Nat King Cole, June Christy, Mel Torme - How High The Moon descargar videos gratis


411,066
Duración: 03:06
Subido: 2007/10/01

Video para conocedores y coleccionistas de la verdadera y buena Música, tres grandes estrellas juntas en vivo, años 50, interpretando un maravilloso tema. Que lo disfruten!!!

Comentarios

8 years ago

Una Tone Bjarnardóttir

Nat king cole is amzing singer and pionist he is my all time fawortie

8 years ago

caponsacchi

Talk about talent the likes of which we haven't seen since and will never see again. Mel Tomé was the male Ella Fitzgerald, a jazz musician who could sing anything--and he wrote biographies of his friends Buddy Rich and Judy Garland in addition to composing jazz standards. Nat King Cole was one of the best 2-3 jazz pianists of the Swing Era, rivaled only by Teddy Wilson and Art Tatum. Although Sinatra was "The Voice" and the first American "Elvis" in terms of his popularity and star power over young female fans, Nat had the more lovely pipes. Sinatra's strength was not in his having a pretty voice: it was rather his phrasing, elocution, and ability to convey raw emotion like Billie Holiday and to elevate a jazz ensemble like Basie's to exciting, ecstatic levels of swing. Finally, Sinatra had the best arrangers (Nelson Riddle) and songwriters (Jimmy Van Heusen). The closest vocal experience to Ole Blue is Tony Bennett--who is still a distant second--but when I heard him in Milwaukee last year, he sounded better than ever even at the age of 88. It's no accident that Bob Dylan, when asked last month to name his top cultural heroes, bypassed all of the artists of his generation and listed Sinatra in the top spot. The remaining 6 places were given to Irving Berlin, Cole Porter and Shakespeare (I can't remember the remaining three--it's an interview in the May 2014 issue of AARP magazine. Incidentally the song that Dylan, after a big build-up by the host as the "world's greatest composer," sang to David Letterman on the host's next-to-last show was a Sinatra song! ("The Night We Called It a Day"). Dylan is often called the single most important influence in the revolution in popular music that gave us no end of guitar-strumming folk and country singer-songwriters. It was the end of the era that gave us "The Great American Songbook," that library of compositions by a short list of professional composers who wrote the "standards"-"over the Rainbow," "As Time Goes Boy," "The Lady Is a Tramp" (a clever manifesto of female liberation), "My Funny Valentine," "Old Man River," "Fly Me to the Moon," and I haven't even mentioned a Gershwin or Cole Porter song. Replacing this material is "Crazy" (not a bad tune), "Blowing in he Wind," and "I Can't Get No Satisfaction."

9 years ago

Bianca S

This is so very, very cool. I'm so glad I'm discovering this great stuff. Oh, man.

9 years ago

CHRISTY T.S.

How High The Moon / Morgan Lewis -Nancy Hamilton.Nat KIng Cole, June Christy, Mel Torme.Nat king Cole/1917.3.17 - 1965.2.15.ここでは Nat King Coleはピアニストでございます。Thanks For Upload.

9 years ago

pooterduude1

Being backed up by Piano Jazz Great and voice of crystal, Nat Cole along with the singing frog, on Drums. What a session to sit in on. 

9 years ago

red martin

June Christy has always been a favorite of mine for a long time...her voice is so arresting! Nat's piano playing was legendary before he took to the vocals (my mother loved his playing so much, she resented his singing!) BTW: Listen to Freddie Cole (Nat's brother)...you will not be disappointed!

9 years ago

pop794corima

june was late - its a famous error

9 years ago

Ariel Cohen

talent on steriods!!!!!

9 years ago

força Design

this is amazing music while being high

9 years ago

Nick Whitey

When did Improvisation die??? I wish I could still find improvisationists like Nat King Cole

9 years ago

Michael Backhouse

What a band, and I love June's singing. 

9 years ago

Preman Tilson

Mel takes Nat's hand at the beginning and doesn't want to let go...then at :10 Nat almost touches June but pulls away (black men weren't supposed to touch white women on TV at that time). But at the end he shakes her hand and then puts all three of their hands together. So sweet.

9 years ago

박뀨뀨

goooooooood

10 years ago

ranhill

Can you imagine singing with Nat King Cole and Mel Torme are backing you?

10 years ago

lec0621

How I wished Nat King Cole had lived forever. I can say without reservation that he was a genius for our times. 

10 years ago

direfranchement

He may be immortalized as one of the best vocalists of American Popular song to ever live, but Nathaniel Adams Coles (Nat "King" Cole) was a marvelous pianist. Once he crossed over into the mainstream, the spotlight was on his piano playing far too infrequently. It is a great pleasure to see him accompany the invariably enjoyable June Christy here along with Mel Tormé on drums. 

10 years ago

Joaquín Maria Aguirre Romero

Así se escribe la historia. Tres de los más grandes cantantes de una época reunidos como el que se encuentra en las rebajas. Nat King Cole era esencialmente un pianista dotado, además, de una voz de oro. Otra voz de oro era la de Mel Tormé, aquí en la batería. Y los dos acompañando a la gran June Christy en este tema imperecedero, How High the Moon. Disfrútalo!

10 years ago

Aurelio Ciurlia

Grandi!

10 years ago

Willa Green

What a marvelous sense of humor Nat Cole had with his intro at 1:04, and trying his intro again at 1:54, of two Civil War hymn melodies. The Revolution took place anyway. Love this vid.

10 years ago

ronnieanand

It's ridiculous.... Nat King Cole can play the Piano like God and also sing like God.. 

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