Bobby Was one of my late father BobTessiers best friends. They had palled around together in the 30s and 40s.When my dad died suddenly in 1959.I had a real strong male role model. In my life. I was 4 years old. I took up harmonica, in the rural blues style. Under Bobby's instigation. As he put it I was a natural. For it and for me to embrace it. Make it my life's work. Now 60 years into it. He was so right. I remember Bobby, in each and every sunrise, and in each and every sunset. He was so good to a little disabled boy. God bless His memory, and his musicality forever. The Angels attend my pal, eternally....
I wrote an article about Bobby Hackett years ago, based on a recording session that I observed and an interview with him afterward. He was a gentle man and a gentleman, and it was a real privilege to meet him.
Bobby Hackett was a Jazz musician as well as a Pop musician. It is very rare that a musician can garner great respect by fans of both genres and be so successful in both.
I will say it again: The Swing Era produced many of the greatest musicians the world has ever seen. Bobby Hackett set the bar so high that so very few have ever attained it. This can be said for so many in that era.
As Bob Wilber said, "the thing that happened to jazz after the war - which to me, in retrospect, was really kind of a tragic thing - jazz suddenly took two roads: half of the jazz went with Charlie Parker, Thelonious Monk, Dizzy Gillespie, and the other half went back to Bunk Johnson, Preservation Hall, George Lewis and so forth, and suddenly this mainstream of music which had really been inspired by Louis Armstrong's recordings in the '20's, and nurtured and developed in the '30's and into the '40s into (to me) a perfect music - I guess you would call it swing - suddenly disappeared, and everybody...you had to be either in one. camp or another..."
Thank you sharing this woderful tribute to Bobby Hackett. I'm a trumpet player (and former cornet player), and remember as a kid watching the old Jackie Gleason show with the Sammy Spear Orchestra. Bobby Hacket was the soloist. Of course the old time favorite is the "String of Pearls" solo that every HS student learned. John (JT) Wyper Wesley Chapel FL
The video starts with Bobby playing "The Good Life"--- how appropriate!Sweet as usual. Bobby NEVER, EVER disappointed. Though his abilities were far beyond the small dixie bands he frequently was found in, he must have really loved that kind of music to stay involved as he did.
Bobby was one of the greatest. I had the pleasure of hearing him many times and as a trumpet player fell in love with his lyrical playing. I could never speak as well on the trumpet as he did, but I always tried to sing a melody through the changes like Bobby. Thank God for Bobby Hackett.
Bobby has still many fans in Holland. i get a good response to my postings. Did you know that there is also a 33 rpm record of this performance of May 22th 1973?
Thanks for this posting! I loved Bobby Hackett's playing & music. When I played cornet/trumpet 45 years ago, I always patterned by playing style towards Bobby's, because it was jazz, but retained a purity about it unlike anyone else. Surely, the SWEETEST horn in the world!
He influenced my Trumpet style even though I couldn't approach his playing. BUT he was great to play when making out in the car was right in the 1950's. Truly a very enjoyable video.
To listen to Bobby hackett and Tony Bennett perform together was a wonderful experience. The Very Thought of You was a very , very special recording by them.
Most of what I've heard of Bobby is from the Jackie Gleason recordings. Pure romantic beauty. And that quote from Bobby that you've provided speaks volumes about his artistry.
@rainbowschild He was a good guy and he is missed big time. Where did u see him? Down the Cape @ the columns? I went by there the other week w his granddaughter I wish they would turn it back into a club. It's just wasting away there We would go there for dinner and listen to him and Dave McKenna & who ever else played along. He was fun to watch & listen 2 just talk. They always rumbled along while playing
Always has been a favorite of mine! Many people didn't know or ever hear Tommy Loy, the Texas cornetist! He played pure poetry just like Bobby Hackett! It's not how many notes you play, it's the ones that count and where you put them!
When I post comments concerning some of the great recordings that are posted on You Tube, I feel like I am speaking to good friends whom I have never met. Thanks for being out there.
My dad knew Bobby Hackett. He was also a cornet player in Providence and my mother claimed that my dad was an influence on Bobby's playing.. This was in the `30s.
Thank you so very much for sharing this beautiful video of one great cornet player and inspiration to my life almost all my life. Thank you, Mr. Hackett!
What a refreshing presentation! Thank you for bringing generations together and bridging the gap between then and now! So much is lost and not communicated in most selections on the internet, and I am thrilled to have found your videos. I was raised with a generation past and I miss it so much.
@TheMurphyFamily He wasn't just the greatest cornetist, he was the greatest guy a teen trumpet player could ever meet. It was the early 1970s and me, my friend, and my parents got there early and got the table right up front. At break time he joined us for a cocktail and talked about playing the horn, the Big Band Era, Glen Miller, Harry James, and everything else! My father picked up the tab. He is dead now so the cops cannot go after him. ;-)
It occurred to me to check Harold Jones's book, which reports an August 12, 1973 concert that Benny Goodman did at the Cape Cod Coliseum including the very same tunes as Hackett features. It identifies the trombonist as George Masso, a likely candidate for someone who sounds Green-like.
@notedmusician The first one is "It's the Good Life" Next one is "Poor Butterfly" and the last one (at 8.00) is "BEI MIR BIST DU SCHOEN " Lots of recordings on You Tube incl Ella Fitzgerald
Bobby was a guitar player first before he picked up the cornet. He knew were the pretty notes were because he would visualize the guitar fingerboard remembering what worked on the guitar.
@plectroman Have the 33 1/3s down stairs some place. Purchased them when they were first released. Knew nothing concerning the soloist on coronet, just enjoyed the music. Time sure passes by.
Bobby started upon guitar, both Tenor guitar, and 6 string. He was one of my dad's best friends. And a mentor to me. God Bless the dead Eternally...!!! 🙏
Bobby was a great person. Also did not smoke or use alcohol. I knew him when I was a bartender at "Nick's" ,in 1948, in The Village, 7th. ave. and 10th. St.
"The Greatest Cornetist" isn't just an idle claim in my opinion. Bobby had a command of music that defies description. I don't think he ever, ever played a "clinker."
Bobby Was one of my late father BobTessiers best friends. They had palled around together in the 30s and 40s.When my dad died suddenly in 1959.I had a real strong male role model. In my life. I was 4 years old. I took up harmonica, in the rural blues style. Under Bobby's instigation. As he put it I was a natural. For it and for me to embrace it. Make it my life's work. Now 60 years into it. He was so right. I remember Bobby, in each and every sunrise, and in each and every sunset. He was so good to a little disabled boy. God bless His memory, and his musicality forever. The Angels attend my pal, eternally....
Your memory of him is something for others to value too. His music is with you.
I wrote an article about Bobby Hackett years ago, based on a recording session that I observed and an interview with him afterward. He was a gentle man and a gentleman, and it was a real privilege to meet him.
Bobby Hackett was a Jazz musician as well as a Pop musician. It is very rare that a musician can garner great respect by fans of both genres and be so successful in both.
I will say it again: The Swing Era produced many of the greatest musicians the world has ever seen. Bobby Hackett set the bar so high that so very few have ever attained it. This can be said for so many in that era.
Bob Martin 98:
As Bob Wilber said, "the thing that happened to jazz after the war - which to me, in retrospect, was really kind of a tragic thing - jazz suddenly took two roads: half of the jazz went with Charlie Parker, Thelonious Monk, Dizzy Gillespie, and the other half went back to Bunk Johnson, Preservation Hall, George Lewis and so forth, and suddenly this mainstream of music which had really been inspired by Louis Armstrong's recordings in the '20's, and nurtured and developed in the '30's and into the '40s into (to me) a perfect music - I guess you would call it swing - suddenly disappeared, and everybody...you had to be either in one. camp or another..."
Thank you sharing this woderful tribute to Bobby Hackett. I'm a trumpet player (and former cornet player), and remember as a kid watching the old Jackie Gleason show with the Sammy Spear Orchestra. Bobby Hacket was the soloist. Of course the old time favorite is the "String of Pearls" solo that every HS student learned.
John (JT) Wyper
Wesley Chapel FL
The video starts with Bobby playing "The Good Life"--- how appropriate!Sweet as usual.
Bobby NEVER, EVER disappointed. Though his abilities were far beyond the small dixie bands he frequently was found in, he must have really loved that kind of music to stay involved as he did.
Bobby and my late grandfather Jack Banchick were friends and fellow musicians. I had the pleasure of meeting Bobby Hackett several times on Cape Cod.
Unfortunatelly, only recently I found Bobby Hackett in TH-cam. He's absolutely fantastic! Thank you.
Hackett was the champion of "easy listening" and always very inspired.
Bobby was one of the greatest. I had the pleasure of hearing him many times and as a trumpet player fell in love with his lyrical playing. I could never speak as well on the trumpet as he did, but I always tried to sing a melody through the changes like Bobby. Thank God for Bobby Hackett.
lovely sentiments
The greatest ballad player these ears have ever heard.
Bobby has still many fans in Holland. i get a good response to my postings. Did you know that there is also a 33 rpm record of this performance of May 22th 1973?
Thanks for this posting! I loved Bobby Hackett's playing & music. When I played cornet/trumpet 45 years ago, I always patterned by playing style towards Bobby's, because it was jazz, but retained a purity about it unlike anyone else. Surely, the SWEETEST horn in the world!
9 minutes and 49 seconds of pure JOY! Thank you so much for this post Murphy Family! X
He influenced my Trumpet style even though I couldn't approach his playing. BUT he was great to play when making out in the car was right in the 1950's. Truly a very enjoyable video.
My mom went to school w/ Bobby in Cranston RI,,,,btw, her maiden name was Murphy,,,he was GREAT!
Bobby Hackett.....my all time favorite musician
To listen to Bobby hackett and Tony Bennett perform together was a wonderful experience. The Very Thought of You was a very , very special recording by them.
My dad, Charlie Hall, was a cornet player in Providence in the `30s and knew Bobby Hackett.
Most of what I've heard of Bobby is from the Jackie Gleason recordings. Pure romantic beauty. And that quote from Bobby that you've provided speaks volumes about his artistry.
I watch and share this because I find it inspirational and believe it quintessentially represents what was good about America.
The good side of American culture.
The wonderfully magical sound of Bobby Hackett was featured on the albums Jackie Gleason produced back in the 1950's. Real quality work.
I believe Jackie made a fortune from those recordings, all Bobbie got was a standard musicians fee for the gig.
Jim Thompson Gleason stiffed Bobby ,reneging on a handshake agreement and only paying him scale ; Bobby never spoke to Gleason again.
Bobby Hacket, que l'on se souvienne de ce merveilleux musicien !
@rainbowschild He was a good guy and he is missed big time. Where did u see him? Down the Cape @ the columns? I went by there the other week w his granddaughter I wish they would turn it back into a club. It's just wasting away there We would go there for dinner and listen to him and Dave McKenna & who ever else played along. He was fun to watch & listen 2 just talk. They always rumbled along while playing
Great music and wonderful, unique photos. Thx, Murphy family!
Always has been a favorite of mine! Many people didn't know or ever hear Tommy Loy, the Texas cornetist! He played pure poetry just like Bobby Hackett! It's not how many notes you play, it's the ones that count and where you put them!
When I post comments concerning some of the great recordings that are posted on You Tube, I feel like I am speaking to good friends whom I have never met. Thanks for being out there.
A gentleman and an extraordinary musician!
Thanks for posting. I appreciate the BH quote above.
My dad knew Bobby Hackett. He was also a cornet player in Providence and my mother claimed that my dad was an influence on Bobby's playing.. This was in the `30s.
Gosh, thank you for the music and pictures. At 6:09 is Dave McKenna at the piano and again at 8:29, third from our right.
The best of the best !
What great pics. Thanks so much for sharing some real life with the rest of us schlubs
Cant help but chuckle in awe of his improve . Sooo good forever .
What a sound! What a taste!
Bobby is one of the Greats.❤
Lovin' him here in Palomar, Argentina.😊
Thank you so very much for sharing this beautiful video of one great cornet player and inspiration to my life almost all my life. Thank you, Mr. Hackett!
I also like his unadulterated tone ,no mute and lots of lovely low register
What a refreshing presentation! Thank you for bringing generations together and bridging the gap between then and now! So much is lost and not communicated in most selections on the internet, and I am thrilled to have found your videos. I was raised with a generation past and I miss it so much.
Extraordinario. Muchas gracias por subir este vídeo. En verdad el mejor cornetista que haya existido. El ídolo de mi padre. Grande Bobby
Bobby Hackett MADE Jackie Gleasons recordings famous - what a sweet, pure & beautiful musician...
the best, i always listen
beautiful playing
I grew up on his jazz records and also the Music for Lovers Only produced by Jackie Gleason...he could kill you just playing the melody!!!!
THANKs love the MUSIC love the VIDEO. Just got to mention my empty lot is across from his in seaside cemetery on cape cod.
CHATHAM MASS
Otro de los grandes sonidos de trompeta que me inspirò a tocar este bello instrumento, Gracias!!!!
Bix y Bobby, los mejores cornetas , los únicos por su sonido. Y no me olvido del petiso Branca, pero en trompeta, long time ago...
GOOD !!!! MY IDOL !!!
@TheMurphyFamily He wasn't just the greatest cornetist, he was the greatest guy a teen trumpet player could ever meet. It was the early 1970s and me, my friend, and my parents got there early and got the table right up front. At break time he joined us for a cocktail and talked about playing the horn, the Big Band Era, Glen Miller, Harry James, and everything else! My father picked up the tab. He is dead now so the cops cannot go after him. ;-)
Bobby was a teetotaler!
@@jaddy540 He may have been in his latter years however in his earlier years he was a heavy drinker ,not a good mix for someone who was diabetic !
Thanks for this awesome post!
the last recordings he made was with the same olds super cornet that red nichols played for years.
the photo on 5:46 is with Ted Easton's Jazzband and Betty Smith, of which I posted a TV registration from probably the same night in may 1973
¡Admirable!!!!
It occurred to me to check Harold Jones's book, which reports an August 12, 1973 concert that Benny Goodman did at the Cape Cod Coliseum including the very same tunes as Hackett features. It identifies the trombonist as George Masso, a likely candidate for someone who sounds Green-like.
At 8:19 we see Bobby in a set with Jake Hanna, drummer. Jake always sang Bobby's praises. They are playing together now in a Heavenly Gig.
devine and totally unique
wow!
Years ago some older jazz musician, having had his fill of modern jazz, said: ''What's wrong with pretty?'' Bobby Hackett always played pretty.
A TRUE 'ORIGINAL'!!!
es lo mejor, desde el album easy beat, lo escucho, es unico,
@Protozoo79 The first one is "It's the Good Life" popularised by Tony Bennett
@notedmusician The first one is "It's the Good Life" Next one is "Poor Butterfly" and the last one (at 8.00)
is "BEI MIR BIST DU SCHOEN " Lots of recordings on You Tube incl Ella Fitzgerald
Bobby was a guitar player first before he picked up the cornet. He knew were the pretty notes were because he would visualize the guitar fingerboard remembering what worked on the guitar.
@plectroman Have the 33 1/3s down stairs some place. Purchased them when they were first released. Knew nothing concerning the soloist on coronet, just enjoyed the music. Time sure passes by.
Run rabbit run, run rabbit, run run run......
Am I imagining things, or did Hackett also play the guitar? I might be dreaming this...
Yes he did and very well too.
Bobby started upon guitar, both Tenor guitar, and 6 string. He was one of my dad's best friends. And a mentor to me. God Bless the dead Eternally...!!! 🙏
Good music and lovely photos.
The first tune was The Good Life, co-written by Sacha Distel in 1962.
What was the second tune, please?
Poor Butterfly, Marie
I want this play number list.
As a young trumpet player, I had an underage drink with Bobby Hackett and my parents. It was one of the best nights of my life.
Dedicado a mi amigo Ricardo Hidalgo donde quiera que se encuentre
REAL talent. Not like today. Everything is a plug in to make it sound better. BH didn't need that.
Miles liked Bobby Hackett. After all, what's not to like?
There BIX # 1 - no disputing. But it's a close tie for second with Wild Bill, Louis and Bobby Hackett.
Whata gem... I love it!!! What piece is he playing at 8:00?
So, you thought we wouldn't notice if you sneaked in a few pictures of Buddy Hackett?
@mfey22 Aside from being a lyrical, harmonically sophisticated cornet player, I understand he was a very nice man.
Bobby was a great person. Also did not smoke or use alcohol. I knew him when I was a bartender at "Nick's" ,in 1948, in The Village, 7th. ave. and 10th. St.
"The Greatest Cornetist" isn't just an idle claim in my opinion. Bobby had a command of music that defies description. I don't think he ever, ever played a "clinker."
What's the name of the last song?
Tom Chen Bonsoir, Pour le dernier thème, il s'git de "Bei mir bist du schöen"
first: "La belle vie"
And play person.
yep, most famously for glenn miller
Do not know about the greatest Cornetist but certainly not the best music.
Do you mean Bach, Paul? Rodgers and Hart? Don't know where you are going with that.
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