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Hitz Academy Blog

A blog about performing music, teaching music and the business of music.

Filtering by Category: Monday YouTube Fix

Monday YouTube Fix: Lauren Veronie

Andrew Hitz

General wisdom states that all euphonium solos are either Danny Boy or faster than hell.  The end of Napoli certainly fits the bill for the later of those two descriptions. I had the privilege of meeting Lauren when the US Army Field Band and Boston Brass collaborated a few years ago and have been a big fan of both her playing and her blog/travel log ever since.  I stumbled on this clip when surfing YouTube and was very impressed.  When I hear playing as controlled and effortless as her's I take note and try to apply it to my own playing.

I've played for many audiences as old as the one that she is performing for and I realize how hard it is to make that demographic react that strongly to a performance (including a standing ovation!) But when you play like that anyone and everyone will react.

Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lQdtrte2mQk&feature=youtube_gdata_player]

Monday YouTube Fix: Wynton Marsalis Quintet Featuring Frank Vignola and Mark O'Connor

Andrew Hitz

Man is there whole lot of talent on one stage in this clip! These are some of my favorite performers coming together for an awesome rendition of Sweet Georgia Brown.  I got to know Frank Vignola when he was half of the duo Travelin' Light with Sam Pilafian many moons ago.  I even got to jam with him once in a hotel room in Evanston with my friend Zach Brock when Frank and Sam were in town for the tuba conference at Northwestern in 1995.  It was one of the most fun times I've ever had playing the tuba.  Good times.

I don't think that Mark O'Connor or Wynton really need any introduction.  Simply amazing storytellers.  Awesome clip!

Enjoy!

[vimeo http://vimeo.com/14111149]

Monday YouTube Fix: Medeski, Martin & Wood

Andrew Hitz

No brass this week but instead one of my favorite bands in the world.  I have seen MMW in concert around 75 times and always walk away inspired and motivated to make music.  All three of them play with an incredible amount of style.   The keyboard player, John Medeski, is one of my favorite musicians in the world.  This is a great clip of him in particular.  I have always likened him to a mad scientist.  I have had a lot of luck transferring the intensity with which he plays music like this to my own playing, even things like orchestral excerpts.

As Rex Martin taught me you can play any note or any phrase with one of two punctuation marks: a question mark or an exclamation point.  All three members of MMW scream exclamation points.

Enjoy!

 

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EUZL_wmsXLI&feature=youtube_gdata_player]

Monday YouTube Fix: Mstislav Rostropovich

Andrew Hitz

One of the greatest cellists of all time playing my second favorite solo piece ever written. The Bach Cello Suites, as anyone who has ever attempted to play them on any instrument can tell you, are deceivingly difficult.  Whenever you are playing an unaccompanied piece you must be everything: the melody, the time, the harmony, everything.  Few in history have done this more convincingly than Rostropovich.

If I could play any instrument other than the tuba it would be the cello and that is because of people like this.

Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZwKjpEtnSQ&feature=youtube_gdata_player]

Monday YouTube Fix: Matt Perrine, Lew Soloff, Ray Anderson & Bobby Previte

Andrew Hitz

With all due respect to Ray Anderson, Lew Soloff, and Bobby Previte I put Matt's name first because he is one of my hero's.  The first time I heard him play the sousaphone I was driving into New Orleans and listening to the great radio station WWOZ.  He was playing with Bonerama and the tune was called Blues for Ben from the album 'Live at the Old Pointe'.  I started fist pumping and yelling woo-hoos! I had never heard sousaphone playing like this in my life.

They didn't say what the tune was or who was playing and this was long before the Shazam app so I called the station.  Evidently I asked the DJ with such urgent enthusiasm who in the hell I just heard playing the sousaphone that he literally cracked up.  After he told me it was Matt he said to stay tuned for the song.  He then mentioned the eager sousaphone fan and played another track of Matt's with the Tin Men.  That morning in New Orleans changed my conception of what a sousaphone could do.

I had the privilege of meeting Matt last spring when we did clinics on consecutive days at his alma mater in Sacramento.  It was great to put a face to the name and he is as nice a guy as you could ever hope to meet.  Not every day you get to meet one of your heroes!

Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5WhRMFsVT5o&feature=share]

Monday YouTube Fix: Carl Fontana

Andrew Hitz

This clip is incredible yet not in any way exceptional.  Carl Fontana has played a million solos in his long and illustrious career that were just as effortless.  That were just as in the pocket.  That were just as melodic.  That were just as magnificent. It is mind-boggling to me the legacy he has left behind.  I've never heard anyone talk about the best trombone soloists of all time and not include Carl Fontana in the discussion.  Many of my heroes consider him one as well.  I always come back to the word effortless and this clip embodies that.

Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GohhLbN981s]

Monday YouTube Fix: Les Neish and David Childs

Andrew Hitz

I was very happy when I stumbled upon this clip of two of the best low brass soloists in the world.  Les and David are the kind of players that keep the rest of us in the practice room a little longer than we might have otherwise. The first thing that strikes me about players is their sound.  No matter how difficult a passage may be, they both play with the same characteristically beautiful sound at all times.  That is what I strive for always and it is not as easy as these two make it look!

Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wmg0KVDf-8c]

Monday YouTube Fix: Maurice André

Andrew Hitz

I was very fortunate growing up to have a father who was very interested in classical music.  He had a large collection of compact discs before it was common.  In fact, he picked upped our family's first CD player on a business trip to Tokyo when they were still incredibly expensive here in the States.  As a brass player himself growing up, he had quite a few albums by many different brass players.  One of the artists I remember the most was Maurice André. What a sound.  What style.  What phrasing.  He was the consummate artist.  His trumpet playing was lush and always passionate.  His sound is one that an entire generation of brass players has modeled themselves after.  I was honored to meet him in 2001 at the ITG in Manchester, England.

Mr. André passed away last month and the world lost a true gem.  May he rest in peace.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RLDF8OeD-hc]

 

Monday YouTube Fix: Jeff Nelsen "Fearless Performance" from TedxBloomington

Andrew Hitz

Last week's collection of motivating and inspiring quotes from Jeff Nelsen's master class at George Mason inspired me to post this video.  It is truly a powerful thing watching Jeff do what he does on stage, whether with his horn or with his words.  This is an incredible talk that is absolutely worth 10 minutes of your time to become a better performer in all aspects of your life. Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ko1pS9LeTg&]

Monday YouTube Fix: Yo-Yo Ma, Bobby McFerrin, Mark O'Connor & Edgar Meyer

Andrew Hitz

I guess this clip is predictably awesome.  I don't care what these four musicians are playing, if they are playing together it is going to be special.  Even 'Hush Little Baby'! As people who are at the absolute top of their profession, all four of these guys are used to being the center of musical attention.  Yet in this clip, each one is both contributing and not even remotely over-stepping their role within the ensemble.  This is unheralded yet imperative quality in any musician.

This is such a simple version of an incredibly simple tune yet there is something very special about it.  Oh to have been in the audience for this performance.

Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GczSTQ2nv94]