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Welcome to Jazz Tube a search engine to help source all your jazz videos.
Enter a artist name of the world of music and videos on that artist will appear

MavenMusic on Amazon-Canada is selling off my extensive collection of  Jazz/Blues CD's And DVD's. Click on the link and the the Used link and order from MavenMusic.

Miles Davis 1963-1964: Seven Steps 7CD Deluxe Box Set Click Here

Chick Corea: Rendezvous in New York 10 DVD Box Set. Click Here

The Band Box Set A Musical History: 1968-1975 (6CD) Click Here

Downchild Blues Band Live At The Palais Royale. Click Here

Charlie Haden Private Collection. Click Here

Jack Dejohnette Music We Are (CD + Bonus DVD) Click Here

The Bad Plus Blunt Object: Live in Tokyo
Click Here

Michel Camilo Live At The Blue Note

Click Here

Martin Scorsese Presents:the Blues [ 7 DVD BOX SET] Click Here

Miles Davis Live in Stockholm 1973 [DVD] Click Here

Stevie Wonder At The Close Of A Century (3 CD Box Set-Greatest Hits)
Click Here

Eric Clapton- Clapton Click Here

and more to come.............

Jazztube and all sites came together in my early years when I was exposed to CTI Records, the bebop of Charlie Parker, and then no stopping to Miles & Monk.

But it was one player The Alto Madness  kid Richie Cole that influence all that yosee on my other sites.His playing was fast and always lighthearted and today he is no longer a kid but his playing is even better.

Last year he recorded a major CD Live At Prague Castle and the paying and his group are just amazing.To inquire about getting this CD. Check out Castle Bop web site.

Jazz Top 100  Artist  Click On each group to hear and see the greatest videos in Jazz

1. Louis Armstrong
2. Duke Ellington
3. Miles Davis
4. Charlie Parker
5. John Coltrane


6. Dizzy Gillespie
7. Billie Holiday
8. Thelonious Monk
9. Charles Mingus
10. Count Basie

 
11. Lester Young
12. Ella Fitzgerald
13. Coleman Hawkins
14. Sonny Rollins
15. Sidney Bechet


16. Art Blakey
17. Ornette Coleman
18. Bill Evans
19. Art Tatum
20. Benny Goodman
21. Clifford Brown
22. Stan Getz
23. Jelly Roll Morton
24. Sarah Vaughan
25. Herbie Hancock


26. Bud Powell
27. Wayne Shorter
28. Fletcher Henderson
29. Django Reinhardt
30. Horace Silver
31. Dave Brubeck
32. Rahsaan R Kirk
33. Cecil Taylor
34. King Oliver
35. Sun Ra


36. Gil Evans
37. Lionel Hampton
38. Art Pepper
39. Eric Dolphy
40. Oscar Peterson

 
41. Charlie Christian
42. Ben Webster
43. Fats Waller
44. Earl Hines
45. Woody Herman


46. Wes Montgomery
47. J. J. Johnson
48. John McLaughlin
49. Artie Shaw
50. Lee Morgan
51. David Murray
52. Chick Corea
53. MJQ
54. Max Roach
55. Anthony Braxton


56. Bix Beiderbecke
57. Cannonball Adderley
58. Dexter Gordon
59. Keith Jarrett
60. Lee Konitz




 
61. Stan Kenton
62. Chet Baker
63. Roy Eldridge
64. Joe Henderson
65. McCoy Tyner


66. Gerry Mulligan
67. Benny Carter
68. Teddy Wilson
69. Lennie Tristano
70. Freddie Hubbard
71. Jimmy Smith
72. Mary Lou Williams
73. George Russell
74. Fats Navarro
75. Albert Ayler


76. Bennie Moten
77. Jimmie Lunceford
78. Wynton Marsalis
79. Charlie Haden
80. Erroll Garner
81. Billy Strayhorn
82. Meade Lux Lewis
83. Pat Metheny
84. Jack Teagarden
85. Johnny Hodges


86. Chick Webb
87. Jimmy Giuffre
88. Jaco Pastorius
89. Hank Mobley
90. Elvin Jones
91. Evan Parker
92. Paul Chambers
93. Ron Carter
94. Philly Joe Jones
95. Carla Bley


96. Bennie Golson
97. James Carter
98. Donald Byrd
99.JohnnyDodds
100. 100.Glenn Miller

 

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"If you feel like tapping your feet, tap your feet. If you feel like clapping your hands, clap your hands. And if you feel like taking off your shoes, take off your shoes. We are here to have a ball. So we want you to leave your worldly troubles outside and come in here and swing." - Art Blakey

Check Out   JazzQuotations.com
 is the #1 resource for Jazz quotes, featuring famous quotes about Jazz from every great Jazz artist. Updated regularly with new quotes!


Paintings By Bruni
Check out her site
Here
www.brunijazzart.com

Jazz has been called America's classical music, and for good reason. Along with the blues, its forefather, it is one of the first truly indigenous musics to develop in America, yet its unpredictable, risky ventures into improvisation gave it critical cache with scholars that the blues lacked. At the outset, jazz was dance music, performed by swinging big bands. Soon, the dance elements faded into the background and improvisation became the key element of the music. As the genre evolved, the music split into a number of different styles, from the speedy, hard-hitting rhythms of be-bop and the laid-back, mellow harmonies of cool jazz to the jittery, atonal forays of free jazz and the earthy grooves of soul jazz. What tied it all together was a foundation in the blues, a reliance on group interplay and unpredictable improvisation. Throughout the years, and in all the different styles, those are the qualities that defined jazz.

The term Mainstream Jazz was coined by critic Stanley Dance to describe the type of music that trumpeter Buck Clayton and his contemporaries (veterans of the swing era) were playing in the 1950s. Rather than modernize their styles and play bop or join Dixieland bands (which some did on a part-time basis in order to survive), the former big-band stars (which included players like Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, Harry "Sweets" Edison, and Roy Eldridge) jammed standards and riff tunes in smaller groups. Mainstream, which was fairly well documented in the 1950s, was completely overshadowed by other styles in the '60s and its original players gradually passed away. However with the rise of tenor saxophonist Scott Hamilton and trumpeter Warren Vache in the 1970s, as well as the beginning of the Concord label (which emphasized the music), mainstream jazz made a comeback

Cool Jazz evolved directly from bop in the late '40s and '50s. Essentially, it was a mixture of bop with certain aspects of swing that had been overlooked or temporarily discarded. Dissonances were smoothed out, tones were softened, arrangements became important again, and the rhythm section's accents were less jarring. Because some of the key pacesetters of the style (many of whom were studio musicians) were centered in Los Angeles, it was nicknamed "West Coast jazz." Some of the recordings were experimental in nature (hinting at classical music) and some overarranged sessions were bland, but in general this was a viable and popular style. By the late '50s, hard bop from the East Coast had succeeded cool jazz, although many of the style's top players had long and productive careers. Among the many top artists who were important in the development of cool jazz were Lester Young, Miles Davis, Gerry Mulligan, Stan Getz, Shorty Rogers, and Howard Rumsey (leader of the Lighthouse All-Stars)

smallsLIVE is dedicated to the idea that jazz is best heard in a live context, with minimal editing, captured in the full spontaneous moment in which it was created.  smallsLIVE artists are not placed under any constraints in terms of material, length of cuts or personnel.  the aritst chooses all the takes.  the presentation is that of being at the live show.

This is the most outstanding series of of Jazz Video's available today

produced by Reelin In The Years

Founded in 1992 with the goal of preserving music performance footage from around the globe and making it available to the entertainment industry and the public through all forms of media.

 
Jazz Icons have produced 4 Video Box Sets and Individual Artist DVD's of the best in Jazz
A must gift for the jazz fans this Xmas Season