Joe Pass - All the Things You Are video free download
3,605,136
Duration: 06:53
Uploaded: 2006/03/11
Comments
9 years ago
spacescookies
eats phrases for breakfast
9 years ago
Matthew Smith
The greatest of all jazz guitarists.
9 years ago
Brett Kirby
Check out this video on YouTube:
9 years ago
Tâm Channel
Thanks for subscribing to my amatuer attempts. Great song here. I love jazz and blues and am open to advice on getting better
9 years ago
thmsjordan
Always loved his finger style, but the guy was a real Demon with a pick too.
9 years ago
Daniel Weber
Hard to beat Joe Pass...
10 years ago
MrBrushie
We miss you Master!!!!
10 years ago
Evan Uveges
Amazing! And Ric Flair on Drums!!
10 years ago
Marcelo Maya
The best!!
10 years ago
Robby Snawder
"All the Things You Are"
10 years ago
mateo lopez
Joe is the man! thank you
10 years ago
Jose Angel Ortiz
What a sound!
10 years ago
The Duder
This guys pretty good. I heard he took lessons from the man Kurt Cobain himself.
10 years ago
paul harris
My idea is to segue from this into Freebird. I think it would be cool.
10 years ago
Peter Bromberg
*Joe Pass*Born: January 13, 1929 | Died: May 23, 1994Joe Pass almost didn't make it as a musician due to his early battle with drug addiction. But following a successful rehab at Synanon and a recording session with fellow recovered musicians entitled Sounds of Synanon, the guitarist was signed by Dick Bock to the Pacific Jazz label. Pass made several albums as a leader and sideman for Bock, though work started drying up in the late 1960s as rock dominated the music marketplace.But it was when Joe Pass met impressario Norman Granz that the guitarist's career took off. Granz signed him to his new Pablo label in the early 1970s and recorded him extensively, as a soloist (especially the oustanding Virtuoso series), in duos, trios and as a part of many studio and concert jam sessions. By this time Pass had developed such a virtuoso technique on his instrument that he was considered the “Art Tatum of the guitar” by many critics. Pass especially excelled in his many recordings with piano great Oscar Peterson, as the two men were energized by the stimulation of playing with a fellow master, often at a ridiculous tempo.Strangely, Joe Pass was rarely happy with his recordings, telling liner note writer Ken Dryden that “I always feel like I could have done better.” Following a single session as a leader for Telarc, Pass made one final CD with Roy Clark (of Hee Haw fame): Roy Clark & Joe Pass Play Hank Williams, though a number of previously unissued collections of his recordings would appear after his passing. Joe Pass died of liver cancer on May 23, 1994 in Los Angeles.