0:00 Fairies Wear Boots 6:42 Snowblind 13:05 Evil Woman 19:20 Behind The Wall Of Sleep 27:11 Rat Salad 36:47 Iron Man 43:27 Changes 48:47 N.I.B. 53:59 Paranoid 1:02:36 Children Of The Grave
The entire Hard Rock music evolutioned from Jazz, Blues and Rock´n´Roll... Progressive Rock is as bit different, there we can add Pop and classic music...
The reason this works so well is because the OG Black Sabbath had so much swing and groove, despite being loud and heavy. And they also wrote songs that had as many as four or five distinct sections, rather than just being verse-verse-chorus arrangements. There's a reason this lineup didn't do anything from the Dio era. They became a much more straight-ahead metal band after he joined.
I like almost all post-Ozzy albums but yet totally agree with you. They became more `straightforward` with the years and lost all those elements. Even during 1st Ozzy phase the jazzy and swinging elements were going away.
The reason imo is Bill Ward drumming, if you listen to the bootlegs of the early stages of the Heaven And Hell tour when Bill was still in the band, you can hear is groove all over the songs, the jazzy feel its his signature style. I might argue that it wasn't Dio, but Vinnie Appice (Bill Ward replacement, another monster drummer on is own) who put Sabbath in a more "traditional" Heavy Metal direction.
@@GabAssbreaker yes and no. There's no question that bill was a jazzier, swingier drummer, but that has little to do with the fact that Tony iommi started writing completely different types of songs once he started working with RJD.
I had no idea that Rick Wakeman had a son who was a heavyweight keyboard player. And he is currently a member of the band that backs Mr. Ozzy himself. What a great find, Mr. Adam Wakeman!
This was in my "recommended" on youtube. My father was a jazz drummer in an 18 piece big band, I played Jazz bass in trios as a hobby for years while I made a living as a piano technician and a jazz radio programmer. Now I'm an old guy who spends too much time on youtube. I love discovering new music so naturally I checked this out. Just spent more than an hour pinned in my chair by this incredible trio and their "new" compositions. What an experience! Then I opened the comments. I had no idea these were Black Sabbath songs all along. Thought it was new compositions with hipster titles! 😎 Never listened to Heavy Metal much with no disrespect to the genre. I have taught Jazz appreciation classes using Christmas carols in Jazz because everybody already knows the melody and progression. Now I get to listen to Black Sabbath performances of these songs and enjoy these arrangements and learn it backwards. Thanks for this! BTW massive respect to whomever tuned that Steinway for Mr. Wakeman. Nicely done!
Wow, I never knew there was such a thing as jazz appreciation classes. I wondered for years how people could enjoy jazz. It just made no sense to me, sounded random (some pieces still do). Up till 1,5 year ago when I signed up for a 3-year long school which teaches how to understand music and improvise over chord changes. The teachers use the Real Book jazz standards to achieve these goals, and this is where I started to understand what's going on and appreciate it. I'll never forget the evening, just a few months ago, when I was listening to Watermelon man, and I suddenly heard all parts at the same time and how they intertwine and interact when chords change. It was a beautiful moment. Before, I just heard either the melody or the chords. This is how I learned to appreciate jazz, and I'm very happy about it. Thank you for sharing your story and making me aware that there actually are jazz appreciation classes. I'll look them up.
@@kapitanplanjeta I also used jazz standards and ballads. Get familiar with a vocal ballad and then listen to a good quartet play the same. Lots of "beautiful moments" on students faces. Thanks for sharing your story with me. If you can't locate a class I suggest listening to vocalists singing the song straight up laying down the chord progression and melody, with a few musicians backing them. Listen to the players and enjoy your jazz in a deeper way! Thanks for the reply!
Jazz has in its DNA everything to survive in any genre. Similar to a parasite, but with the goodness of returning to life any genre that has been forgotten by new generations.
Jazz drummer. That's funny. I love Sabbath, but the Jazz drummer thing is not even close. I've been on the bands of many of the great Master Jazz Drummers, including Buddy Rich's band. Buddy, Mel, Elvin, Morello, Tony, Shelly, Papa Jo, THOSE are Jazz drummers.
non-contrived jazz is good to listen to too. if you're not a gatekeeping, self-described "metalhead who only listens to REAL music". But y'all already know.
Planaet Caravan actually is Jazz. BTW who are the band if you don't know German: Adam is behind Jazz Sabbath, a project of jazz covers of Black Sabbath songs. The album (on Black Lake Records) is with Jerry Meehan (bass) and Ash Soan (Rick Wakeman's English Rock Ensemble, Trevor Horn Band, Downes Braide Association, worked with Adele, Seal; drums). Tracks: "Fairies Wear Boots" "Evil Woman" "Rat Salad" "Iron Man" (7:14), streaming audio available on Bandcamp "Hand of Doom" "Changes" "Children of the Grave"
Just the idea....to interprete Sabbath songs, genius. Great playing too and really cool if you like both jazz and hard rock. Also shows the musical depth of Sabbath songs, more layered than we thought.
Never been able to understand the noble art of jazzmusic until now ! This is bloody epic , the skil and respect for these old gems are weltklasse ! 🙏👍❤️
Not a fan really of Jazz myself - but check out the aristocats for jazz fusion/rock/metal thing. Probably the best guitarist in the world in that group.
Great band and Adam Wakeman is a marvelous pianist, carrying on the legacy of his father (aka Spock Wall, hehehe). Listening to it without reading the song names is a very funny game!
Jazz Sabbath's version of Paranoid just slams so hard on the emotions. Been listening to it non stop this weekend and ended up waking up humming the intro piece. I think Jazz Sabbath has internally hit a raw emotion chord with me. This will remain on heavy rotation for the rest of the year.
...and Steve Howe's son playing drums, surprise-surprise :) Plus, Adam Wakeman had played with the original Sabbath for a while, so he's familiar with the stuff.
It's great that it sounds like straight up jazz, and then suddenly you hear the melody, and have to stifle your laughter at work. I also love the idea that The Band That Shan't Be Named stole all their music.
Amazing album for two reasons first on my early listening years I was big fan of black Sabbath and after that I jump in jazz now for the last 40 years I listening 🎧 jazz
The music of Faso is an inexhaustible source of sweetness. It allows us to plunge deep inside ourselves and at the same time resonate with our fellow man, Yé Lassina Coulibaly
When presented as a jazz arrangement, you begin to see the genius in the original written format. After all, rock is just an offshoot of jazz, jazz is the OG.👀
Thanks to YT algorithms, I saw their Jazz Sabbath album and thought eh? So I checked it out and what a pleasant surprise. Great music. If you appreciate good music then this band fits the bill.
Don't actually listen to jazz, but listen and love black sabbath. Don't know why matrix sent me here though. As a player myself these guys are outstanding. Incredible work. Just perfect. 3 killers. Early Black Sabbath still sound so fresh. Right selection btw .
Sabbath is grounded in blues and it swings with syncopation. That's why this jazz arrangement can really anchor into the tunes and improvise upon them. Snowblind here is a beautiful rendition, like a classic jazz ballad and Behind the Wall of Sleep is a very free form piece here.
This takes me back to the 1st time I heard Me First and the Gimme Gimmes. I didn't recognize the song right away, but when I did, it was that typical "A HA" moment, and I was hooked. There is something to be said for familiarity. I'm not generally a fan of 180° genre spins in music, but maybe being a fan of both Black Sabbath and jazz (especially jazz without vocals), combined with the moving "swing" by these guys, it's absolutely catchy and I'll be looking to share it with those I think might also enjoy it, and add Jazz Sabbath to my music collection. I like the "Spinal Tap-y" spin on the origins as well.😆
ปีที่แล้ว +1
Yesterday thought about them... I would also lke to see the jazz version of The Skatelites
Muito bom esse repertório! 0:00 Fairies Wear Boots 6:42 Snowblind 13:05 Evil Woman 19:20 Behind The Wall Of Sleep 27:11 Rat Salad 36:47 Iron Man 43:27 Changes 48:47 N.I.B. 53:59 Paranoid 1:02:36 Children Of The Grave
Fantastic. What a great jazz interpretation of Black Sabbath. Not only a Sabbath fan , but a jazz fan too. It's definitely going onto my playlist . Maybe I will be able to get to see preform live too. Just need to work out a website for you Thank you once again.
Awesome! Brilliant arrangements, great musicianship, and beautifully filmed. Sabbath always had a groove, but here it really shines. Very well done. Bravo 👏👏👏
I was already eating this up readily, being a Sabbath and Jazz fan...I just did a cursory search about Adam, the pianist; son of Rick Wakeman?? Played with Ozzy? Payed with Sabbath???? WOW!
ปีที่แล้ว
You mean they are all conected to the original band and playing music of their father, but in a jazz way?
@ "they are all connected to the original band" - "yes", speaking of Adam, and "no", speaking of Dylan. Both have family ties with members of band "Yes"
QUAND'ON RÉGARDE L'INSPIRATION ET LA TECHNIQUE, IL EST DIFFICILE Á DIRE, QUEL DES MUSICIENS, EST EN PREMIER LIEU... ILS SONT GÉNIALES!!! MERCI POUR LA VIDEO!!!
The obvious irony is that Adam Wakeman is the current touring keyboard player for the actual Black Sabbath. And if that name Wakeman sounds familiar, yes, Adam is the son of Rick. Even sporting the Wakeman on brand long hair.
Has the history of the band been smothered and lied? Is there a grain of truth in it? Or is it just damn well thought out from start to finish? In any case, it is clear that the story we are talking about here started in Berlin in 2013. Adam Wakeman, ex-Black Sabbath touring keyboardist and still in Ozzy Osbourne's live band, was hanging out with a few crew members in a Berlin hotel bar on an off-day. And, just for fun, played a few Black Sabbath songs on the piano. He did it improvised and freely, and he consistently pushed the songs of the legendary and style-defining heavy metal band in the direction of jazz. The impromptu late night session was a hit with the crew, hotel staff and other guests. And the story that Adam Wakeman knitted from it is now legend. If not legendary. Adam Wakeman later claimed that Black Sabbath stole the songs from their first two studio albums, Black Sabbath and Paranoid, both released in 1970. Namely by the trio Jazz Sabbath, which was founded two years earlier. Which of course is strong stuff: Black Sabbath in Wakeman's version are not only thieves, but also plagiarize. Rare versions of the (supposed) originals were released in 2020 and 2022 as "Jazz Sabbath" and "Jazz Sabbath Vol.2" on the respective Record Store Day. And the damn well thought out and yet very true band that goes with it is still alive and kicking. According to the album liner notes, the trio consists of - Milton Keanes on piano (Adam Wakeman), - Jacque T'fono on upright bass (Jerry Meehan), and - Juan Také on drums (Ash Soan). So who or what was there first? The chicken or the egg? Black Sabbath or Jazz Sabbath? One thing is undisputed: The story of Black "Jazz" Sabbath has all sorts of errors, turning points and a well-dosed portion of humor. Jazz Sabbath can trim heavy classics to jazz. And anyone who thought The Hound of the Baskervilles, the Cindy & Bert version of Paranoid, was the most whimsical Black Sabbath cover might need to rethink. When Jazz Sabbath put "Paranoid" through the meat grinder, there's pretty much everything there, from fairs and beer tents to easy listening and free jazz.
0:00 Fairies Wear Boots
6:42 Snowblind
13:05 Evil Woman
19:20 Behind The Wall Of Sleep
27:11 Rat Salad
36:47 Iron Man
43:27 Changes
48:47 N.I.B.
53:59 Paranoid
1:02:36 Children Of The Grave
Thank you very much for these great songs, guys... Any chance to came to Brazil? =)
@@rubensviniciusdasilva9895 Thanks. Hope to come to South America soon.
Lovely. Thank you !!
Una adaptación jazzistica memorable hace JazzSabbath de los éxitos de la gran banda Black Sabbath banda icónica del rock heavy.
@@angelestebanfonseca4316no sabía de este proyecto , como rockero q está comenzando a conocer el jazz me viene como anillo al dedo ❤
When I was sixteen it was a very good year, a time for hard rock and foolish boys. At sixty it is a very good time for Sabbath jazz!
After listening to Sabbath for 40 years, this is just what I need.
"Paranoid" Jazz IMHO lame. Thus Fairies - great
The entire Hard Rock music evolutioned from Jazz, Blues and Rock´n´Roll...
Progressive Rock is as bit different, there we can add Pop and classic music...
This works so well because it is done with love of the source material and zero irony.
I love jazz, I love Black Sabbath, this is fantastic, I've been listening nonstop for two days and it gets better every time
Same here !
Istinu pricas Cedoo!
I'm on my second week.
So do I
You should try Casualties of Jazz
That have astonishing album of black Sabbath music played with Hammond organs. It pulls you in for a long time
The reason this works so well is because the OG Black Sabbath had so much swing and groove, despite being loud and heavy. And they also wrote songs that had as many as four or five distinct sections, rather than just being verse-verse-chorus arrangements. There's a reason this lineup didn't do anything from the Dio era. They became a much more straight-ahead metal band after he joined.
I like almost all post-Ozzy albums but yet totally agree with you. They became more `straightforward` with the years and lost all those elements. Even during 1st Ozzy phase the jazzy and swinging elements were going away.
You're absolutely right...
IIRC Early Sabbath was groovy because it was very blues-rock inspired, Iommi's style and soloing is a very big tell IMO
The reason imo is Bill Ward drumming, if you listen to the bootlegs of the early stages of the Heaven And Hell tour when Bill was still in the band, you can hear is groove all over the songs, the jazzy feel its his signature style. I might argue that it wasn't Dio, but Vinnie Appice (Bill Ward replacement, another monster drummer on is own) who put Sabbath in a more "traditional" Heavy Metal direction.
@@GabAssbreaker yes and no. There's no question that bill was a jazzier, swingier drummer, but that has little to do with the fact that Tony iommi started writing completely different types of songs once he started working with RJD.
I had no idea that Rick Wakeman had a son who was a heavyweight keyboard player. And he is currently a member of the band that backs Mr. Ozzy himself. What a great find, Mr. Adam Wakeman!
And Dylan Howe is the son of Steve
that makes YESsabath
After hearing Mac Sabbath, I never thought I could hear another Sabbath-themed band that would blow my mind.
You heard BROWN SABBATH before?
Brown Sabbath is my jam
This was in my "recommended" on youtube. My father was a jazz drummer in an 18 piece big band, I played Jazz bass in trios as a hobby for years while I made a living as a piano technician and a jazz radio programmer. Now I'm an old guy who spends too much time on youtube. I love discovering new music so naturally I checked this out. Just spent more than an hour pinned in my chair by this incredible trio and their "new" compositions. What an experience! Then I opened the comments. I had no idea these were Black Sabbath songs all along. Thought it was new compositions with hipster titles! 😎 Never listened to Heavy Metal much with no disrespect to the genre. I have taught Jazz appreciation classes using Christmas carols in Jazz because everybody already knows the melody and progression. Now I get to listen to Black Sabbath performances of these songs and enjoy these arrangements and learn it backwards. Thanks for this! BTW massive respect to whomever tuned that Steinway for Mr. Wakeman. Nicely done!
They already 😂know that 😂 don't care about what they think.
Wow, I never knew there was such a thing as jazz appreciation classes. I wondered for years how people could enjoy jazz. It just made no sense to me, sounded random (some pieces still do). Up till 1,5 year ago when I signed up for a 3-year long school which teaches how to understand music and improvise over chord changes. The teachers use the Real Book jazz standards to achieve these goals, and this is where I started to understand what's going on and appreciate it. I'll never forget the evening, just a few months ago, when I was listening to Watermelon man, and I suddenly heard all parts at the same time and how they intertwine and interact when chords change. It was a beautiful moment. Before, I just heard either the melody or the chords. This is how I learned to appreciate jazz, and I'm very happy about it. Thank you for sharing your story and making me aware that there actually are jazz appreciation classes. I'll look them up.
@@kapitanplanjeta I also used jazz standards and ballads. Get familiar with a vocal ballad and then listen to a good quartet play the same. Lots of "beautiful moments" on students faces. Thanks for sharing your story with me. If you can't locate a class I suggest listening to vocalists singing the song straight up laying down the chord progression and melody, with a few musicians backing them. Listen to the players and enjoy your jazz in a deeper way! Thanks for the reply!
Jazz has in its DNA everything to survive in any genre. Similar to a parasite, but with the goodness of returning to life any genre that has been forgotten by new generations.
When you want to listen to Sabbath but your inlaws are over
😂
😄😄, nice X 2
Or it's Christmas Time
Boomer moment
😂👏
One of the best trios I ever heard, enyoing Jazz for more than 50 years!
Wish a good life for u, sir. 🥂
Moi aussi je pense comme vous trio merveilleux 🤩
Bill Ward being a jazz drummer to begin with makes this transition easier. Amazing work by the band here 👍🏾
Jazz drummer. That's funny. I love Sabbath, but the Jazz drummer thing is not even close. I've been on the bands of many of the great Master Jazz Drummers, including Buddy Rich's band. Buddy, Mel, Elvin, Morello, Tony, Shelly, Papa Jo, THOSE are Jazz drummers.
Rule number one of the internet: never talk about any rock drummer as a equal to a jazz drummer… people get really offended😂
@@Bloodonthepick No, offended is the wrong word. There is no such thing as being offended, but there IS such a thing as reality.
@@Bloodonthepick It's a shame too. P.S. I really dig that ride cymbal!
@@bigswingface5847 Bill Bruford of Yes might choose to disagree with you. 😊
Fantastic ❤. I have always been a fan of Black Sabbath since I was a teenager in the 1970s. Now I am a fan of Jazz Sabbath!
This is so chill and enjoyable
non-contrived jazz is good to listen to too.
if you're not a gatekeeping, self-described "metalhead who only listens to REAL music". But y'all already know.
Yeah! Almost as chill and enjoyable as Black Sabbath.
You guys did a nice work stealing from smaller channels!
Thanks
The opposite is Zakk Wylde's Zakk Sabbath, wear all the songs sound like they're on steroids 😂
I have no words. there are many covers, but this is an independent work of art. We understand the authors and these performers very deeply. Thanks.
This beautifully shows how jazzy-swinging Black Sabbath really is. Thank you!
Planaet Caravan actually is Jazz. BTW who are the band if you don't know German: Adam is behind Jazz Sabbath, a project of jazz covers of Black Sabbath songs. The album (on Black Lake Records) is with Jerry Meehan (bass) and Ash Soan (Rick Wakeman's English Rock Ensemble, Trevor Horn Band, Downes Braide Association, worked with Adele, Seal; drums). Tracks:
"Fairies Wear Boots"
"Evil Woman"
"Rat Salad"
"Iron Man" (7:14), streaming audio available on Bandcamp
"Hand of Doom"
"Changes"
"Children of the Grave"
Not
Nice to hear a different interpretation of these classic rock songs from my youth ... CONGRATULATIONS ... I enjoyed listening in Western Australia 🎶
Just the idea....to interprete Sabbath songs, genius. Great playing too and really cool if you like both jazz and hard rock. Also shows the musical depth of Sabbath songs, more layered than we thought.
Tony Iommi is a very great musician, so much more than a riff meister
0:00 Fairies Wear Boots
6:42 Snowblind
12:12 Talking
13:05 Evil Woman
19:20 Behind The Wall Of Sleep
26:41 Talking
27:11 Rat Salad (drum solo 29:22)
35:08 Introduction and talking
36:47 Iron Man
43:27 Changes
48:47 N.I.B.
54:04 Paranoid
1:01:37 Talking
1:02:36 Children Of The Grave
👍🤣🤙😁👏👏👏
This is the most epic thing ive heard or witnessed in a while 🎉
I listen to this entire set every morning at work, since discovering their talent a month ago. Absolutely fantastic!
Bellísima....preciosa música 🎶 para soñar ,Felicitaciones, me encanta el Jazz..cariños desde Argentina 🇦🇷
Jazz version of a jazz band. Brilliant
One of THE best albums in a long time! Absolute technicality and emotion!
Never been able to understand the noble art of jazzmusic until now ! This is bloody epic , the skil and respect for these old gems are weltklasse ! 🙏👍❤️
YEP ! , Huge Respect .
Not a fan really of Jazz myself - but check out the aristocats for jazz fusion/rock/metal thing. Probably the best guitarist in the world in that group.
Absolutely tastefull, Great Musicians, Great Songs, Played with stylle and good taste!! Long Live to Jazz Sabbath!!
Я не поклонник джаза, но этот концерт меня сразил на повал! Очень понравилось выступление Jazz Sabbath! Молодцы. 👍
Excellent arrangements and playing! I love jazz and Sabbath so this is a real treat for me.
You can really hear how a lot of early metal was born out of the blues in this style
My grandmother would have loved this!!!
RIP Gram.
I like Black Sabbath and Jazz. Excellent musical combination from this superb trio!
Brilliant jazztrio. And arrangements of iconic Sabbath songs are genious! Thx.
This is Out of this World, Man !!!!!.... Simply Genius !!!!...
This band does way more than entertain. They open my ears to what I want in music.
Great band and Adam Wakeman is a marvelous pianist, carrying on the legacy of his father (aka Spock Wall, hehehe). Listening to it without reading the song names is a very funny game!
Jazz Sabbath's version of Paranoid just slams so hard on the emotions. Been listening to it non stop this weekend and ended up waking up humming the intro piece.
I think Jazz Sabbath has internally hit a raw emotion chord with me. This will remain on heavy rotation for the rest of the year.
These guys deserve a wider audience.
this is the kind of jazz that i need
Wow! This was great ! The Bass sounded so pure and the whole group was just so dam good!
I just realized I've had a smile on my face this entire time I'm watching. These guys are so good.
One of the things that made Sabbath so great was the rhythm section of Butler and Ward...They could really swing.
I love the dude who's playing that piano he was rocking and the drummer all in sync
It's Rick Wakeman's son playing piano.
...and Steve Howe's son playing drums, surprise-surprise :)
Plus, Adam Wakeman had played with the original Sabbath for a while, so he's familiar with the stuff.
Sabbath is so good! What a rhythm section!
It's great that it sounds like straight up jazz, and then suddenly you hear the melody, and have to stifle your laughter at work. I also love the idea that The Band That Shan't Be Named stole all their music.
Finally a Jazz trio in which you can actually hear the bass. Nice stuff.
I've been into black Sabbath since the 70's and always heard a jazzy tempo....really cool man
Спасибо. Слушал с перерывами на приготовление кофе. Без сигарет тоже не обошлось.
Absolutely cannot be bothered by Black Sabbath and Ozzy Osbourne in general but this might be the greatest thing I have ever heard :)
Потрясающее трио!!! Спасибо!
Oh My! I just found this. I am in love. Reminds me so much of Keith Emerson and the Nice.
I haven’t heard anything recently that intrigued me but this band is now one of my favorites!!!😊
I can't believe The Wizard isn't in the setlist! It is soooo jazzy!
Thanks for sharing, Rockpalast! I had the pleasure of seeing them live in Utrecht recently, and they were incredible.
Amazing album for two reasons first on my early listening years I was big fan of black Sabbath and after that I jump in jazz now for the last 40 years I listening 🎧 jazz
Im seeing them tomorrow live!?!?!! !!!!!!! Im so excited!!!
The music of Faso is an inexhaustible source of sweetness.
It allows us to plunge deep inside ourselves and at the same time resonate with our fellow man, Yé Lassina Coulibaly
music is THE artform. I will rediscover original Black Sabbath songs and enjoy these new jazz version so much
This is so good,,,Adam and Dylan damn !!! Bring it to the States ,,San Francisco please,
When presented as a jazz arrangement, you begin to see the genius in the original written format. After all, rock is just an offshoot of jazz, jazz is the OG.👀
This is great, loved Black Sabbath back in the day, and to hear it like this is wonderful
Wow, Sabbath was REALLY influenced by Jazz.
It's so grateful listening to this at 2:00 AM.
i love the complete absence of sarchasm and the total commitment to jazzing this up!!
Suenan tan bien, y se ven tan relajados... trasmite tanta paz...
Thanks to YT algorithms, I saw their Jazz Sabbath album and thought eh? So I checked it out and what a pleasant surprise. Great music. If you appreciate good music then this band fits the bill.
This GUYS HAVE FEEEL .. THEY MAKE JAZZ SOUND AMAZING... PERFECT TO CHILL OUT ON A SUNDAY AFTERNOON... OR ANY OTHER DAY... 💯💜🎵🥁🎸✌🏿😍
Enjoy it very much..what a chill and lovely music, thanks for sharing.
Don't actually listen to jazz, but listen and love black sabbath. Don't know why matrix sent me here though.
As a player myself these guys are outstanding. Incredible work. Just perfect. 3 killers.
Early Black Sabbath still sound so fresh.
Right selection btw .
Killers or gun slingers or whatever is a great description they are beyond incredible.
Sabbath is grounded in blues and it swings with syncopation. That's why this jazz arrangement can really anchor into the tunes and improvise upon them. Snowblind here is a beautiful rendition, like a classic jazz ballad and Behind the Wall of Sleep is a very free form piece here.
This takes me back to the 1st time I heard Me First and the Gimme Gimmes. I didn't recognize the song right away, but when I did, it was that typical "A HA" moment, and I was hooked. There is something to be said for familiarity.
I'm not generally a fan of 180° genre spins in music, but maybe being a fan of both Black Sabbath and jazz (especially jazz without vocals), combined with the moving "swing" by these guys, it's absolutely catchy and I'll be looking to share it with those I think might also enjoy it, and add Jazz Sabbath to my music collection. I like the "Spinal Tap-y" spin on the origins as well.😆
Yesterday thought about them... I would also lke to see the jazz version of The Skatelites
Muito bom esse repertório!
0:00 Fairies Wear Boots
6:42 Snowblind
13:05 Evil Woman
19:20 Behind The Wall Of Sleep
27:11 Rat Salad
36:47 Iron Man
43:27 Changes
48:47 N.I.B.
53:59 Paranoid
1:02:36 Children Of The Grave
The airy version of Iron Man at 36:46 is absolutely beautiful
Simplesmente maravilhoso ❤
Fantastic. What a great jazz interpretation of Black Sabbath. Not only a Sabbath fan , but a jazz fan too. It's definitely going onto my playlist . Maybe I will be able to get to see preform live too.
Just need to work out a website for you
Thank you once again.
Awesome! Brilliant arrangements, great musicianship, and beautifully filmed. Sabbath always had a groove, but here it really shines. Very well done. Bravo 👏👏👏
Oh my god, this amazing!!!!!!! Bravo Bravissímo!!!! Not another words!!
¡Fabuloso, increíble, interesante y hermoso!
Un saludo desde Chile 🇨🇱.
Suena espectacular.
I was already eating this up readily, being a Sabbath and Jazz fan...I just did a cursory search about Adam, the pianist; son of Rick Wakeman?? Played with Ozzy? Payed with Sabbath???? WOW!
You mean they are all conected to the original band and playing music of their father, but in a jazz way?
@ "they are all connected to the original band" - "yes", speaking of Adam, and "no", speaking of Dylan. Both have family ties with members of band "Yes"
Very cool. There's not enough jazz/metal crossover in the world
QUAND'ON RÉGARDE L'INSPIRATION ET LA TECHNIQUE, IL EST DIFFICILE Á DIRE, QUEL DES MUSICIENS, EST EN PREMIER LIEU... ILS SONT GÉNIALES!!! MERCI POUR LA VIDEO!!!
A new experience for "old" songs. Thank you so much for this.
Traumhaft! Super Besetzung, Jazz pur, gefällt mir sehr gut!
Me encanta Black Sabbath, en versión Jazz exquisita experiencia musical, 🎉 Saludos desde El Salvador
I love jazz ! Sabbath amazing !
this proves Sabbath was Jazz metal totally unlike any other band.
Good Lord, this is so good. What a band, wonderful players.
Дуже смачно звучить бас. Браво всім !!!
The obvious irony is that Adam Wakeman is the current touring keyboard player for the actual Black Sabbath. And if that name Wakeman sounds familiar, yes, Adam is the son of Rick. Even sporting the Wakeman on brand long hair.
Im just waiting for Richard Cheese to start signing :D Great show!
wow,, its like hearing all these grate songs for the first time again,, wow,,
Learning the true story of how the song came to be called Iron Man was so fascinating!
I think Adam Wakeman was born in 1974....
Excellent pianiste, musiciens accomplis. Très bonne rythmique, variations agréables. Qualité d'enregistrement irréprochable. Un réel plaisir à l'écoute ! Merci TH-cam !
ich wollte ja nur mal kurz reinhören... und schon war die Stunde rum. Macht echt Spaß 👌👏
Enhorabona! Extraordinària Música de Jazz! Best Regards From Catalonia! Next Independent Republic in Europe!
Great show, great band. I've been playing both their albums over and over again the last few months. Hope more albums will follow!
Tak ożywczej synkopy już dawno nie słyszałem. Fajne to jest...
So beautiful and relaxing
Has the history of the band been smothered and lied? Is there a grain of truth in it? Or is it just damn well thought out from start to finish? In any case, it is clear that the story we are talking about here started in Berlin in 2013. Adam Wakeman, ex-Black Sabbath touring keyboardist and still in Ozzy Osbourne's live band, was hanging out with a few crew members in a Berlin hotel bar on an off-day. And, just for fun, played a few Black Sabbath songs on the piano.
He did it improvised and freely, and he consistently pushed the songs of the legendary and style-defining heavy metal band in the direction of jazz. The impromptu late night session was a hit with the crew, hotel staff and other guests. And the story that Adam Wakeman knitted from it is now legend. If not legendary.
Adam Wakeman later claimed that Black Sabbath stole the songs from their first two studio albums, Black Sabbath and Paranoid, both released in 1970. Namely by the trio Jazz Sabbath, which was founded two years earlier. Which of course is strong stuff: Black Sabbath in Wakeman's version are not only thieves, but also plagiarize.
Rare versions of the (supposed) originals were released in 2020 and 2022 as "Jazz Sabbath" and "Jazz Sabbath Vol.2" on the respective Record Store Day. And the damn well thought out and yet very true band that goes with it is still alive and kicking.
According to the album liner notes, the trio consists of
- Milton Keanes on piano (Adam Wakeman),
- Jacque T'fono on upright bass (Jerry Meehan), and
- Juan Také on drums (Ash Soan).
So who or what was there first? The chicken or the egg? Black Sabbath or Jazz Sabbath? One thing is undisputed: The story of Black "Jazz" Sabbath has all sorts of errors, turning points and a well-dosed portion of humor. Jazz Sabbath can trim heavy classics to jazz. And anyone who thought The Hound of the Baskervilles, the Cindy & Bert version of Paranoid, was the most whimsical Black Sabbath cover might need to rethink. When Jazz Sabbath put "Paranoid" through the meat grinder, there's pretty much everything there, from fairs and beer tents to easy listening and free jazz.
“I’m sorry, what?”
@@CaptainReedo40 This is the original poster's notes, rendered into English via Google Translate.
sounds like something CHAT GPT would say: Chat gpt tell me a fairy tale story how the Jazz Sabbath was created...
This music really helps me sleep
I didnt love Sabbath until I heard Changes. Your version is very beautiful. Thank you!