Nick Lucas - Walkin' My Baby Back Home (1951) скачать видео бесплатно


100,120
Длительность: 03:25
Загружено: 2007/01/24

Watch Nick Lucas sing his hit song 'Walkin' My Baby Back Home',

Комментарии

6 years назад

closeupman

He was GREAT No Doubt About It

7 years назад

k carr

Nick Lucas: (born August 22nd 1897 - died July, 28th 1982, age 84) Rest In Peace!

8 years назад

Picolo Varify

I LOVE DIS SONG

8 years назад

Peter Hartley

Just discovering these old Nick Lucas vids and it feels like I've found the original version of McCartney's 'granny music' (honey pie etc.). Pure gold!

8 years назад

Ian Board

Interesting. Saw his 'tiptoe through the tulips' from 1929 and looked for more.Very good phrasing. Surprised I never heard of him before.

9 years назад

Lowdenjim

Does music ever get better than this? Pure gold.....

10 years назад

SHMUEL PAPIRNIKOV

'WHAT A GUITARIST!

10 years назад

SHMUEL PAPIRNIKOV

WAS SUNG BY DONALD OCONOR IN THE MOVIE WITH THE SAME NAME.

10 years назад

MrCliveDavies

An historic performance! His vocals and guitar style are so interesting!

10 years назад

BixLives32

Fantastic!  Lucas had one heck of voice!  Why do people miss this?  Also, he had James Taylor's open-string technique about 70 years before Taylor!  Notice that Nick almost never leaves 1st position!  All of you advanced Jazz players, —look, see?!  You may have NOT thoroughly investigated the power of 1st position!?   And all you new players; remember that first position made both Lucas and James Taylor big stars.   —E.g. open strings combined with Jazz voicing can become a most powerful comping method. I studied with the late, GREAT Richard Lieberson.   Richard, as a strict traditionalist, and would rightly reprimand  me every time I tried to employ an open string while arranging a song.  This is because traditional Jazz orchestra rhythm (what Mr. Lieberson was so patiently trying to teach me) does NOT allow for open strings.  A open string breaks the Jazz voicing sound and prevents quick transposition of KEYS.  In trad-Jazz playing, an open strings is usually a BIG no-no.  Notice, that trad-Jazz players never use kapos.   But here is Nick Lucas the grand daddy of Jazz playing in first position and COOKING!   Nick Lucas had some great buddies.  E.g.; Eddie Lang, Carl Kress, Dick McDonough, Eddie Durham, Lonnie Johnson, etc.  Check out the guitar duos of these cats.  The new electric recording technology that became the  standard by 1926, was a similar technology leap as were CDs and  home high-fidelity kits in the 1940s & 50s.  This new recording technology allowed the acoustic guitar to be heard!    The technology specifically  allowed the guitar to be mostly a  rhythm instrument for a combo or orchestra.  The electric guitar had  not been invented;  —Lloyd Loar left Gibson in 1924 because Gibson turned down his design for a new ELECTRIC guitar. Single note leads were still beyond the technology of the day, yet notice that Lucas can be heard above the orchestra and plays several chords with single note picking.   This can only be attributed to the great RCA/Westinghouse engineers of the day -No one beat RCA/Westinghouse!  HOWEVER; the new recording technology allowed the guitar to play GUITAR DUETS which allowed the players to play just about anything they wanted. Often a single guitar would comp a great singer, E.g. Bessie Smith & Eddie Lang on "Kitchen Man" is required listening...and fun!   Not until Eddie Durham ca.1936 would this begin to change. But it was Charlie Christian  ca. 1941 who blew  the lid off!  Simply because he had a 4  watt class-A amp with a 12" dynamic speaker along with a primitive pickup using iron bar magnets that weighted over  5 lbs!  There would be no ceramic magnets or AlNico for several years.I LOVE watching Lucas move.  And, I sure wish this vid had more resolution so that I could see his hands better. But, just knowing approximately where his hands were in a song is sufficient .  Much thanks to the person whom posted this video and PLEASE post more if you have them!    

11 years назад

Richard Haynes

Genius really.

11 years назад

Jon White

So... Pop videos didn't begin with MTV then ? Or even Bob Dylan's Subterranean Homesick Blues ? Or even this! I just noticed a bunch of earlier ones down the side bar.

12 years назад

yuh boy

My grandpa only sings this song. It's the only one he knows

12 years назад

natalie c

hahaha his face makes me happy.

13 years назад

Patrick Reilly

Voice doesn't fit the song too well

14 years назад

busessuck1

reminds me of cliff edwards

14 years назад

LStrachey

so fine!

14 years назад

tricolorpicks

@Ezdduf4kuZ I've never heard of Johnnie Ray. Nick Lucas was one of the first, (if not the first), to record this song in Feb. 1931and it charted a #8 Hit for him in '31.

14 years назад

elmer zu

I've never heard of Nick Lucas, but I've heard of this song...oh yes. I might of heard it just once, just once is good enough for a song that I drool over, anyway to make a long story short, it was probably on my mother's kitchen radio that I heard it and I beliee it was done by none other than Johnnie Ray. Now Johnnie's version is unav. at this time, and I was surprized but that is the way with many doowop/early R&R era...unav. Great cover...3 1/2 stars but Johnnie's gets 5 stars! THX

15 years назад

Erik Lemke

die schrubbt ihm ein' die alte. man is das geil.

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