i love how quickly it goes from mozart to complete and utter musical degeneracy. 0:17 School Days (Stanley Clarke) 0:23 Smoke On The Water (Deep Purple) 0:37 Burn (Deep Purple) 0:43 Richard Tee style 0:52 Domino Line (Casiopea) 1:31 Sonata Facile KV545 (Mozart) 1:55 Jonetsu Tairku 2:02 On The TRail (Ferde Froge's Grand Canyon Suite) Thanks for commenter contributions^^
0:37 is the riff from Deep Purple's "Burn". Would make a bit more sense, right after Smoke on the Water i think. Also since when is Michio Kaku playing guitar? lmao edit: Keys 2 section at 1:55 is also a very popular phrase, but i don't remember the name.
The jingle at 1:54 from keys 2 might be Conga by Miami Sound Machine. The rhythm is a little different though. I'm too late to comment about Deep Purple's Burn at 0:36 lol.
@@ThaddeusSilva Koji Kondo has said that one of his main inspirations when writing Mario music is T-Square. The main Mario theme is definitely borrowing from the T-Square song 'Sister Marian', and in my opinion Soyo Oka's 'Battle Mode' music from Super Mario Kart borrows from the T-Square song 'Rodan'. The fact that members of T-Square (along with their contemporary band Dimension) now help create Mario music brings me great joy. T-Square's musical inspiration on Mario has come full circle.
@@lakejizzio7777 you’re not wrong, but first they trade solos every 4 bars/16 beats, then they trade every 2 bars, finally then trading every bar/4 beats… I’d agree with the original comment saying trading every bar is an epic way to end this whole section
it was rehearsed. check out the cd release, was the same concert but on a different day, so different solos. ends more or less the same way. good way to signify the end of the main solo section tho
I just recently started getting into Japanese contemporary jazz and this is why I dig it. They put little comedic touches on top of amazing shredding over smooth grooves.
@@dag1407 go here cuz this guy has a big catalog and he’s playing on a guitar that’s a huge surfboard in this video…literally shredding 🤣 th-cam.com/video/cTDK5Bluh5A/w-d-xo.html
Everyone's talking about the musicians but let's also give a quick shout-out to the camera crew and control room for being on point with all the cutting around back and forth between performers.
Musicians are: 0:02 Akira Jimbo from CASIOPEA (stayed in 1980-1989, 1997-2022) 0:09 Hiroyuki Noritake from THE SQUARE (stayed in 1985-2000) 0:16 Yoshihiro Naruse from CASIOPEA (staying from 1990-present) 0:23 Mitsuru Suto from THE SQUARE (stayed in 1986-2000) 0:30 Minoru Mukaiya from CASIOPEA (stayed in 1977-2006) 0:37 Keizo Kawano from THE SQUARE (stayed in 2005-2020) 0:43 Hirotaka Izumi from THE SQUARE (stayed in 1982-1998) 0:51 Issei Noro from CASIOPEA (staying from 1976-present) 0:58 Masahiro Ando from THE SQUARE (stayed in 1976-2021) 1:04 Takeshi Ito from THE SQUARE (stayed in 1977-1990, 2000-present) Hirotaka Izumi passed away in 2021. Rest in peace.
@@aiinsant yes he's still a support member, that's why he didn't appear on album covers. And I think he's the best alongside late Izumi-san as T-Square keyboardist/pianist.
This has got to be one of my favorite of your videos and that is saying a lot considering I’m a trombone player and love listening to some REALLY LOW VOCAL NOTES
1:32 loved it! I almost choked on my coffee laughing! The solos were getting funkier and weirder an he comes with a f-ing Mozart sonata out of nowhere lol
This is like watching a heist movie in a scene where the entire crew is playing their own individual role and it somehow all comes together in an amazing way at the end
These two bands are just absolute masters. When I found them around 2014, I had never, and still have never, seen groups play shows with just so much FUN. There is basically never a point where they all don't have goofy grins or faces on. In ANY of their live shows I've ever found on youtube. They are fuckin' SHREDDING and having the time of their lives. God I love them so much. I need to acquire physical albums of theirs, I swear.
@@juangabrieleliasgomez518 Casiopea & T-Square. Watch any live shows of Casiopea, they are amazing. Especially Mid Manhattan from the Live in London 1983 show. edit: naming just one song is too hard. They just have way to many good ones: galactic funk, space road, dazzling, ayasake, domino line, misty lady, looking up, take me, conjunction, ... to name a few.
YES! IM SO HAPPY PEOPLE HAVE FOUND THIS BEAUTIFUL CORNER OF JAZZ FUSION! Highly recommend watching the full concert, it's insane. Also go listen to each of these bands, really high tier musicians with exciting and unique takes on jazz with ideas you won't find anywhere else
I just watched the whole concert in its entirety Friday night of last week! TRULY some amazing artists/musicians, I’m so glad I found/discovered both Casiopea and T-Square last year! I DEFINITELY will be rewatching this whole concert all over again sometime this upcoming Summer. Rest In Peace Hirotaka Izumi 🙏🏽
@@karabelle221 th-cam.com/video/wBD1_mrRUIk/w-d-xo.html here on TH-cam! It’s got just about everything included except for them playing “Get Back” by The Beatles at the end, along with bloopers/end credits which can all be found on separate videos.
This is called jugalbandi in Indian/Pakistani classical music. Usually two or three artists will play, say, 16 or 32 measures each. Then the time is halved over and over and over again until each person is only playing one beat. After that, they all progressively start to meld together until it becomes an explosion of sound. It's a beautiful thing to behold.
@@BenjaminTheBatchelor tons. To start with, just look up "tabla jugalbandi" and you'll immediately get tons of results. Ustad Zakir Hussain playing with his father, Ustad Alla Rakha, is one of my all-time favorite duos - because the father-son relationship doesn't exist on stage, only the teacher-student relationship. Even though both of them were already well-established masters by the time Zakirji was in his 20s. Zakirji is over 70 now and has been at the forefront of fusion classical/jazz/rock music, and his father (RIP) was one of the most innovative players of all time. th-cam.com/video/zcUZiuejt9g/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/hrgqYM_kTYY/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/E2u2X9ezCuA/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/mmiThgzYX5E/w-d-xo.html
I've loved listening to Classical South Asian music since I first heard it as a teenager but I never knew this was a deliberate and named method. That building tempo and unifying crescendo appealed to me without me even knowing what it was. Music always has more to teach us.
A lot of people are pointing out the Smoke on the Water and Mozart references, but 2:02 is straight from one of my favorite symphonies, the "On the Trail" movement of the Grand Canyon Suite!
Casiopea vs. T-Square. The full concert is on TH-cam. Highly recommend watching. Two powerhouses of japanese jazz fusion and to see them both on the same stage is incredible
Casiopea is FUCKING AMAZING. Would definitely like to see some more transcriptions of Casiopea for sure. Especially any of Tetsuo Sakurai's insane bass solos.
@@elisantiago8061 yeah, I don’t mind Yoshihiro Naruse. He’s very good. I just really love the bass solos that Tetsuo Sakurai put down. Especially the live performance of Looking Up and Domino Line. Regardless, the whole of Casiopea is a group of extremely talented musicians that brought so much great music to the world. So energetic and happy as well.
There's nothing wrong with quoting other musicians work and using it as a foundation for something new. In fact a huge part of the jazz tradition which Gershwin is part of is exactly that. And it's not just Jazz, the same thing is the case with the blues, with rock, with western art music, ect. It's only in the past few decades that people have started getting pissy about the same sequence of notes that they used being used by someone else, and that's only because people are fucking greedy bastards. There's so much more to music than just a sequence of notes played in a specific rhythm.
Some people may not know but the Guitarist at 0:58, Masahiro Andoh from T-Square, actually made a lot of music for the Gran Turismo series 1-5 including the famous 'Moon over the Castle'.
And the pianist, Minoru Mukaiya from Casiopea has made train jingles for the lines in and throughout the Tokyo subways and train systems throughout the years. These guys are just the coolest people.
Fun fact: the grey haired guitarist is Masahiro Andoh, a composer for the Gran Turismo series of games. For an alternate version of Moon Over The Castle, check out Knights Song by T-Square. Masato Honda’s EWI solo on that is FIRE!
YO this concert is one of the greatest ever and the Japanese Soul Brothers/Fight Man medley is an absolute highlight. I've watched this for years. Such a blessing to see it transcribed!
I've watched this full concert video so many times and the sax player for tsquare's outfit just gets more and more ridiculous everytime I look at it. What a legend
The best way I can explain this piece is two people battling neck and neck wresting for the advantage . And in their toil, at 1:31 the fight drags them into a tea parlor, populated by only the most exquisite clientele. Then shortly after they fall back into the fight.
im so glad this is getting recognition. this is one of my favorite live performances ever by a band. Casiopea and T-Square are the bands btw if anyone was wondering
And this is immediately followed by another avalanche of incredible solos. I'm biased as a guitar player, but I just adore Masahiro Andoh's playing in this fightman rendition as a whole. Beyond smooth
I am so glad to see this posted and transcribed here. T-Square is my absolute favorite jazz act, and Casiopeia is right up there with them. T-Square is so incredibly underrated and little known outside of Japan, and they are, in my personal opinion, the most skilled and talented jazz fusion group to emerge from the scene. Masahiro Andoh (first appears at 0:58) is the Japanese Eddie van Halen and is a phenomenal guitarist; Mitsuri Sutoh (first appears at 0:23) is one of my favorite bassists, and his slap play style is like ear candy; the late Hirotaka Izumi (first appears at 0:45) really was like a modern-day Mozart as his solo would suggest; Takeshi Ito (first appears at 1:05) is a highly underrated saxophonist, EWI player and flautist; and Issei Noro's (first appears at 0:52) unique funky style practically defined the Japanese Fusion movement. This is one of my favorite performances of the two groups, the fun they have while goofing around and trading solos is positively enthralling. Thank you and your assistants for transcribing this moment so beautifully. More people need to know about T-Square and Casiopeia.
i love how quickly it goes from mozart to complete and utter musical degeneracy.
0:17 School Days (Stanley Clarke)
0:23 Smoke On The Water (Deep Purple)
0:37 Burn (Deep Purple)
0:43 Richard Tee style
0:52 Domino Line (Casiopea)
1:31 Sonata Facile KV545 (Mozart)
1:55 Jonetsu Tairku
2:02 On The TRail (Ferde Froge's Grand Canyon Suite)
Thanks for commenter contributions^^
0:37 is the riff from Deep Purple's "Burn". Would make a bit more sense, right after Smoke on the Water i think.
Also since when is Michio Kaku playing guitar? lmao
edit: Keys 2 section at 1:55 is also a very popular phrase, but i don't remember the name.
1:54 Keys 2 little jingle sounds familiar
@@ijhhcfionlkgs it's the theme of 情熱大陸 (Jonetsu Tairiku)
The jingle at 1:54 from keys 2 might be Conga by Miami Sound Machine. The rhythm is a little different though.
I'm too late to comment about Deep Purple's Burn at 0:36 lol.
but how out of the world did you transcribe this!?
the worst part of this video is that it ends
Could have gone for the full orchestra really
Good things are never enough, especially this solo.
had us in the first half ngl
th-cam.com/video/Edc2yVHRHiQ/w-d-xo.html
I feel like there was some damage to my health when I din't get the full resolving at the end after all that build up.
The mozart sonata appearing out of nowhere in the middle of all this was just perfect
Time stamp? I’m dumb lol
Edit 1:32
@@jeremymarks8228 the hero we didn't deserve
A-HA! Nobody expects span... MOZART SONATA!
Had to go back 10 seconds to have another laugh.
Literally dying laughing at that part, I would be on my feet jumping shouting if someone did that. Super hype and hilarious
absolute madlad gets a bass solo, plays smoke on the water
The bravest bass player indeed
and the guitar at 0:54 plays a slap bit
amazing
one of the guitar players on the end does the last part of the stairway to heaven solo 😂
Otherwise known as 0-3-5
Organ player also sneaks some Deep Purple in there
>Finally get bass solo
>Years of pain and practice
>All leading here
>Here it comes
>Play smoke on the water
>Refuse to elaborate
A true hero.
my favorite bass solo part is him straight up slapping the bass once LMAO
and the guy playing the guitar like a bass lol
@urproblemif i knew i was competing against yoshihiro naruse i would just not show up
The 2nd solo is he plays terribly offbeat lmao
>greentext outside of 4cuck
1:31 I love how you can hear the audience bursting into laughter at the Mozart sonata
This kind of sounds like a Mario Kart 8 song but the fills never stop
One of the drummers in this video, Hiroyuki Noritake, is one of the drummers on the Mario Kart 8 soundtrack
Also one of the guitarists, Masahiro Andoh, composed the music for Gran Turismo
@@sbthree satoshi bandoh also played on the soundtrack!
@@ThaddeusSilva Koji Kondo has said that one of his main inspirations when writing Mario music is T-Square. The main Mario theme is definitely borrowing from the T-Square song 'Sister Marian', and in my opinion Soyo Oka's 'Battle Mode' music from Super Mario Kart borrows from the T-Square song 'Rodan'. The fact that members of T-Square (along with their contemporary band Dimension) now help create Mario music brings me great joy. T-Square's musical inspiration on Mario has come full circle.
I would have said Pokémon Colosseum/XD, so pretty much any high tempo Gamecube era track😂
Wow, trading solos in completely different styles up to every 4 beats is no joke!
More like every 8 beats
@@lakejizzio7777 4
@@yunhan7653 wouldnt it be 4 bars and 16 beats
Wouldn't it be 8 restaurants and 32 carrots?
@@lakejizzio7777 you’re not wrong, but first they trade solos every 4 bars/16 beats, then they trade every 2 bars, finally then trading every bar/4 beats… I’d agree with the original comment saying trading every bar is an epic way to end this whole section
RIP Izumi, amazing composer, and keyboardist on T-SQUARE. Your solo which just playing the Sonata always makes me laugh.
wow didn't expect you here. btw. how are you not verified yet?
no wayy, bro I love your stuff man
and rip Izumi
i love camellia's stuff so much im glad you enjoy jazz too man
camellia is watching the most band kid channel to ever exist, i feel blessed
yo camellia is here
2:17 if the sax player was able to copy the guitar riff on the spot and especially with these high pitched notes, he's a beast...
it was rehearsed. check out the cd release, was the same concert but on a different day, so different solos. ends more or less the same way. good way to signify the end of the main solo section tho
It is the end of the solo on stairway to heaven
@@snspi1 he’s still a beast tho
@@Flapjack505 not as much of a beast as masato honda, his successor (or predecessor at this point) >:]
to get to such a great level of live rendition, I'm pretty sure it took preparation
great nonetheless. Go watch the full piece, it's really worth it !
0:08 Bruh we need to talk about this camera panning
that last scene from whiplash got the same camera panning
Even the camera operator got a solo!
@@ImmortalDestructor Golden comment
Whiplash Damien Chazelle ahh cinematography
I first saw this video like 2 years ago and I think about that pan at least twice a week
Hmmm, I have two measures. What should I do?
Uh, Mozart? Yep, that'll work.
Absolutely amazing song and performance. Such a jam.
that cracked me up lmao
@@HappyBeezerStudios yep
Always works
YOU get a solo ✨
YOU get a solo ✨
YOU get a solo ✨
YOU ALL GET A SOLO!!!!
✨✨✨✨✨✨✨
haha that made me laugh!:)
What about Han !! Does he get a SOLO ?? 😎
Band directors in jazz band be like
@@jonathangaray4937 He doesn’t he already IS THE SOLO
I just recently started getting into Japanese contemporary jazz and this is why I dig it. They put little comedic touches on top of amazing shredding over smooth grooves.
I've listened to a little of contemporary Japanese jazz and I adore it, got any reccs?
@@dag1407 TRIX!
@@dag1407 go here cuz this guy has a big catalog and he’s playing on a guitar that’s a huge surfboard in this video…literally shredding 🤣 th-cam.com/video/cTDK5Bluh5A/w-d-xo.html
@@dag1407 from the 80s: casiopeia
@@dag1407 fox capture plan, blu-swing and paris match are some of my favourites.
Everyone's talking about the musicians but let's also give a quick shout-out to the camera crew and control room for being on point with all the cutting around back and forth between performers.
The absolute madlad at 1:32 playing a Sonata has not only balls of steel, but probably a closet of monocles to boot!
😂🤣
I think that “literally play anything quickly” has got to be my new favourite piece of musical notation
Discovering this whole elaborate sheet music shitpost has got to be the best thing I've discovered in 2024 thus far
@@thealandude9146 ikr wish I found this earlier
@@Aniyah-CHG Yes. yes. yesyesyesyesyesyesyesyesyesyes
Musicians are:
0:02 Akira Jimbo from CASIOPEA (stayed in 1980-1989, 1997-2022)
0:09 Hiroyuki Noritake from THE SQUARE (stayed in 1985-2000)
0:16 Yoshihiro Naruse from CASIOPEA (staying from 1990-present)
0:23 Mitsuru Suto from THE SQUARE (stayed in 1986-2000)
0:30 Minoru Mukaiya from CASIOPEA (stayed in 1977-2006)
0:37 Keizo Kawano from THE SQUARE (stayed in 2005-2020)
0:43 Hirotaka Izumi from THE SQUARE (stayed in 1982-1998)
0:51 Issei Noro from CASIOPEA (staying from 1976-present)
0:58 Masahiro Ando from THE SQUARE (stayed in 1976-2021)
1:04 Takeshi Ito from THE SQUARE (stayed in 1977-1990, 2000-present)
Hirotaka Izumi passed away in 2021. Rest in peace.
Little correction. Masahiro Ando from THE SQUARE. Not Casiopea.
@@hendroprasetyo9814 oops, i've fixed it. thx.
umm...peace? or I get it wrong lol
@@kebihara Oh yeah and also in this era of T-Square, Keizo Kawano is still a support member. He became an official in 2004 or 2005 i think.
@@aiinsant yes he's still a support member, that's why he didn't appear on album covers. And I think he's the best alongside late Izumi-san as T-Square keyboardist/pianist.
This has got to be one of my favorite of your videos and that is saying a lot considering I’m a trombone player and love listening to some REALLY LOW VOCAL NOTES
Are you me?
Trombone gang
TROMBONE GANG
@@rickyc1410 I wanted to comment these exact three words... So... Are you me?
I AM ME
the call and response with the guitar and sax at the end is just so DIRTYYYY
1:21 gotta love it when the gituar deadass says "yah-y"
Bogos Binted ahh sound 👽👽👽
It’s a bass my guy
@@hairglowingkyle4572😂
@@Fellon11a bass guitar 🙄
1:32 loved it! I almost choked on my coffee laughing! The solos were getting funkier and weirder an he comes with a f-ing Mozart sonata out of nowhere lol
He caught your attention he wins
😂😂😂 what an absolute madlad
And the funkyness after didn’t disappoint 😂
Gotta love that contrast of Mozart followed by the funkiest rhythm guitar you'll hear all day
Legend
@@kevingao5787 LMAOOO
0:51 to 1:32 is all so smooth
And then it's the freaking Mozart sonata
the mozart sonata made it a masterpiece
I laughed so hard when that popped up lmfao
This is like watching a heist movie in a scene where the entire crew is playing their own individual role and it somehow all comes together in an amazing way at the end
I love this comment
i love how it just slowly becomes just "play the most fucking random and creative shit u can think of right now"
That's some live jazz for you baby 😂
wrote an essay on this concert for a music appreciation class and the trading solos here was so good that i spent half my essay talking about it
I would love to read that essay
Same! Seriously!
agreed!
Please share it with us
no essay?
1:57 my favorite part and it's beautifully transcribed. Love it.
Edit: wtf 1k likes. I don't deserve it lol
Agreed!
I thought 2:11 was transcribed perfectly
lmfaoo thats funny
Cracks me up every time I see it 😂😂😂
These two bands are just absolute masters. When I found them around 2014, I had never, and still have never, seen groups play shows with just so much FUN. There is basically never a point where they all don't have goofy grins or faces on. In ANY of their live shows I've ever found on youtube. They are fuckin' SHREDDING and having the time of their lives. God I love them so much. I need to acquire physical albums of theirs, I swear.
whats their names?
@@juangabrieleliasgomez518 Casiopea & T-Square.
Watch any live shows of Casiopea, they are amazing. Especially Mid Manhattan from the Live in London 1983 show.
edit: naming just one song is too hard. They just have way to many good ones: galactic funk, space road, dazzling, ayasake, domino line, misty lady, looking up, take me, conjunction, ... to name a few.
Nah, that sax mirroring the last guitar solo is underrated
YES! IM SO HAPPY PEOPLE HAVE FOUND THIS BEAUTIFUL CORNER OF JAZZ FUSION! Highly recommend watching the full concert, it's insane. Also go listen to each of these bands, really high tier musicians with exciting and unique takes on jazz with ideas you won't find anywhere else
The whole concert was the only thing on my limewire. So glad people are discovering them too!
I just watched the whole concert in its entirety Friday night of last week! TRULY some amazing artists/musicians, I’m so glad I found/discovered both Casiopea and T-Square last year! I DEFINITELY will be rewatching this whole concert all over again sometime this upcoming Summer. Rest In Peace Hirotaka Izumi 🙏🏽
Where can I find the full concert?
Can you link me the original video?
@@karabelle221 th-cam.com/video/wBD1_mrRUIk/w-d-xo.html here on TH-cam! It’s got just about everything included except for them playing “Get Back” by The Beatles at the end, along with bloopers/end credits which can all be found on separate videos.
This is called jugalbandi in Indian/Pakistani classical music. Usually two or three artists will play, say, 16 or 32 measures each. Then the time is halved over and over and over again until each person is only playing one beat. After that, they all progressively start to meld together until it becomes an explosion of sound. It's a beautiful thing to behold.
that's actually cool as shit! do you have any favorite recordings of what you described that I could look up?
@@BenjaminTheBatchelor tons. To start with, just look up "tabla jugalbandi" and you'll immediately get tons of results. Ustad Zakir Hussain playing with his father, Ustad Alla Rakha, is one of my all-time favorite duos - because the father-son relationship doesn't exist on stage, only the teacher-student relationship. Even though both of them were already well-established masters by the time Zakirji was in his 20s. Zakirji is over 70 now and has been at the forefront of fusion classical/jazz/rock music, and his father (RIP) was one of the most innovative players of all time.
th-cam.com/video/zcUZiuejt9g/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/hrgqYM_kTYY/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/E2u2X9ezCuA/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/mmiThgzYX5E/w-d-xo.html
Sounds cool!
I've loved listening to Classical South Asian music since I first heard it as a teenager but I never knew this was a deliberate and named method. That building tempo and unifying crescendo appealed to me without me even knowing what it was. Music always has more to teach us.
wow!
A lot of people are pointing out the Smoke on the Water and Mozart references, but 2:02 is straight from one of my favorite symphonies, the "On the Trail" movement of the Grand Canyon Suite!
Bump
The keyboardist also quoted deep purple's 'burn'
@@josteinv.jordet257the part at 0:37?
Casiopea vs. T-Square. The full concert is on TH-cam. Highly recommend watching. Two powerhouses of japanese jazz fusion and to see them both on the same stage is incredible
I agree
i keep coming back to this every few months or so and it somehow gets better every single time, i'll see you again in late 2024
1:56 I love how you seemed to give up transcribing that 😂
i had things to do, decided my time would be better spent studying for finals lmao
@@GeorgeCollier how do you even transcribe stuff? You should do a video on your process because damn you're amazing at this
Its one of those things that's just not important to transcribe, its more accurately transcribed as movement
@@Smung that’s what I told myself hahaha
I believe that was transcribed correctly 🎵〰️ 😂
Casiopea is FUCKING AMAZING. Would definitely like to see some more transcriptions of Casiopea for sure. Especially any of Tetsuo Sakurai's insane bass solos.
Funny enough he wasn't here, he left the band in 1989. Would have been amazing to hear him shred on this.
@@elisantiago8061 yeah, I don’t mind Yoshihiro Naruse. He’s very good. I just really love the bass solos that Tetsuo Sakurai put down. Especially the live performance of Looking Up and Domino Line. Regardless, the whole of Casiopea is a group of extremely talented musicians that brought so much great music to the world. So energetic and happy as well.
@@PibbXtraPls Domino Line solo tho
huge casiopea fan here too, would’ve loved to see tetsuo in this performance
i haven't seen Tetsuo in casiopea's lineup in a long time... same with Masato with Tsquare :(
Best part is they’re all just having fun and messing around
1:38 so beautiful sound
1:36 you mean
I love this version of fightman so much 🔥
That's not Fascinating Rhythm, it's Burn by Deep Purple!
Oh, you’re right, it could be. Both are literally exactly the same notes but your suggestion might be more likely given the era.
@@GeorgeCollier it uses the same keyboard tone that deep purple used as well
Also maybe a cheeky call-out since Smoke On The Water also made an appearance.
It's Burn but it's such an obvious ripoff. Gershwin did it first
There's nothing wrong with quoting other musicians work and using it as a foundation for something new. In fact a huge part of the jazz tradition which Gershwin is part of is exactly that. And it's not just Jazz, the same thing is the case with the blues, with rock, with western art music, ect.
It's only in the past few decades that people have started getting pissy about the same sequence of notes that they used being used by someone else, and that's only because people are fucking greedy bastards. There's so much more to music than just a sequence of notes played in a specific rhythm.
Some people may not know but the Guitarist at 0:58, Masahiro Andoh from T-Square, actually made a lot of music for the Gran Turismo series 1-5 including the famous 'Moon over the Castle'.
And the pianist, Minoru Mukaiya from Casiopea has made train jingles for the lines in and throughout the Tokyo subways and train systems throughout the years. These guys are just the coolest people.
Fun fact: the grey haired guitarist is Masahiro Andoh, a composer for the Gran Turismo series of games. For an alternate version of Moon Over The Castle, check out Knights Song by T-Square. Masato Honda’s EWI solo on that is FIRE!
I like how each segment of the solo slowly progresses from jazz to "more jazz"
As a musician the best word I can use to describe these performances is CLEAN, just clean as hell, absolutely amazing
Oh man I love this performance so much glad someone finally had the balls to transcribe it 💗✨😩🥰
You catch the squiggly line for that one piano run 🤣🤣🤣
I actually find this a very good idea! I bet the whole crowd was paying 100% of their attention in this part of the show.
thank you so much for making this, I love T-Square and Casiopea, and this comes from their amazing concert together
The fact that they had a concert together is the best crossover in history.
Drummer to drummer I LOVE 00:16 how you purposely kept the bell pattern the same thru a few measures to displace the beat 🤩
This tells how talented they are on there own and would be even better as a team.
Huge rispect to them.
1:34 had me dying 🤣🤣
Same lmao
At 2:17 where the guitar and the sax trade mesures get me goosebumps
YO this concert is one of the greatest ever and the Japanese Soul Brothers/Fight Man medley is an absolute highlight. I've watched this for years. Such a blessing to see it transcribed!
and. the saxophonist blows them all away literally.
the number of insane musicians required to duplicate such an absurd piece of music is phenomenal
if you feed all the music in the world into an AI and let it spew out a medley....
the AI doesn't know 035 is forbidden.
This would be played in a movie scene where each instrument represents a different character, and they're all fighting for the same thing
If you haven't watched it Cowboy Bebop has one of the greatest soundtracks of any TV series
@@Lanteader This was from a Casiopea VS T-Square concert so you're kinda right.
Only fitting that this is Casiopea's song titled 'Fightman'
Discovering this last year was incredible. Some of the most pure joy I've ever seen in musical performance!
that Mozart part MADE MY DAY!!!
Is this the BEST video around internet ?
Im impressed how smooth all their transitions are
LMAO I died when he played that mozart part, music can be such great comedy
Bro that sonata right there was genius, pure comedic value
I've watched this full concert video so many times and the sax player for tsquare's outfit just gets more and more ridiculous everytime I look at it. What a legend
Seriously impressed at your transcription abilities. Bravo!
This vid is legendary, thank you for the transcription! it was so fun to see.
Hats off to the stage, video and camera crew for doing an amazing job keeping up with all the quick switches. The true unsung(unplayed) heroes.
As soon as I saw Minoru Mukaiya appear, I fangirled hard, that man is frickin’ GOOD on the keys, holy moly!
It got progressively better and better. Loved the random classical bits.
This is like the part of a show or movie where everyone is getting introduced. Everyone gets a chance to shine then one big flourish at the end.
Great to see Casiopea and T-Square content getting recognition, these guys are all legends of Japanese jazz fusion
That transition out of the solos was hectic too
The best way I can explain this piece is two people battling neck and neck wresting for the advantage . And in their toil, at 1:31 the fight drags them into a tea parlor, populated by only the most exquisite clientele. Then shortly after they fall back into the fight.
HELL YEAH FIGHTMAN!!! love this
the tone of the second guitar was chef kiss
Man that one Japanese guy is an amazing musician!
this is exactly why casiopea is one of the greatest and most underrated bands of all time
when the keyboard did 📈📉📉📈📉
OH THAT WAS TOO GOOD
Fuck I love Casiopea and The Square. Absolute master musicians.
im so glad this is getting recognition. this is one of my favorite live performances ever by a band. Casiopea and T-Square are the bands btw if anyone was wondering
0:58 ooOOOoooo, that guitar solo was sooooo clean!!
1:49 when it's your time to shine and you fuck it up
At least his boy had em 😂
You absolute GOD! This is my fav musical performance ever. The whole thing gives me goosebumps everytime and you tabbed it!
The full video of this is absolutely amazing. Never seen a performance like it
And this is immediately followed by another avalanche of incredible solos. I'm biased as a guitar player, but I just adore Masahiro Andoh's playing in this fightman rendition as a whole. Beyond smooth
I am so glad to see this posted and transcribed here. T-Square is my absolute favorite jazz act, and Casiopeia is right up there with them. T-Square is so incredibly underrated and little known outside of Japan, and they are, in my personal opinion, the most skilled and talented jazz fusion group to emerge from the scene. Masahiro Andoh (first appears at 0:58) is the Japanese Eddie van Halen and is a phenomenal guitarist; Mitsuri Sutoh (first appears at 0:23) is one of my favorite bassists, and his slap play style is like ear candy; the late Hirotaka Izumi (first appears at 0:45) really was like a modern-day Mozart as his solo would suggest; Takeshi Ito (first appears at 1:05) is a highly underrated saxophonist, EWI player and flautist; and Issei Noro's (first appears at 0:52) unique funky style practically defined the Japanese Fusion movement. This is one of my favorite performances of the two groups, the fun they have while goofing around and trading solos is positively enthralling. Thank you and your assistants for transcribing this moment so beautifully. More people need to know about T-Square and Casiopeia.
this should be titled "when literally everyone wants a solo and everyone is incredible at them"
T square getting some appreciation for once
the whole concert is amazing! Casiopea's songs accomodate the sax and flute very well
mutliple people have already pointed out 1:32 but im adding a drop to the bucket because fuck that was genuinely really funny
Rare to see so many gifted musicians in one area the all have soul and technique usally it goes one without the other
The only dude missed in this crossover lineup is Tetsuo Sakurai..
That electric guitar slap part by Issei Norro is legendary..
this made my night
best thing ive watched at 12:16 am
no way I'm back, a year later at 12.24 am
the fact that the guitar player was the first to slap and the bass players doing the iconic guitar riffs
The saxophone is so under appreciated here. He's absolutely shredding.
1:32 🤣🤣🤣 when the director realizes that you actually play whatever you want:
"0:43 Richard Tee style" ends with a progression that Toto loves to use, just don't know anymore which song it was.
I fucking love those last piano notations, the wave function-like scribble and the straight up "play anything quicky"
The spinning around at the end! Also, loved looking at their faces. They were all clearly so into it and it was awesome