I am NOT a fan of this interviewer at all, but I appreciate you for posting this interview. I ADORE this man. Dizzy Gillespie was the first non-Hispanic to appreciate and to champion Afro-Cuban jazz. His friendship with Chano Pozo and with Mario Bauzá helped to revolutionize the sound of jazz itself.
The interviewer sounds very condescending. He had the nerve to say to Dizzy that his cheek muscles puffed-out due to weakness, and Dizzy's reponse, "I don't know what it is but I don't sound too weak do I?" Classic response! Not to mention that he ask Dizzy a question and then interrupts him in the process of answering it, to provide his own incorrect answer. Very unprofessional annyoing bloke!
it's pretty insane how so many interviews with jazz greats are so condescending. the miles davis interviews, especially the ones from the usa like 60 minutes, are enough to make me sick.
The interviewer is lame as fuck and I dislike him but the neck thing is indeed caused by certain muscles in the pharynx becoming weak. It doesn't imply the trumpeter will become a weak player in any sense... clearly!
I feel you although I think he was asking about muscles weakening in reference to how big this man head got when he puffed his cheeks lmao. I am also pretty astonished this man could puff out his whole neck!
I saw Diz and Sara Vaughn, Max Roach, and Buddy R. At Monterey Jazz! Dizzie was dressed so casual in African dress! He played Congas between trumpet solos.Diz introduced this well dressed man in a suit, from Jullards, plays rumpet! The young man was excellent, playin rapid fire notes, clean and slick. Dizzy watched him, as Diz played congas. Diz smiled at the youngster. Then, it was Dizzies turn. Weren't no triplets nor musical acrobatics. Diz took his time, held his horn then casually, pressed the horn to his lips and took his time with every note. So beautiful and soulful. I was blessed, as were all the audience, black and white. Yes sir. Mr. Gillespie, music is universal! Thank ya !!
when he says, "you didn't carry your trumpet in a brown paper bag" he is referring to Bix Beiderbecke, a very influential cornet player from the 20's...he lost his mind and would walk around town with his cornet in a brown paper bag...tragic story
Diz is just the sweetest and most charming character in Jazz, ever. Beautiful human being. I think the interviewer is Dick Cavett. He is certainly not an ass. He is actually quite sympathetic; Nicer than many other TV hosts, I can think of.
Because of his dizzy personality, people often forget that he was a profoundly advanced musical genius, an innovative virtuoso, composer, and improviser of the very first rank !
the questions the interviewer males, my god. asking about money and shit like that.... Diz did it because he loved the music... gaining stuff was not even in his wildest dreams... his life was to phrase like he did, and as he does because he will remain alive in his music, and though humanity doesn't listen to this quality of fine and elegant music anymore, there will always be a kid like me who will be blown away by the frog man, wailing at incredible tempos and connecting those movements with that bebop idiom:) i love you Diz, thank you for your energy....
I'm a musician and a music journalist who always knows his subject and the people I interview can tell that I'm one of them and it makes a huge difference. I never got to interview Diz! I would have been prepared.
You're 100% right. He's a condescending bigoted prick. "Your daddy, your momma." He's a grown man, anytime a white person says that crap to a black person it's condescending and disrespectful.
Damn what a trumpet player. Saying you can never master it; feeling that the instrument has its own personality and playing accordingly. I wish I was that musical to feel that way about any instrument.
So, DizzyFanatic,...there was an HBO special on Quincy Jones, 20 something years ago, that had Miles, Dizzy,...tons of other people,....but the Dizzy portions of the interview were priceless, including a story he told about Charlie Parker. In the story, he and Bird were playing some club down south and somebody broke a bottle over Dizzy's head. Charlie came out and found Dizzy bleeding and according to him, Bird said, "you cur,....you have struck my friend." Even in the seriousness of the situation Dizzy found humor in Parker calling this guy a "cur". I'd love to see that again. Any chance you have access to that? At any rate, enjoyed what you have.
@@gstar-365 If dogs understood English, they would be offended at being called a cur. When you use the word cur, you're talking about a dog that's either a mutt, very unattractive, aggressive, or all three. The word can also be used as an insult for a person, especially a despicable man.
what, I never knew that Dizzy is such a great guy, super funny humble sensitive intelligent tough. he got it ! I love him now!! Im listening all of his recordings different from now on, Im looking much forward to play some of his solos, to become a little little little bit like him or at least understand a way of his thinking.
Diz was my teachers teacher - a musical genius on the level of Mozart. This is no exaggeration. I challenge anyone to scat sing what Diz did at the beginning of the interview :-)
Akinseye-actually Dizzy DID have a condition which caused his cheeks to bullfrog out (if you will) like they did and it sadly did catch up with him as he got older. Many of us trumpeters can get a rupture in the neck (or lower), which will cause the same effect (like Bill Chase had) that is caused by "bottle-ing" up the air and delaying your attacks when you're coming along. What Diz had was different, true the guy doing the interview seemed out of his element asking a lot of useless questions.
This guy is not a great interviewer (and he is NOT Dick Cavett*) but he is forgotten and Dizzy lives on as one of history's great musicians - both as player and person. Great to hear him talk. *Interviewer sounds similar to Dick Cavett but if you listen to any of the many Dick Cavett interviews on youtube you can tell it is not him.
@decus69 I think i read somewhere that he got the name because his "Dizzy" personality. Not entirely sure. I would of loved to of met him. Seems such a chilled nice dude.
Glad some of the other comments called out the interviewer for what he was -- a condescending, arrogant display. Imagine standing in front of one of the grand masters of American music and calling him "weak" and "a poor boy from Cheraw". Embarrassing!
I SUSPECT THE ANNUAL BUBBLE GUM BLOWING COMPETITION ORGANISERS WOULD'VE BANNED GILLESPIE FORTHRIGHT FROM EVER ENTERING WHAT UNDOUBTEDLY WOULD BE AN ASSUMED 'BREEZE' EVENT FOR THE LEGEND!
this interviewer doesn't seem respectful, he is in the presence of greatness, saying he has weak throat muscles as a world reknown trumpet player is like saying Michael Jordan can't jump.
I think everyone is saying the interviewer is a jerk because the video is edited in such a way as to almost seem as if the interviewer is interrupting or switching subjects while Dizzy is speaking. That's just it. It's an edited interview.
Yeah, I agree with previous comments. The interviewer is being eeeeever so slightly exploitative here. Not sure what the word for that is, but it's noticeable.
Some of the people leaving comments criticizing the interviewer appear to me as being guilty of racial snobbery. The interviewer, who obviously is white, was very down to earth and genuinely curious. He asked good questions that many people who aren’t Dizzy experts would want to ask if given the opportunity. And both men obviously enjoyed each other’s company. I was lucky enough to see DG play a gig in 1989. But I have no patience with some of these “woke” elitists who think that they wrote the book on how to conduct an interview with jazz musicians.
The interviewer attempting some bizarre affected accent which is not native to his speech is so unbelievably offensive. I met Mr. Gillespie when I was a teenager after a concert he performed in Massachusetts. There were 5 or 10 of us young folk there. He was incredibly warm and friendly to us, he spoke to us for about 30 minutes. Truly nice man.
"every time is modern"
I am NOT a fan of this interviewer at all, but I appreciate you for posting this interview. I ADORE this man. Dizzy Gillespie was the first non-Hispanic to appreciate and to champion Afro-Cuban jazz. His friendship with Chano Pozo and with Mario Bauzá helped to revolutionize the sound of jazz itself.
this interviewer is a fool I agree, and dizzy man, he is awesome
The interviewer did a fine job.
Finally realized that Bill Cosby is imitating Dizzy Gillespie.
interesting 🤔
Yah I think he admired Dizzie , almost like a son feels about his Father. They share similar mannerisms, vocal inflections, tone.
I'm sure Dizzy picked it up too.. I love how he keeps his composure... He was an amazing guy.
I wish that I could have met this man. What an inspiration!
The interviewer sounds very condescending. He had the nerve to say to Dizzy that his cheek muscles puffed-out due to weakness, and Dizzy's reponse, "I don't know what it is but I don't sound too weak do I?" Classic response! Not to mention that he ask Dizzy a question and then interrupts him in the process of answering it, to provide his own incorrect answer. Very unprofessional annyoing bloke!
it's pretty insane how so many interviews with jazz greats are so condescending. the miles davis interviews, especially the ones from the usa like 60 minutes, are enough to make me sick.
@Zach Higgins He told him to hit his trumpet, I don't think he cares.
Some white boys usually,
I am not innocent, just always respect.
The interviewer is lame as fuck and I dislike him but the neck thing is indeed caused by certain muscles in the pharynx becoming weak. It doesn't imply the trumpeter will become a weak player in any sense... clearly!
I feel you although I think he was asking about muscles weakening in reference to how big this man head got when he puffed his cheeks lmao. I am also pretty astonished this man could puff out his whole neck!
I saw Diz and Sara Vaughn, Max Roach, and Buddy R. At Monterey Jazz! Dizzie was dressed so casual in African dress! He played Congas between trumpet solos.Diz introduced this well dressed man in a suit, from Jullards, plays rumpet! The young man was excellent, playin rapid fire notes, clean and slick. Dizzy watched him, as Diz played congas. Diz smiled at the youngster. Then, it was Dizzies turn. Weren't no triplets nor musical acrobatics. Diz took his time, held his horn then casually, pressed the horn to his lips and took his time with every note. So beautiful and soulful. I was blessed, as were all the audience, black and white. Yes sir. Mr. Gillespie, music is universal! Thank ya !!
I just LOVE Dizzie. I cried like a baby when I heard of his death. A truly great musician and a wonderful human being.
I love this guy. I miss him. A true genius of the art. Humble as you can get.
still stands out in my memory as the best concert I ever saw..lifted us right up..
when he says, "you didn't carry your trumpet in a brown paper bag" he is referring to Bix Beiderbecke, a very influential cornet player from the 20's...he lost his mind and would walk around town with his cornet in a brown paper bag...tragic story
Diz is just the sweetest and most charming character in Jazz, ever.
Beautiful human being.
I think the interviewer is Dick Cavett. He is certainly not an ass. He is actually quite sympathetic; Nicer than many other TV hosts, I can think of.
I so wish I could have met this man! He was (still is, in spirit) just amazing!
I love Dizzy he had a heck of a good sense of humor and Personality.
His vocabulary was great.
wow...."don't play it?" that's like telling picasso, "no, stop that. don't paint anything!"
"if you lived to be 1000 years old, you'd never mess with this boy..."
legend
He said “...you’d never master this, boy!”
@@otmq ah thanks!
what can a "poor boy do" but REVOLUTIONIZE MUSIC!!!
Because of his dizzy personality, people often forget that he was a profoundly advanced musical genius, an innovative virtuoso, composer, and improviser of the very first rank !
the questions the interviewer males, my god. asking about money and shit like that.... Diz did it because he loved the music... gaining stuff was not even in his wildest dreams... his life was to phrase like he did, and as he does because he will remain alive in his music, and though humanity doesn't listen to this quality of fine and elegant music anymore, there will always be a kid like me who will be blown away by the frog man, wailing at incredible tempos and connecting those movements with that bebop idiom:) i love you Diz, thank you for your energy....
I'm a musician and a music journalist who always knows his subject and the people I interview can tell that I'm one of them and it makes a huge difference. I never got to interview Diz! I would have been prepared.
What a human being, gone but not forgotten!!..
For some reason the interviewer sounds to me obnoxious... almost disrespectful.
I've just watched this video and that's what I'm thinking right now.
You're 100% right. He's a condescending bigoted prick. "Your daddy, your momma." He's a grown man, anytime a white person says that crap to a black person it's condescending and disrespectful.
You are right...he is an asshole
i would love to have met dizzy, he seems so awsome.
he use to dance with my mom at monterey jazz festival down the aisles, it was a trip, he's the best
This is my uncle :) haha
you're a lucky man
that’s awesome
Damn what a trumpet player. Saying you can never master it; feeling that the instrument has its own personality and playing accordingly. I wish I was that musical to feel that way about any instrument.
The interviewer is very interesting.
Greatest Musician ever.
Awesome knowledge from the master. My Lawd
What a guy. I wish i coud've met him
So, DizzyFanatic,...there was an HBO special on Quincy Jones, 20 something years ago, that had Miles, Dizzy,...tons of other people,....but the Dizzy portions of the interview were priceless, including a story he told about Charlie Parker. In the story, he and Bird were playing some club down south and somebody broke a bottle over Dizzy's head. Charlie came out and found Dizzy bleeding and according to him, Bird said, "you cur,....you have struck my friend." Even in the seriousness of the situation Dizzy found humor in Parker calling this guy a "cur". I'd love to see that again. Any chance you have access to that? At any rate, enjoyed what you have.
What's a cur ?
@@gstar-365 If dogs understood English, they would be offended at being called a cur. When you use the word cur, you're talking about a dog that's either a mutt, very unattractive, aggressive, or all three. The word can also be used as an insult for a person, especially a despicable man.
I wish that I could've lived in the time of dizzy and been his friend he seems like a great man
what, I never knew that Dizzy is such a great guy, super funny humble sensitive intelligent tough. he got it ! I love him now!! Im listening all of his recordings different from now on, Im looking much forward to play some of his solos, to become a little little little bit like him or at least understand a way of his thinking.
Such a happy soul Dizz is
Wonderful!
Dizzy was great!! Such a warm person!!
what a humble man
I love him so much. Awww!
musical genius...
Diz was my teachers teacher - a musical genius on the level of Mozart. This is no exaggeration. I challenge anyone to scat sing what Diz did at the beginning of the interview :-)
The great artist as art himself.
2:40 is what you're here for. You're welcome.
Dizzy giving us a little serial killer techniques
4:05 is the best clip to understand what a musicians career is like
Dizzy was always a teacher
Akinseye-actually Dizzy DID have a condition which caused his cheeks to bullfrog out (if you will) like they did and it sadly did catch up with him as he got older. Many of us trumpeters can get a rupture in the neck (or lower), which will cause the same effect (like Bill Chase had) that is caused by "bottle-ing" up the air and delaying your attacks when you're coming along. What Diz had was different, true the guy doing the interview seemed out of his element asking a lot of useless questions.
dizzy always high as fuck love this guy
Dizzy Gillespie 1945 that's the Year everything started to break BIG TIME for both DIZZY and CHARLIE PARKER.
I never get the respect I deserve that's why I hate getting interviewed --- Nas
Que gran musico, que gran ser humano.
From all accounts he was modest, humble man. To me a genius.
He has a funny way of saying things but you understand every point
dizzy for president
The rise of the Bebop drummers, during this organic change in Jazz brought rhythm into the contrapunctal scheme of the music.
Kenny Clarke, Max Roach, Art Blakey, Stan Levy.
He was on the faculty of the .lenox school of Jazz
Teach Master!!!!!!!
gr8 guy...
This guy is not a great interviewer (and he is NOT Dick Cavett*) but he is forgotten and Dizzy lives on as one of history's great musicians - both as player and person. Great to hear him talk.
*Interviewer sounds similar to Dick Cavett but if you listen to any of the many Dick Cavett interviews on youtube you can tell it is not him.
Sounds like the interviewer is CHARLIE ROSE........jus sayin
The cut this interview to pieces! smh!
I guess he got the nick name 'Dizzy' as his middle name was Birk - Berk.
Dizzy was the coolest
The interviewer is *not* Dick Cavett. I can hear some similarities in the voice but it's absolutely not him.
i like his hat
The interviewer smugly described the Dizzy as a youth as a poor "boy".
na you hit em with this part check it out hahahah hell yea
@decus69 I think i read somewhere that he got the name because his "Dizzy" personality. Not entirely sure. I would of loved to of met him. Seems such a chilled nice dude.
I agree.
Glad some of the other comments called out the interviewer for what he was -- a condescending, arrogant display. Imagine standing in front of one of the grand masters of American music and calling him "weak" and "a poor boy from Cheraw". Embarrassing!
I SUSPECT THE ANNUAL BUBBLE GUM BLOWING COMPETITION ORGANISERS WOULD'VE BANNED GILLESPIE FORTHRIGHT FROM EVER ENTERING WHAT UNDOUBTEDLY WOULD BE AN ASSUMED 'BREEZE' EVENT FOR THE LEGEND!
this interviewer doesn't seem respectful, he is in the presence of greatness, saying he has weak throat muscles as a world reknown trumpet player is like saying Michael Jordan can't jump.
6:05 interviewer was about to say how did you died :P
🌹
DAMN!
god the interviewer "Don't play it". You don't interview dizzy and tell him not to play the trumpet...
I think everyone is saying the interviewer is a jerk because the video is edited in such a way as to almost seem as if the interviewer is interrupting or switching subjects while Dizzy is speaking. That's just it. It's an edited interview.
It's Dick Cavett and he lost his mind that night.
Not Cavett.
The interviewer had the nerves to call Dizzy “ a boy “ ? “You were a poor boy growing up “ so disrespectful
You must be such fun to be with.
@@janedubourg4837 Ignoramus. Ask any black american about how they feel about a white person calling them "boy".
Dizzy Gillespie was the 1st guy to bend it like that?
Yes.
Date of interview and name of interviewer?
Why was the interviewer bad? I didn't listen too much to him, so I really can't say..
What modern musician is gonna say something's a misnomer? They prolly don't even know that word.
Pause at 5:02 and 5:04
Yeah, I agree with previous comments. The interviewer is being eeeeever so slightly exploitative here. Not sure what the word for that is, but it's noticeable.
hahah you hit with that. hes one funny bastad!
@mikhailr13 Yes he was the Main man
DIZZY GAGA...!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
What’s wrong with the interviewer ? Lotsa hate on here , he sounds fine to me .
What a great interview..thanx to Dick Cavett
Some of the people leaving comments criticizing the interviewer appear to me as being guilty of racial snobbery.
The interviewer, who obviously is white, was very down to earth and genuinely curious.
He asked good questions that many people who aren’t Dizzy experts would want to ask if given the opportunity.
And both men obviously enjoyed each other’s company.
I was lucky enough to see DG play a gig in 1989. But I have no patience with some of these “woke” elitists who think that they wrote the book on how to conduct an interview with jazz musicians.
You are so much for a
The interviewer attempting some bizarre affected accent which is not native to his speech is so unbelievably offensive.
I met Mr. Gillespie when I was a teenager after a concert he performed in Massachusetts. There were 5 or 10 of us young folk there. He was incredibly warm and friendly to us, he spoke to us for about 30 minutes. Truly nice man.
dizzy is the best this interviewer is the worst
who is the interviewer? some say dick cavett some say no? let's find out who it was....
Sounds like CHARLIE ROSE
interviewer is cavett
Wrong.
Cuanto racismo en esta entrevista.
Si. Eso mismo me pareció!
he seems disrespectful to a certain degree... saying mama... stuff like that... there are some racial undertones.. "aint fair the call you that, huh?"
condescending irritating interviwer. whats with imitating his accent and calling him boy?
That interviewer sounds racist his undertones and use of words this sounds like Dick Cavett