER the PERSON trying to reach them IMMEDIATELY, unlike in the old days. But I digress...
EVERY one of us kids learned more in that few Summer weeks that year than we did in SEVERAL YEARS of our regular Big Band and standard music classes in school, and that summer WE EARNED THE BRAGGING RIGHTS to be able to say WE HAD PLAYED WITH HANK MANCINI'S BOYS!!! THAT, my friends, is something which most likely will NEVER happen again. And one cannot BUY an experience like THAT!! Every one of us owes all that to NO ONE but Hollywood's King Of Low Brass, His Majesty, Paul Keen.
The greatest stuff ,I ve ever heard!!!!?
This is what it's all about - have FUN with it! Unfortunately doesn't seem to be but two or three things on TH-cam with this drummer, last I checked.
Absolute timeless perfection and talent !
When my Jewish, drugstore cowboy father met my Arkansas-rooted mother dealing 21 in Reno, he courted her by whistling "Big Noise" as he sauntered through the casino where she worked each night. . . without the drums, of course!
My mom got up on stage in Cincinnati, Ohio when she was 19 and sang a tune with Bob Crosby and his orchestra. They let her do the whole tune because Mr. Crosby said she was "cool" !
Music of my youth.....great stuff! Thanks for posting.
Some folks think their cool. Then there's these real Cool Cats 🙂 Don't get any better than this !!!!
The original and still the best. Thanks for posting.
Love the use of this song in Woody Allen's Manhattan Murder Mystery.
Yes! Yes! Yes!!!!
Pure genius. I'm sure that friendship and the genius and fun that comes with it still goes on in Heaven
I love how casual the drummer is
As a drummer, i love this !!!!!
It's weird how i usually listen to punk rock and stuff but still love this kind of music too xD
Not weird at all. DJ Bonebrake also leads a jazz band sometimes.
Love Bob Crosby and his Bobcats !
The level of cool on this is impossible to measure 😎
No idea who Edd ed and what's so ever are but used to bop to this 40 years ago .
*Ed, Edd n Eddy
I may be three sheets to the wind, but this is the best music I've ever heard. this is just IT!
I saw this live in Copenhagen a few years ago ! Fantastic
Some people are born with it. That drummer is some people.
It looks effortless....an excellent posting
Fun Story: this is how Danny Antonucci got the idea to do the whistling for the Ed Edd n Eddy theme song
The BEST thing from EVER. ❤️❤️❤️
This is great.
This kind of reminds me of Ed Edd n' Eddy's Opening theme at the beginning especially the whistling part. :D
+Alburn Barron You'd be right, he took inspiration from this
Oh wow haha I knew it sounded familiar. :D
Yeahh
that drummer face tho hes like bruh iam so sweet!!!
Excellent!
just WOW what fun they were having
I love the use of this song in Raging Bull!
Good god, i've been looking everywhere for this!
Brilliant! The men without shadows!
I know these guys from somewhere.... Tom and Jerry :D when Tom had a band :D :D
Now that is some smooth music making.
Stupendo!!!
Bob Haggart and Ray Bauduc also wrote ‘South Rampart St.Parade ‘ on the back of a napkin ,in a cafe ! A jazz classic now.
thx joe ripa for the knowledge...great tune!
Listen to it once, get it stuck in your head FOREVER!!! My apologies to all the co-workers who had to listen to me whistle this idly to myself over the years. Some of you got to know it so when you'd whistle along back, which I can't tell you how much that means to me.
Damn what a beat... so smooth and funky 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
MERAVIGLIOSI ! DA URLO! GRAZIE GRAZIE GRAZIE! THXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
that was the coolest thing i've ever seen
The ergonomics of those spread rack toms is crazy but it makes him play so musically!
As a little kid, I can remember my dad's record of this spinning/wobbling like it was keeping beat at 78 rpm.
Great old number, Loved the comic Bass & Drums. Nice one Nicky.
I was just in a thrift store and found this for $3. I was so excited I almost squealed. I have wanted this song ever since I heard it on the movie Radioland Murders.
Drummer looks like Mel Blanc. Great recording.
just love this ....first saw it on TV programme broadcast in New Zealand in the early 60's "Jazz Scene USA" with Oscar Brown Jnr ...please feel free to correct me if my memory has it wrong. Have loved it ever since.The Gene Krupa version is of course brilliant as well. Am I right in remembering a version where the drummer moves across the stage and keeps the beat going on various stage props ?? can't find it if so...
+Mike Hogan I think the vintage clip of a drummer moving from behind the drums and playing on chairs, etc., is a clip of Barrett Deems. It's on TH-cam. Cheers!
The story goes ... My uncle, by marriage, Bobby Haggart (bass), wrote this about my Dads younger brother, J B. He and his loud friends would come to hear the (Bob Crosby and the bobcats) band play at the Pump Room in Chicago. When he would show up uncle Bobby would say here comes the “big noise from Winnetka!”
Holy shtski. That was incredible..Thanks for showing it.
Just Amazing.
this ias an amazing piece im playing it in my school's high school jazz band i play the tenor saxophone
These guys were so cool😂
Just heard that tune in Woody Allen's "Manhattan Murder Mystery" and had to look for it asap to get the whole thing. Fantastic
GENIAAAAAAL !
Bob Corsby's band, as you can see and hear, has two fourths of one of the best rhythm sections in the band business, bassest Bob Haggart and drummer Ray Bauduc.
Oh, look!! REAL people playing REAL instruments. No electronics anywhere. That, my friend, is talent.
Dude they didn't have any of that electronic crap back then, or at least no popular people used them until the 60s area. They really didn't have a choice, but I do have to agree with you.
+Andrei Porojanu wtf? Wrong anyone can play an instrument just like anyone can make electronic music. To be good at playing and to make good music are two different things however.
+Andrei Porojanu simple and stable? You're just ignoring everything that can be done with pitches. I'd say you have more control on the sound with electronic music allowing you to spend more time on arrangements rather than practicing your intonation
You clearly don't understand these things, so, even though I'm not gonna tell you to keep your opinions for yourself, I will tell you that you are wrong.
Apparently, one of Art Blakey's favorite drummers.
I love how he used sticks on te strings, it sounded sweet
Hard to believe all this from just two guys playing a bass and drums.
THE definition of cool