I love the Pres Hall 1980s lineup, with Jaffe on the helicon and so many elder statesmen down front. 'His Eye Is On The Sparrow' is my favorite song by them.
I saw the same people herein March of 1985 in NewOrleans at Presrvation Hall ! Its my Dad era and music but I love it too grewup on it as Dad loved dixieland and Prservation hall music ! Dad would be 104 . Im 64 !
i've been watching this for years.cant stop.i'm 93 now and played in a combo with my two older brothers now gone .Willy and Percy were an inspiration to us.Brother AL played sax brotherr ,RAY played piano, I played trumpet.wonderful memories.
I met all the men here Preservation Hall in Feb of 1985 in New Orleans Dad took me and Mom had so much fun I was the goofy one dancing by Sing Miller in When The Saints Come Marching In song the one video where coments were disabled but that was me alright dancing and giving Sing Miller kiss on cheek !!
I saw them play at Presavation All In New Orleans when Dad took me and Mom there in Feb of 1985 I was 29 I met them all there got theier autograph they are were aewsome band !! Im 62 but loved Dad Music he died Dad on Jan 14th 1988 he was only 71
I've attended The Preservation Jazz Concerts twice: New Orleans - summer 1975 or 76, and my graduation week from Iowa State University - February 1978. My parents from Massachusetts loved it, especially my father who played his Martin steel guitar in bands when he was in his early 20s.
Willie and Percy Humphrey can't get any better brothers playing together. Now playing for St Peter at the pearly gates of heaven. My all time favorite is hold that tiger
I saw the same band members when Dad took MOm and I to see them in Feb of 1985 and im almost 64 years old and it was from my Dads era as he was in his 60s near 70 when he took us so hed be over 100 which I know they are all gone now and are about Dads age or older .MOm would be going on 91 and Dad would be going on 105 or 106 .My sister will be71 in August.AlwayslovedDads era typeof musicbut love a variety of music too and have alot on Pandora Radio !
These guys also visiting Norway for 5 concerts. I think it was the same year. They only played in churches exept in Ski, Norway where they played in the Town Hall Theatre. The concert in Ski was a great experience, but also interesting to watch. I think it was the guy on tuba that owned the Preservation Hall. He had renovated it and restarted the band. The trompet player was the boss, 80 years old. He always gave the black guys a finger hook in honour for solo performances, but looked very hostail to the white guys. When the man on trombone moved over central on a solo perfomance he pushed him back to his chair. Very peculiar.
I probly heard some of these same cats once when my father took me to Belmont Park racetrack- not to bet on the ponies, but to hear the Preservation Hall Jazz Band! Fast forward to 50 years later, I now play- or represent- this music, with my voice and my slide trombone. Dag.
0:07 Clarinet Marmarlade 5:31 His Eye Is On The Sparrow 10:52 Joe Avery's Piece (Victory Walk) 18:30 Basin Street Blues 24:05 Lil' Liza Jane Personnel Trumpet:Percy Humphrey Clarinet:Willie Humphrey Trombone:Frank Demond Piano:James "Sing" Miller Banjo:Narvin Kimball Hericon:Allan Jaffe Drums:Frank Parker Sing Miller's singing on "His Eye's on the Sparrow" makes me cry. Narvin's harmonies are great. And I'm sure the timing is definitely on the spot overall.
I saw them in New Orleans and have been hooked ever since. Even sat on stage next to Frank in Tarrytown NY. Have t-shirt and "I danced with Percy Humphrey" pin. The band has really gone downhill lately - 2019.
I saw the same band at the Royal Festival Hall in September of 1979 . The band ain't all about the musicianship it was more about the preservation of the music and a hall in New Orleans. It was a great concert . 😢
HOLA ADELAIDE!!! GRACIAS MIL POR EL MAGNIFICO POSTEO DE ESTA MUSICA CONTAGIOSA Y ALEGRE DE LA PRESERVATION JAZZ BAND. MUY BUENO LO TUYO. TE TIENES MERECIDO UN ELOGIOSO Y GRANDE ¡¡¡BRAVOOOOOOOO!!!. AGRADECIENDOTE NUEVAMENTE, ADELAIDE, EL GRATO MOMENTO DISFRUTADO TE SALUDAMOS CORDIALMENTE Y TE DESEAMOS UNA MUY BUENA VIDA ,AMANDA Y VICTOR SIGALOV DESDE LA CIUDAD AUTONOMA DE BUENOS AIRES, CAPITAL DE LA REPUBLICA ARGENTINA. NUEVAMENTE GRACIAS ADELAIDE Y HASTA EL PROXIMO ENCUENTRO CONTIGO. NOS "VEMOS" ADELAIDE. ¡¡¡CHAUUUUUU!!!A
Somebody below says the timing is wrong. The guy does not understand the music at all. Anybody can go out of time and come back in to make the whole number more interesting. It happens all the time. All the musicians understand this. There is a fundamental beat that everyone comes back to. That's why they call it jazz, folks. These musicians are the BEST.
Thank you very much .Back at 1985 I had the great chance to be right inside the Preservation Hall for one concert and there were exactly the same excellent artists. One of my best music memories !
Saw these guys live in the Great Hall of the Union at University of Wisconsin in the early 60s!! Great hot jass!! Marvin Kimball here on banjo was the last man standing!! Fled Hurricane Katrina and died with family in New Jersey well into his 90s!! Desmond on trombone might still be alive!!
Willie, one of my favouriter clarinet players. How the hell does he get that sound with such a soft read. Must have a mouth piece with one hell of an open lay.
Those two programmes were possibly the best things I ever saw on TV. So pleased you have preserved this for us, adelaide102. Tunes: Clarinet Marmalade; His Eye is on the Sparrow; Joe Avery's Piece; Basin Street Blues; Li'l Liza Jane.
From the comments, the musicians are Percy Humphrey (tp), Willie Humphrey (cl), Frank Demond (tb), Marwin KImball (bj), Alan Jaffe (Tuba), Anybody knows who are the drummer and the pianist ?
I was in NOLA almost a year ago. I was so happy to see that people love this music played in the original, the old and the modern push the envelope styles. I enjoyed them all. If you ever get a chance to go to the Spotted Cat Club on Frenchman Street or to all the stages of the French Quarter Festival I say go for it. I also recommend making sure you see and hear Meschiya Lake, a local fave and I hope soon a bigger star.
Correct, and Allan Jaffe on TUba. These guys go back to the Origianl N.O.Preservation Hall 731 St Peter's st, N.O where this music was conceived born and bred/ I find it odd, strange even that there appear to be NO Afro Americans in NO these days,however, there's a lot of young Whitey's who flying the flag of the Best Music ever. N/O/ Jazz. I dare say the White supremacists in the US Govt.had something to do with the shifting of some 300,000 Blacks after Hurricane Katrina, Wonder where they were all shipped out to?
+JandritoBlues It always makes me sad when folks like you can't count to ONE. They WEREN'T clapping on 1 and 3, they were only clapping on the downbeat of ONE, clapping off the bars. Perfectly acceptable. And no less than Percy Humphrey, himself, started them off on ONE at exactly 16:34, and they followed him ! At 16:48, you can even SEE them clapping on ONE only !
Frank Desmond?? Because of his youth in the1960s he if alive is one of the last men standing of that era of New Orleans Jass!! Have to be careful. Billie Pierce and Sweet Emma were women of this music in that era. They own a share of that eras best jass. Long gone!! Desmond always wore loud socks usually fire engine red!! With the white shirt and tie!! Of the olde timers, Kimball was last man out!! Fled Katrina and his breathing stopped somewhere in New Jersey well into his 90s!! Great banjo silenced!! Jaffe here onTuba: heard his son on bass playing in Boulder Colorado in the 90s at a PHJB concert. Great Tradition here!!
Tommy Schibli The outstanding trombone player is Frank Demond, born in 1933. He was 51 years old in this video and very experienced, having played with the Preservation Hall Jazz Band since 1976 and banjo with them before that. It was Big Jim Robinson who encouraged him in his college years to switch from banjo to trombone. Robinson later invited him to sit in with the Preservation Hall Band in 1965, but he played mainly banjo until Jim Robinson died and Demond took over the trombone chair in 1976. But it was ten years before he could play the trombone that Jim Robinson had bequeathed to him.
accordio13 Frank Demond ( correct spelling), is still living and was born in 1933. . Narvin Kimball was helped to evacuate New Orleans to Baton Rouge by Ben Jaffe, Allan's son. He died in South Carolina in 2006 at the age of 97. "Great banjo silenced " is right, although he had retired from the Preservation Hall Jazz band in 1999.
I first heard the band in NO in 1974. I know they are getting old but can't believe they couldn't find brother's good enough to replace the old guys when they passed away.
I love the Pres Hall 1980s lineup, with Jaffe on the helicon and so many elder statesmen down front. 'His Eye Is On The Sparrow' is my favorite song by them.
I saw the same people herein March of 1985 in NewOrleans at Presrvation Hall ! Its my Dad era and music but I love it too grewup on it as Dad loved dixieland and Prservation hall music ! Dad would be 104 . Im 64 !
i've been watching this for years.cant stop.i'm 93 now and played in a combo with my two older brothers now gone .Willy and Percy were an inspiration to us.Brother AL played sax brotherr ,RAY played piano, I played trumpet.wonderful memories.
I met all the men here Preservation Hall in Feb of 1985 in New Orleans Dad took me and Mom had so much fun I was the goofy one dancing by Sing Miller in When The Saints Come Marching In song the one video where coments were disabled but that was me alright dancing and giving Sing Miller kiss on cheek !!
I saw them play at Presavation All In New Orleans when Dad took me and Mom there in Feb of 1985 I was 29 I met them all there got theier autograph they are were aewsome band !! Im 62 but loved Dad Music he died Dad on Jan 14th 1988 he was only 71
I saw this program in '84 and manged to get tickets to a performance in the Barbican Hall. I was so lucky ! Magnificent!
I've attended The Preservation Jazz Concerts twice: New Orleans - summer 1975 or 76, and my graduation week from Iowa State University - February 1978. My parents from Massachusetts loved it, especially my father who played his Martin steel guitar in bands when he was in his early 20s.
They start off right in your face. I love it
Willie and Percy Humphrey can't get any better brothers playing together. Now playing for St Peter at the pearly gates of heaven. My all time favorite is hold that tiger
I saw the same band members when Dad took MOm and I to see them in Feb of 1985 and im almost 64 years old and it was from my Dads era as he was in his 60s near 70 when he took us so hed be over 100 which I know they are all gone now and are about Dads age or older .MOm would be going on 91 and Dad would be going on 105 or 106 .My sister will be71 in August.AlwayslovedDads era typeof musicbut love a variety of music too and have alot on Pandora Radio !
BAND. ...di JAZZ Classico che , per me ( ho 86 anni ), è. Favolosa. Grandiosa...ti prende Anima e. Cuore!!! E" bello. Ascoltare, Grazie!!
These guys also visiting Norway for 5 concerts. I think it was the same year. They only played in churches exept in Ski, Norway where they played in the Town Hall Theatre. The concert in Ski was a great experience, but also interesting to watch. I think it was the guy on tuba that owned the Preservation Hall. He had renovated it and restarted the band. The trompet player was the boss, 80 years old. He always gave the black guys a finger hook in honour for solo performances, but looked very hostail to the white guys. When the man on trombone moved over central on a solo perfomance he pushed him back to his chair. Very peculiar.
I probly heard some of these same cats once when my father took me to Belmont Park racetrack- not to bet on the ponies, but to hear the Preservation Hall Jazz Band! Fast forward to 50 years later, I now play- or represent- this music, with my voice and my slide trombone. Dag.
Great music, great photography..... thanks for putting this music up here!!!!
0:07 Clarinet Marmarlade
5:31 His Eye Is On The Sparrow
10:52 Joe Avery's Piece (Victory Walk)
18:30 Basin Street Blues
24:05 Lil' Liza Jane
Personnel
Trumpet:Percy Humphrey
Clarinet:Willie Humphrey
Trombone:Frank Demond
Piano:James "Sing" Miller
Banjo:Narvin Kimball
Hericon:Allan Jaffe
Drums:Frank Parker
Sing Miller's singing on "His Eye's on the Sparrow" makes me cry. Narvin's harmonies are great.
And I'm sure the timing is definitely on the spot overall.
I saw them in New Orleans and have been hooked ever since. Even sat on stage next to Frank in Tarrytown NY. Have t-shirt and "I danced with Percy Humphrey" pin. The band has really gone downhill lately - 2019.
Aca en Quito tuvimos la surte de verlos en aquella epoca a estos virtuosos MUSICOS, grandes grandes.
ESTIMADO''HERMANO ECUATORIANO'',PERMÍTEME COMPARTIR VUESTRA SUERTE.-REALMENTE''VIRTUOSOS''.-SALU2 DESDE''ARGENTINA''.-
I saw the same band at the Royal Festival Hall in September of 1979 .
The band ain't all about the musicianship it was more about the preservation of the music and a hall in New Orleans.
It was a great concert . 😢
Now Percy is gone you will not hear New Orleans Jazz in Preservation Hall now.
Besides being a delightful clarinetist Willie was such an engaging vocalist and had moves!
HOLA ADELAIDE!!! GRACIAS MIL POR EL MAGNIFICO POSTEO DE ESTA MUSICA CONTAGIOSA Y ALEGRE DE LA PRESERVATION JAZZ BAND. MUY BUENO LO TUYO. TE TIENES MERECIDO UN ELOGIOSO Y GRANDE ¡¡¡BRAVOOOOOOOO!!!. AGRADECIENDOTE NUEVAMENTE, ADELAIDE, EL GRATO MOMENTO DISFRUTADO TE SALUDAMOS CORDIALMENTE Y TE DESEAMOS UNA MUY BUENA VIDA ,AMANDA Y VICTOR SIGALOV DESDE LA CIUDAD AUTONOMA DE BUENOS AIRES, CAPITAL DE LA REPUBLICA ARGENTINA. NUEVAMENTE GRACIAS ADELAIDE Y HASTA EL PROXIMO ENCUENTRO CONTIGO. NOS "VEMOS" ADELAIDE. ¡¡¡CHAUUUUUU!!!A
ADHIERO AL COMENTARIO DE ''VICTOR''.-SALU2 DESDE EL MISMO''PAÍS-CAPITAL Y CIUDAD''
Somebody below says the timing is wrong. The guy does not understand the music at all. Anybody can go out of time and come back in to make the whole number more interesting. It happens all the time. All the musicians understand this. There is a fundamental beat that everyone comes back to. That's why they call it jazz, folks. These musicians are the BEST.
The technical name of this "out of time" trick is RUBATO.
so romantic so stylous. i just feel in the 30s ...no grater music has being plyed
Thank you very much .Back at 1985 I had the great chance to be right inside the Preservation Hall for one concert and there were exactly the same excellent artists.
One of my best music memories !
Saw these guys live in the Great Hall of the Union at University of Wisconsin in the early 60s!! Great hot jass!! Marvin Kimball here on banjo was the last man standing!! Fled Hurricane Katrina and died with family in New Jersey well into his 90s!! Desmond on trombone might still be alive!!
Enjoyed their show in Toronto about the same year. Same players and a great night out.
Willie, one of my favouriter clarinet players. How the hell does he get that sound with such a soft read. Must have a mouth piece with one hell of an open lay.
I saw the band play at the Barbican on this tour and what an enjoyable evening. Brill!!!
I was there too, quite a night, I saw them again in Preservation Hall in New Orleans in 1988 amazing.
Schön dass ich noch einige dieser Musiker in Ascona bei der Festa New Orleans Music erleben konnte und erst noch Openair
Very nice!!!
fantastic! thank you so much for uploading. They made a great team together. Beatiful, so much joy in there
Gracias por hacernos escuchar esta música hermosa .
Those two programmes were possibly the best things I ever saw on TV. So pleased you have preserved this for us, adelaide102. Tunes: Clarinet Marmalade; His Eye is on the Sparrow; Joe Avery's Piece; Basin Street Blues; Li'l Liza Jane.
Eu e minha filha assistimos à apresentação da banda em New Orleans, no Preservation Hall, na Bourbon St.
The trombone player is brilliant. I still remember them when they played in my home town.
From the comments, the musicians are Percy Humphrey (tp), Willie Humphrey (cl), Frank Demond (tb), Marwin KImball (bj), Alan Jaffe (Tuba), Anybody knows who are the drummer and the pianist ?
It's Narvin Kimball, not Marwin. The pianist was 'Sing' Miller. Drummer Frank Parker, I think.
Take my hand precious lord ..Elvis
Спасибо
Real thing superb!
Чудо!
Класика...
Діди - ровесники ХХ сторіччя...
Чарівники!!!
tuve la suerte inmensa de escucharlos en vivo en Nueva Orleans en una noche inolvidable
ESTIMADO''MARIO'';PERMÍTEME ACOMPAÑAR TU COMENTARIO,VIENDO Y ESCUCHARLOS EN ÉSTE CONCIERTO.-SALU2 DESDE''BUENOS AIRES C.A.B.A.''.-
Superbe////Quel bon moment,merci
ANDRE QUIER
¡Geniales, veteranía y calidad total ;)!!!
I was in NOLA almost a year ago. I was so happy to see that people love this music played in the original, the old and the modern push the envelope styles. I enjoyed them all. If you ever get a chance to go to the Spotted Cat Club on Frenchman Street or to all the stages of the French Quarter Festival I say go for it. I also recommend making sure you see and hear Meschiya Lake, a local fave and I hope soon a bigger star.
du du du du dayum ....they goood ....
Bit of a shock!! I was there. didn't know this tape existed
Sing Miller on piano
Alan Jaffe on tuba hope I spelt his name right
Percy Humphrey on trumpet, Willy Humphrey on clarinet. Frank Demond on trombone.
Almost a tuba: it's a helicon.
thanks Roy, I didn't know
Our guys 🇺🇸
The "Young Trombone Player" must be Mr. Frank Demond.
Correct, and Allan Jaffe on TUba. These guys go back to the Origianl N.O.Preservation Hall 731 St Peter's st, N.O where this music was conceived born and bred/ I find it odd, strange even that there appear to be NO Afro Americans in NO these days,however, there's a lot of young Whitey's who flying the flag of the Best Music ever. N/O/ Jazz. I dare say the White supremacists in the US Govt.had something to do with the shifting of some 300,000 Blacks after Hurricane Katrina, Wonder where they were all shipped out to?
excellent !!!
humphrey brothers standing tall ! ! !
excelent!!!
Gotta say, the timing is all over the place on the first number and as I can't bear to listen further ......................... .
+Philip Robson You're right. Age and liquor are a dangerous combination. The Pres Hall band has done better things.
good!!!!
Was this at The Grand In Wilmington, DE?
16:40 it always makes me sad when folks clap on 1 and 3.
+JandritoBlues it's really damn annoying!
+JandritoBlues It always makes me sad when folks like you can't count to ONE. They WEREN'T clapping on 1 and 3, they were only clapping on the downbeat of ONE, clapping off the bars. Perfectly acceptable. And no less than Percy Humphrey, himself, started them off on ONE at exactly 16:34, and they followed him ! At 16:48, you can even SEE them clapping on ONE only !
We were playing in Spain before people who rarely heard Jazz before. THEY ALL CLAPPED OFF BEAT (2 & 4)
THIS YOUNG TROMBONE PLAYER HAD TO SUBTITUE BIG JIM ROBINSON.
BASICALLY IMPOSSIBLE,
HE DID IT - VERY WELL¨.
Frank Desmond?? Because of his youth in the1960s he if alive is one of the last men standing of that era of New Orleans Jass!! Have to be careful. Billie Pierce and Sweet Emma were women of this music in that era. They own a share of that eras best jass. Long gone!! Desmond always wore loud socks usually fire engine red!! With the white shirt and tie!! Of the olde timers, Kimball was last man out!! Fled Katrina and his breathing stopped somewhere in New Jersey well into his 90s!! Great banjo silenced!! Jaffe here onTuba: heard his son on bass playing in Boulder Colorado in the 90s at a PHJB concert. Great Tradition here!!
accordio13 I
Tommy Schibli The outstanding trombone player is Frank Demond, born in 1933. He was 51 years old in this video and very experienced, having played with the Preservation Hall Jazz Band since 1976 and banjo with them before that. It was Big Jim Robinson who encouraged him in his college years to switch from banjo to trombone. Robinson later invited him to sit in with the Preservation Hall Band in 1965, but he played mainly banjo until Jim Robinson died and Demond took over the trombone chair in 1976. But it was ten years before he could play the trombone that Jim Robinson had bequeathed to him.
accordio13 Frank Demond ( correct spelling), is still living and was born in 1933. . Narvin Kimball was helped to evacuate New Orleans to Baton Rouge by Ben Jaffe, Allan's son. He died in South Carolina in 2006 at the age of 97. "Great banjo silenced " is right, although he had retired from the Preservation Hall Jazz band in 1999.
Marathonracer Thanks for then info. Saw Ben Jaffe years ago up in Boulder colorado at a PHJB performance. He was on bass.
Ist das die Lärmmaschine von NO ?
MA RA VI LLO SO!!!!!!!!
slide trombone man reminds me a bit of tom snyder [ newsie , died 2007]
I first heard the band in NO in 1974. I know they are getting old but can't believe they couldn't find brother's good enough to replace the old guys when they passed away.
Musica no seu melhor.....
Играют кто в лес, кто по дрова...
Die brauchen keine Präservative mehr.