Tony plays A snippet of Beethoven sonata for mandolin in C...into "Soldiers Joy" I had a cassette recording of this I grabbed off of the TV! My hood technology has changed...thanks for posting!
@@seansuperman Ah! Totally missed that! So sorry. : ) Would love to hear that cassette as well some day. I can't get enough Tony Trischka in my life right now. In fact, I'm working my way through his "Hot Licks" book.
There was a Warner Brothers cartoon about a spoiled, rich cat with a butler named Meadows. It was called "The Aristo-Cat." In it was a variation on Mozart's K.545, but with a slight difference at the end of phrases. Sounds like what they're doing here.
One of the most beautiful duets on banjo ever
Agreed
Damned, these yanks from downtown New York City can give this rebel instrument some serious credibility!
I never seen this thanks for posting!
Hope you enjoyed it. I think one day I will try and tab it out
@@seansuperman share if you do lol
Pretty amazing! Saw both of them yesterday and today at Rockygrass festival in Lyons CO, still going incredibly strong!
That is awesome! Wish I could have gone, missed my opportunity to go to Telluride in 2019 and still regretting it
Tony plays A snippet of Beethoven sonata for mandolin in C...into "Soldiers Joy" I had a cassette recording of this I grabbed off of the TV! My hood technology has changed...thanks for posting!
That's awesome. I was really lucky to have "saved" this before the old video was removed. It's one of my favorites of them
It's actually a snippet of Mozart's sonata no. 16, in C major (Köchel 545). :)
@@samuelbarham8483 Yeah, that's in the description. Jeff was talking about a 'Soldier's Joy' recording
@@seansuperman Ah! Totally missed that! So sorry. : ) Would love to hear that cassette as well some day. I can't get enough Tony Trischka in my life right now.
In fact, I'm working my way through his "Hot Licks" book.
@@samuelbarham8483 no problem! Hot Licks is a good one. Tony is a real master.
There was a Warner Brothers cartoon about a spoiled, rich cat with a butler named Meadows. It was called "The Aristo-Cat." In it was a variation on Mozart's K.545, but with a slight difference at the end of phrases. Sounds like what they're doing here.