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Oscar Peterson

  • 1.  Oscar Peterson

    Registered Piano Technician
    Posted 12-25-2007 09:15
    From "Tom Driscoll" <tomtuner@verizon.net>
    
    Ahhhh----So long Big Man.
        Tom D.
        
    http://youtube.com/watch?v=-Ebo12xg4ws


  • 2.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-25-2007 10:03
    From John Delacour <JD@Pianomaker.co.uk>
    
    At 11:14 -0500 25/12/07, Tom Driscoll wrote:
    
    >Ahhhh----So long Big Man.
    >     Tom D.
    >
    ><http://youtube.com/watch?...
    
    
    If you scan through the Vienna photos at his website 
    <http://oscarpeterson.com/> you'll find quite a few taken at the 
    B?sendorfer factory.
    
    JD
    


  • 3.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-25-2007 10:17
    From Ron Nossaman <rnossaman@cox.net>
    
    > If you scan through the Vienna photos at his website 
    > <http://oscarpeterson.com/> you'll find quite a few taken at the 
    > B?sendorfer factory.
    > 
    > JD
    
    
    And that drill press!!!
    Ron N
    


  • 4.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-25-2007 14:48
    From "Farrell" <mfarrel2@tampabay.rr.com>
    
    Indeed. Very nice drill press set-up. My guess is that Ron Overs saw that 
    before he built his - it is scaled down a bit, but otherwise very much 
    similar design.
    
    I like that stickered stacks of spruce outside. Man, I wish I had that much 
    stock to pick through when building panels. Pretty neat.
    
    Terry Farrell
    
    


  • 5.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-25-2007 11:37
      |   view attached
    From Marcel Carey <mcpianos@hotmail.com>
    
    Here's a picture of me (well more the top of my head) and Oscar at the last concert he gave in Toronto. The concert was on a Yamaha CF IIIs.
    
    It was very moving for me to be able to talk with him even for just a few moments.
    
    Marcel Carey
    Sherbrooke, QC
    _________________________________________________________________
    D?couvre la carte magique du P?re No?l! Clique ici pour la voir!
    http://www.demandeauperenoel.ca/magicalmapsfr/?icid=NOELFRCA105


  • 6.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-25-2007 16:41
    From Hechler Family <dahechler@charter.net>
    
       I listened to this all the way through.
       I never could get used to this form of jazz because WHERE THE HELL IS
       THE MELODY ?
       I really don't play BUT I could probably come up with something like he
       is doing!
       No offense to anyone who likes this form of jazz but being my teenage
       years was the 60's and 70's, this sounds like something composed on
       cocaine or pot.
       Tom Driscoll wrote:
    
    
    
    
       Ahhhh----So long Big Man.
    
           Tom D.
    
    
    
       [1]http://youtube.com/watch?v=-Ebo12xg4ws
    
    --
    Duaine Hechler
    Piano, Player Piano, Pump Organ
    Tuning, Servicing & Rebuilding
    Associate Member of the Piano Technicians Guild
    Reed Organ Society Member
    St. Louis, MO 63034
    (314) 838-5587
    [2]dahechler@charter.net
    [3]www.hechlerpianoandorgan.com
    --
    Home & Business user of Linux - 9+ years
    
    References
    
       1. http://youtube.com/watch?v=-Ebo12xg4ws
       2. mailto:dahechler@charter.net
       3. http://www.hechlerpianoandorgan.com/
    


  • 7.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-25-2007 17:29
    From "Brooks & Yumi" <brooksw@jps.net>
    
    Just because you can't find and/or follow the melody doesn't mean there isn't one.  Did you ever think that (from your own words "I really don't play") it might be too abstract for you to find/hear?  
    Oscar Peterson was one of the greatest Jazz Pianists ever and this video is a wonderful example of his incredible playing which was not influenced by drugs of any kind. 
    To say that you "could probably come up with something like he is doing" is ludicrous and your reference to drugs was more than a little offensive.
    If you really feel that you could "come up with something like he is doing" - How about we give you a year?  Ten years?  A lifetime?  10 lifetimes?
    
    Brooks Weisman RPT
      


  • 8.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-25-2007 21:01
    From David Andersen <david@davidandersenpianos.com>
    
    Duaine, Duaine. For the love of God, man. Can you spell peer-group  
    suicide?
    
    I agree: the most thoughtless and ill-conceived post I've ever seen  
    here.
    
    When I say, over and over, that everything is eventually revealed,  
    I'm not kidding---give 'em enough rope, and someone this clueless  
    will certainly swing and twitch...cut him down and take him away....
    
    I invite y'all to watch this clip with either headphones on or  
    through good speakers. You will hear, and see, and feel the majesty  
    of a talent beyond genre, beyond stupid titles. What a gift are fine  
    musicians, fine artists. What a heartbreaking, shameful pity that one  
    of our fraternity not only can't feel it, can't see it, can't hear  
    it, but belittles it...drags it in the dirt.
    
    Surreal. Truly.
    
    David Andersen
    
    >> http://youtube.com/watch?v=-Ebo12xg4ws
    
    
    
    > Just because you can't find and/or follow the melody doesn't mean  
    > there isn't one.  Did you ever think that (from your own words "I  
    > really don't play") it might be too abstract for you to find/hear?
    > Oscar Peterson was one of the greatest Jazz Pianists ever and this  
    > video is a wonderful example of his incredible playing which was  
    > not influenced by drugs of any kind.
    > To say that you "could probably come up with something like he is  
    > doing" is ludicrous and your reference to drugs was more than a  
    > little offensive.
    > If you really feel that you could "come up with something like he  
    > is doing" - How about we give you a year?  Ten years?  A lifetime?   
    > 10 lifetimes?
    >
    > Brooks Weisman RPT
    > 


  • 9.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-25-2007 19:33
    From "Gary Fluke" <gary.fluke@verizon.net>
    
    Duaine,
    
    This is sort of a Rorschach test moment, isn't it?  I guess you never heard the tune "Goodbye", written by Gordon Jenkins.  Or, maybe you heard it but you weren't able to process the information.
    
    
    Gary Fluke
    Snohomish, WA
    
    
    
    
      


  • 10.  Oscar Peterson

    Registered Piano Technician
    Posted 12-26-2007 04:27
    From Kent Swafford <kswafford@gmail.com>
    
    On Dec 25, 2007, at 5:40 PM, Hechler Family wrote:
    
    > I listened to this all the way through.
    >
    > I never could get used to this form of jazz because WHERE THE HELL  
    > IS THE MELODY ?
    
    Contrasting views of Oscar Peterson's playing are nothing new. The New  
    York Times deals with the issue well in its obituary.
    
    Oscar Peterson was the greatest. My favorite record of his was a solo  
    piano album from the 70's called "Tracks". If you happen to have  
    iTunes, you can listen to the excerpt from "A Little Jazz Exercise",  
    which still blows me away after 30 years.
    
    http://tinyurl.com/3dcpv9
    
    Kent Swafford
    
    
    
    December 25, 2007
    Oscar Peterson, 82, Jazz?s Piano Virtuoso, Dies
    By RICHARD SEVERO
    Oscar Peterson, whose dazzling piano playing made him one of the most  
    popular jazz artists in history, died on Sunday night at his home in  
    Mississauga, Ontario, outside Toronto. He was 82.
    
    The cause was kidney failure, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation  
    reported. Mr. Peterson had performed publicly for a time even after a  
    stroke he suffered in 1993 compromised movement in his left hand.
    
    Mr. Peterson was one of the greatest virtuosos in jazz, with a piano  
    technique that was always meticulous and ornate and sometimes  
    overwhelming. But rather than expand the boundaries of jazz, he used  
    his gifts in the service of moderation and reliability, gratifying his  
    devoted audiences whether he was playing in a trio or solo or  
    accompanying some of the most famous names of jazz. His technical  
    accomplishments were always evident, almost transparently so. Even at  
    his peak, there was very little tension in his playing.
    
    One of the most prolific major stars in jazz history, he amassed an  
    enormous discography. From the 1950s until his death, he released  
    sometimes four or five albums a year, toured Europe and Japan  
    frequently and became a big draw at jazz festivals.
    
    Norman Granz, his influential manager and producer, helped Mr.  
    Peterson realize that success, setting loose a flow of records on his  
    own Verve and Pablo labels and establishing Mr. Peterson as a favorite  
    in his touring Jazz at the Philharmonic concerts in the 1940s and ?50s.
    
    Mr. Peterson won eight Grammy awards, as well as almost every possible  
    honor in the jazz world. He played alongside giants like Louis  
    Armstrong, Count Basie, Charlie Parker, Roy Eldridge, Nat King Cole,  
    Stan Getz, Dizzy Gillespie and Ella Fitzgerald.
    
    Duke Ellington referred to him as ?maharajah of the keyboard.? Basie  
    said, ?Oscar Peterson plays the best ivory box I?ve ever heard.? The  
    pianist and conductor Andr? Previn called Mr. Peterson ?the best?  
    among jazz pianists.
    
    In a review of a performance in 1987, Stephen Holden, writing in The  
    New York Times, said, ?Mr. Peterson?s rock-solid sense of swing,  
    grounded in Count Basie, is balanced by a delicacy of tone and  
    fleetness of touch that make his extended runs seem to almost  
    disappear into the sky.? He added, ?His amazing speed was matched by  
    an equally amazing sense of thematic invention.?
    
    But many critics found Mr. Peterson more derivative than original,  
    especially early in his career. Some even suggested that his fantastic  
    technique lacked coherence and was almost too much for some listeners  
    to compute.
    
    Billy Taylor, a fellow pianist and a jazz historian, said he thought  
    that while Mr. Peterson was a ?remarkable musician,? his ?phenomenal  
    facility sometimes gets in the way of people?s listening.?
    
    Whitney Balliett, the jazz critic of The New Yorker, wrote in 1966  
    that Mr. Peterson?s playing ?continues to be a pudding made of the  
    leavings of Art Tatum, Nat Cole and Teddy Wilson.?
    
    The critical ambivalence was typified in 1973 in a review of a  
    Peterson performance by John S. Wilson of The Times. Mr. Wilson wrote:  
    ?For the last 20 years, Oscar Peterson has been one of the most  
    dazzling exponents of the flying fingers school of piano playing. His  
    performances have tended to be beautifully executed displays of  
    technique but woefully weak on emotional projection.?
    
    The complaints evoked those heard in the 1940s about the great concert  
    violinist Jascha Heifetz, who was occasionally accused of being so  
    technically brilliant that one could not find his or the composer?s  
    heart and soul in the music he played.
    
    The jazz critic Gene Lees defended Mr. Peterson as ?a summational  
    artist.?
    
    ?So was Mozart. So was Bach,? Mr. Lees wrote in his biography of Mr.  
    Peterson, ?The Will to Swing? (1990). ?Bach and Mozart were both  
    dealing with known vocabularies and an accepted body of aesthetic  
    principles.? He noted that just as Bach used material that he first  
    heard in Vivaldi, ?Oscar uses a curious spinning figure that he got  
    from Dizzy Gillespie.?
    
    Oscar Emmanuel Peterson was born in the poor St. Antoine district of  
    Montreal on Aug. 15, 1925, one of five children of Daniel Peterson, a  
    West Indian immigrant, and the former Olivia John, whom Daniel had met  
    in Montreal. Daniel Peterson, who worked as a sleeping-car porter on  
    the Canadian Pacific Railway, had taught himself how to play the organ  
    before he landed in Halifax, N.S., in 1917. Mr. Peterson?s mother, who  
    also had roots in the Caribbean, encouraged Oscar to study music.
    
    As a boy, Oscar began to learn the trumpet as well as the piano. At 7,  
    he contracted tuberculosis and was hospitalized for 13 months. Fearing  
    the strain the trumpet might put on his son?s lungs, Daniel Peterson  
    persuaded him to concentrate on piano. He studied first with Lou  
    Hooper, then with Paul (Alexander) de Marky, a Hungarian who had also  
    given lessons to Oscar?s older sister, Daisy.
    
    By his own account, Oscar believed he had become quite accomplished by  
    age 14. Then he heard a recording by Art Tatum.
    
    ?I gave up the piano for two solid months,? Mr. Peterson later  
    recalled, and had ?crying fits at night? because he thought nobody  
    else could ever be as good as Tatum.
    
    The same year, however, he won an amateur competition sponsored by the  
    CBC, prompting him to drop out of Montreal High School so he could  
    spend all his time playing the piano.
    
    By 1942, Oscar Peterson was known in Canada as the ?Brown Bomber of  
    Boogie-Woogie,? an allusion to the nickname of the boxer Joe Louis and  
    also to Mr. Peterson?s physical stature ? 6-foot-3 and 250 pounds.
    
    Mr. Peterson became the only black member of the Johnny Holmes  
    Orchestra, which toured Canada and the United States. In parts of the  
    United States, he discovered that he, like other blacks, would not be  
    served in the same hotels and restaurants as the white musicians. Many  
    times they would bring food out to him as he sat in the band?s bus, he  
    recalled.
    
    For a time, Mr. Peterson was so identified with popular dance boogie- 
    woogie that he was denied wider recognition as a serious jazz  
    musician. In 1947, Mr. Granz, the jazz impresario, was on his way to  
    Montreal?s airport in a taxi when he heard a live broadcast of Mr.  
    Peterson playing at a local lounge. He ordered the driver to turn the  
    taxi around and take him to the lounge. There he persuaded Mr.  
    Peterson to move away from boogie-woogie.
    
    Mr. Peterson eventually became a mainstay of the Jazz at the  
    Philharmonic series, which Mr. Granz created in the 1940s. In 1949 Mr.  
    Peterson made his debut at Carnegie Hall, becoming a sensation. A year  
    later he won the Down Beat magazine readers? poll for best jazz  
    pianist for the first time. He would go on to win it more than a dozen  
    times, the last in 1972.
    
    Over the years his albums sold well, and he recorded with Billie  
    Holiday, Fred Astaire, Benny Carter, Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald,  
    Roy Eldridge, Lester Young, Stan Getz, Buddy DeFranco and many others.  
    He also occasionally sang.
    
    Among his more notable long-playing recordings were the so-called Song  
    Books of Irving Berlin, George Gershwin, Duke Ellington, Jerome Kern,  
    Richard Rodgers, Harry Warren, Harold Arlen and Jimmy McHugh.
    
    His format of choice was the trio. Perhaps his most famous threesome,  
    which lasted from 1953 to 1958, was with the guitarist Herb Ellis and  
    the bassist Ray Brown.
    
    Though best known as an interpreter of other people?s work, Mr.  
    Peterson cultivated a second identity as a composer. In 1964 he  
    recorded ?The Canadiana Suite,? an extended work written for his home  
    country; he later wrote ?African Suite? and ?A Royal Wedding Suite,?  
    for the wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer.
    
    Mr. Granz?s Verve and Pablo labels released most of Mr. Peterson?s  
    work, but he also recorded for the MPS and Telarc labels, among others.
    
    Mr. Peterson was frequently invited to perform for heads of state,  
    including Queen Elizabeth II and President Richard M. Nixon. In 2005  
    he became the first living person other than a reigning monarch to  
    obtain a commemorative stamp in Canada, where streets, squares,  
    concert halls and schools are named after him.
    
    Mr. Peterson?s autobiography, ?A Jazz Odyssey: The Life of Oscar  
    Peterson,? was published in 2002 by Continuum.
    
    According to the CBC, Mr. Peterson was married four times. He had a  
    daughter, Celine, with his fourth wife, Kelly. He also had six  
    children from his first and third marriages: Lyn, Sharon, Gay, Oscar  
    Jr., Norman and Joel.
    
    Mr. Peterson continued playing after his stroke in 1993 because, as he  
    told The Chicago Tribune, ?I think I have a closeness with the  
    instrument that I?ve treasured over the years.? Before long he was  
    back on tour and recording, among other albums, ?Side by Side? with  
    Itzhak Perlman, having learned to do more playing with his right hand.  
    As he told Down Beat in 1997: ?When I sit down to the piano, I don?t  
    want any scuffling. I want it to be a love affair.?
    
    Ben Ratliff contributed reporting.
    
    
    
    Copyright 2007The New York Times Company
    


  • 11.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-26-2007 08:35
    From John Delacour <JD@Pianomaker.co.uk>
    
    At 05:26 -0600 26/12/07, Kent Swafford wrote:
    
    >Oscar Peterson was the greatest. My favorite record of his was a 
    >solo piano album from the 70's called "Tracks". If you happen to 
    >have iTunes, you can listen to the excerpt from "A Little Jazz 
    >Exercise", which still blows me away after 30 years.
    
    ...and here's a particularly great clip with the great Niels Pedersen 
    on bass, whom we also sadly lost in 2005.
    
    <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gpWx62Mkl24&feature=related>
    
    My daughter has just suffered an instant conversion to jazz piano 
    after hearing me play Oscar Peterson (whom she'd never heard of!!!) 
    Fats Waller and Art Tatum.
    
    JD
    


  • 12.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-26-2007 12:14
    From David Andersen <david@davidandersenpianos.com>
    
    On Dec 26, 2007, at 7:34 AM, John Delacour wrote:
    
    > My daughter has just suffered an instant conversion to jazz piano  
    > after hearing me play Oscar Peterson (whom she'd never heard of!!!)  
    > Fats Waller and Art Tatum.
    >
    > JD
    
    Insanely great taste, J.D.; three of the finest, funniest, sweetest,  
    nastiest, most technically gifted, rooted-in-the-blues piano players  
    ever.
    
    Bravo for giving that gift to your daughter. Beautiful legacy....
    xoDA
    


  • 13.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-26-2007 12:44
    From piannaman@aol.com
    
    I'll second that.? Giving a chance to love great art--music in particular, imho--is a great gift to give anyone.? 
    
    I always considered the blues-rooted genre of jazz practiced in varying styles by Peterson, Tatum and Waller to be a very accessible form of music.? It can be melodic, stays pretty tonal, playful, sentimental, joyous.? It runs the gamut of emotions.? It oozes soul.? 
    
    Oscar will be missed in my little neck of the woods, that's for sure.
    
    
    
    
     
    
    
    Dave Stahl, RPT
    Dave Stahl Piano Service
    dstahlpiano.net
    
     
    
    
     
    
    


  • 14.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-27-2007 17:38
    From "alan forsyth" <alan@forsythalan.wanadoo.co.uk>
    
    Ah! One of my favourites is "Fats" Waller's "Your Feets Too Big". I 
    sometimes entertain the kids miming the words and making gestures while 
    playing the CD and they find it absolutely hilarious.
    
    It's the genius of the likes of Oscar Peterson that probably gives us 
    technicians the will to suffer in the hope that one day we will meet some of 
    these icons in the line of duty. The closest I have got so far is Darius 
    Brubeck, the son of Dave Brubeck. At that time I was not a tuner, but a 
    sound engineer.
    
    Marcel Carey, you must really be proud of that photo.
    
    AF
    
    
    


  • 15.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-27-2007 08:18
    From Richard Brekne <ricb@pianostemmer.no>
    
    Duaine:
    
    Holy Christmas guy.... If you think Petersons playing is a bit wild... 
    you are about 35 years out of date.  Your post is comparable to saying 
    something like Monet's paintings are impossible to understand... I mean 
    really... so much has gone by since then.   When you top it off by 
    dumping on one of the worlds greatest musical talents ever by 
    insinuating drug use... you disgrace yourself.
    
    About the only even close to valid criticism I ever heard about O.P. 's  
    playing what that it was too much <<lick>> based.  Indeed... he did use 
    a lot of so practiced in licks in his playing that movement from one to 
    the other would be seamless... but anyone listening closely to his 
    playing would be foolish indeed to say he was incapable of "Bop".  His 
    trio with Nils Henning ?rsted Peterson and  Joe Pass remains to this day 
    as some of the finest Jazz regardless of period ever performed.  For 
    that matter some of the finest music period.
    
    I wouldnt go so far in condemning your post as some.... nor ask you to 
    leave the list.   Tho... if I were you I'd drop back, punt... and 
    perhaps humble yourself.  You have stated nothing at all of worth about 
    Oscar Peterson... and revealed quite a bit about yourself here...
    
    Sigh...
    
    RicB
    
    
    
        From:  Duaine Hechler
    
         I listened to this all the way through.
    
         I never could get used to this form of jazz because WHERE THE HELL  
         IS THE MELODY ?
    
         I really don't play BUT I could probably come up with something  
         like he is doing!
    
         No offense to anyone who likes this form of jazz but being my  
         teenage years was the 60's and 70's, this sounds like something  
         composed on cocaine or pot.
    


  • 16.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-29-2007 14:10
    From Hechler Family <dahechler@charter.net>
    
    List,
    
    First of all, I'm late with this reply because I just got of the
    hospital from infection of the esophagus.
    
    Now, trying to redeem myself.
    
    I love - most - forms of music especially what I feel is - true - jazz,
    blues and boogie-woogie that came from the south from the 20's and 30's -
    Earl Hines, Cab Calloway, Ma Rainey, Ruth Etting, Josephine Baker, Isham
    Jones, Art Tatum, Lionel Hampton, Frankie Trumbauer, Fats Waller, Ben
    Pollack, Ben Selvin, Billy Cotton, Ted Lewis, Sophie Tucker, Bessie
    Smith, Bix Beiderbecke, Cow Cow Davenport, Meade Lux Lewis, Jane Green,
    and Walter Barnes & His Royal Creolians
    -- just to name a few.
    
    Not to mention my beloved artists from my era - the 70's - ELO, STYX,
    HEAD EAST,  and the like.
    
    OH, and must not forget about all the ragtime greats
    
    Ready for the flames again ......
    
    Richard Brekne wrote:
    > Duaine:
    >
    > Holy Christmas guy.... If you think Petersons playing is a bit wild...
    > you are about 35 years out of date.  Your post is comparable to saying
    > something like Monet's paintings are impossible to understand... I
    > mean really... so much has gone by since then.   When you top it off
    > by dumping on one of the worlds greatest musical talents ever by
    > insinuating drug use... you disgrace yourself.
    >
    > About the only even close to valid criticism I ever heard about O.P.
    > 's  playing what that it was too much <<lick>> based.  Indeed... he
    > did use a lot of so practiced in licks in his playing that movement
    > from one to the other would be seamless... but anyone listening
    > closely to his playing would be foolish indeed to say he was incapable
    > of "Bop".  His trio with Nils Henning ?rsted Peterson and  Joe Pass
    > remains to this day as some of the finest Jazz regardless of period
    > ever performed.  For that matter some of the finest music period.
    >
    > I wouldnt go so far in condemning your post as some.... nor ask you to
    > leave the list.   Tho... if I were you I'd drop back, punt... and
    > perhaps humble yourself.  You have stated nothing at all of worth
    > about Oscar Peterson... and revealed quite a bit about yourself here...
    >
    > Sigh...
    >
    > RicB
    >
    >
    >
    >    From:  Duaine Hechler
    >
    >     I listened to this all the way through.
    >
    >     I never could get used to this form of jazz because WHERE THE
    > HELL      IS THE MELODY ?
    >
    >     I really don't play BUT I could probably come up with something 
    >     like he is doing!
    >
    >     No offense to anyone who likes this form of jazz but being my     
    > teenage years was the 60's and 70's, this sounds like something     
    > composed on cocaine or pot.
    >
    >
    
    
    -- 
    Duaine Hechler
    Piano, Player Piano, Pump Organ
    Tuning, Servicing & Rebuilding
    Associate Member of the Piano Technicians Guild
    Reed Organ Society Member
    St. Louis, MO 63034
    (314) 838-5587
    dahechler@charter.net
    www.hechlerpianoandorgan.com
    --
    Home & Business user of Linux - 9+ years
    


  • 17.  Oscar Peterson

    Registered Piano Technician
    Posted 12-29-2007 15:02
    From David Doremus <algiers_piano@bellsouth.net>
    
    Honestly, and truly not trying to be unfriendly even though sometimes 
    email seems like that without the tone of voice, how can you like the 
    early guys and not the direct descendent? Its not like Cecil Taylor, 
    Albert Ayler or the later Coltrane. And, on top of that to name Styx and 
    ELO as favs? Man, even in high school we thought those were for the 
    uneducated, do you include Starship and Peter Frampton in that list?  :-)
    
    Really, Im enjoying this discussion and I hope no one takes offense. Its 
    a nice break from a busy season and the mental effort of technical 
    learning....
    
    My biggest crowd experience was at intermission for Ahmad Jamal, in a 
    packed bar. I did improve a couple of bad treble unisons which he had 
    thrilled me by standing up and pounding on with his whole arm during one 
    solo, very effective in context but not what you want to see as a tuner. 
    I got out of the show with everyone happy but it was nerve wracking for 
    15 noisy minutes.
    
    
    --Dave
       New Orleans
    
    Hechler Family wrote:
    > Not to mention my beloved artists from my era - the 70's - ELO, STYX,
    > HEAD EAST,  and the like.
    >
    >
    >   
    >   
    


  • 18.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-29-2007 16:16
    From Richard Brekne <ricb@pianostemmer.no>
    
    Hi Duaine
    
    Ok... since I for one actually draw some measure of humorous moments 
    from your pandoric paranoia preponderments relative to Microsoft, and 
    because of the rather interesting list of artists below.... you can 
    consider yourself redeemed for my part :)
    
    A bit odd tho that you can dig some of the below and have trouble with 
    Oscar.  I mean... bop was rather easy to follow.... its not like it we 
    were talking about free bag or anything.  Try Ornette Coleman on for 
    size :)  Or perhaps some of Don Pullan and George Adams stuff...
    
    Cheers
    RicB
    
        List,
    
        First of all, I'm late with this reply because I just got of the
        hospital from infection of the esophagus.
    
        Now, trying to redeem myself.
    
        I love - most - forms of music especially what I feel is - true - jazz,
        blues and boogie-woogie that came from the south from the 20's and
        30's -
        Earl Hines, Cab Calloway, Ma Rainey, Ruth Etting, Josephine Baker, Isham
        Jones, Art Tatum, Lionel Hampton, Frankie Trumbauer, Fats Waller, Ben
        Pollack, Ben Selvin, Billy Cotton, Ted Lewis, Sophie Tucker, Bessie
        Smith, Bix Beiderbecke, Cow Cow Davenport, Meade Lux Lewis, Jane Green,
        and Walter Barnes & His Royal Creolians
        -- just to name a few.
    
        Not to mention my beloved artists from my era - the 70's - ELO, STYX,
        HEAD EAST,  and the like.
    
        OH, and must not forget about all the ragtime greats
    
        Ready for the flames again ......
    


  • 19.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-25-2007 17:40
    From "David Ilvedson" <ilvey@sbcglobal.net>
    
    You mean like in Mary Had A Little Lamb?
    
    
    
    David Ilvedson, RPT
    
    Pacifica, CA 94044
    
    
    
    I never could get used to this form of jazz because WHERE THE HELL IS THE MELODY ?
    
    
    
    I really don't play BUT I could probably come up with something like he is doing!
    
    
    
    No offense to anyone who likes this form of jazz but being my teenage years was the 60's and 70's, this sounds like something composed on cocaine or pot.
    
    
    
    Tom Driscoll wrote:
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    Ahhhh----So long Big Man.
    
        Tom D.
    
    
    
    http://youtube.com/watch?v=-Ebo12xg4ws
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    --
    
    Duaine Hechler
    
    Piano, Player Piano, Pump Organ
    
    Tuning, Servicing & Rebuilding
    
    Associate Member of the Piano Technicians Guild
    
    Reed Organ Society Member
    
    St. Louis, MO 63034
    
    (314) 838-5587
    
    dahechler@charter.net
    
    www.hechlerpianoandorgan.com
    
    --
    
    Home & Business user of Linux - 9+ years
    


  • 20.  Oscar Peterson

    Registered Piano Technician
    Posted 12-25-2007 18:55
    From "tom" <tomtuner@verizon.net>
    
    Duaine,
    
                You bring Idiocy to a new level.
    
    I've been on list for 10 years and your post is the most insulting
    contribution I have yet seen.
    
                I can tolerate your woe is me crap and your chicken little
    references to Microsoft, but you have reached all new levels now.
    
                Get off this list and do us all a favor.
    
    You disgust me.
    
                
    
    Tom Driscoll
    
     
    
     
    
     
    
     
    
     
    
     
    
      _____  
    
    From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf
    Of Hechler Family
    Sent: Tuesday, December 25, 2007 6:41 PM
    To: Pianotech List
    Subject: Re: Oscar Peterson
    
     
    
    I listened to this all the way through. 
    
    I never could get used to this form of jazz because WHERE THE HELL IS THE
    MELODY ?
    
    I really don't play BUT I could probably come up with something like he is
    doing!
    
    No offense to anyone who likes this form of jazz but being my teenage years
    was the 60's and 70's, this sounds like something composed on cocaine or
    pot.
    
    Tom Driscoll wrote: 
    
     
    
     
    
     
    
    Ahhhh----So long Big Man.
    
        Tom D.
    
        
    
    http://youtube.com/watch?v=-Ebo12xg4ws
    
    
    
    
    
    
    -- 
    Duaine Hechler
    Piano, Player Piano, Pump Organ
    Tuning, Servicing & Rebuilding
    Associate Member of the Piano Technicians Guild
    Reed Organ Society Member
    St. Louis, MO 63034
    (314) 838-5587
    dahechler@charter.net
    www.hechlerpianoandorgan.com
    --
    Home & Business user of Linux - 9+ years
    


  • 21.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-25-2007 19:44
    From "Leslie Bartlett" <l-bartlett@sbcglobal.net>
    
    I always have had trouble finding the "melody" in that stuff
    also............   but I listened in complete awe that those who were
    performing knew every second where EVERYTHING was, and were able to put
    their minds into "CREATE", and the incredible results had meaning in each
    beat, each chord- even though I couldn't always follow it.  I have always
    wondered what was wrong with me- because I coudn't approach magic like that.
    But I have had a concert artist or two thank me for being able to pull a
    unison in so that it would stay, and a few judges at competitions express
    appreciation that I kept the piano so accurately tuned that their job became
    pleasure instead of pain.   A great sadness came to me when the word was out
    Mr. Peterson was gone.   A large chunk of VALUE has been lost to the planet-
    and though I can't ever rise to such a level, I am grateful that I have
    managed to help with a few of their instruments, thus being a small part of
    bringing joy to many who are able to understand what I do not.  I have been
    honored, even lacking much understanding, to have been a tiny part in the
    success of some great keyboard artists. There is satisfaction in knowing a
    single unison can make a contribution to things I don't fully
    understand...................
    les bartlett
    houston
    
      _____  
    
    From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf
    Of tom
    Sent: Tuesday, December 25, 2007 7:55 PM
    To: 'Pianotech List'
    Subject: RE: Oscar Peterson
    
    
    
    Duaine,
    
                You bring Idiocy to a new level.
    
    I've been on list for 10 years and your post is the most insulting
    contribution I have yet seen.
    
                I can tolerate your woe is me crap and your chicken little
    references to Microsoft, but you have reached all new levels now.
    
                Get off this list and do us all a favor.
    
    You disgust me.
    
                
    
    Tom Driscoll
    
     
    
     
    
     
    
     
    
     
    
     
    
      _____  
    
    From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf
    Of Hechler Family
    Sent: Tuesday, December 25, 2007 6:41 PM
    To: Pianotech List
    Subject: Re: Oscar Peterson
    
     
    
    I listened to this all the way through. 
    
    I never could get used to this form of jazz because WHERE THE HELL IS THE
    MELODY ?
    
    I really don't play BUT I could probably come up with something like he is
    doing!
    
    No offense to anyone who likes this form of jazz but being my teenage years
    was the 60's and 70's, this sounds like something composed on cocaine or
    pot.
    
    Tom Driscoll wrote: 
    
     
    
     
    
     
    
    Ahhhh----So long Big Man.
    
        Tom D.
    
        
    
    http://youtube.com/watch?v=-Ebo12xg4ws
    
    
    
    
    
    
    -- 
    Duaine Hechler
    Piano, Player Piano, Pump Organ
    Tuning, Servicing & Rebuilding
    Associate Member of the Piano Technicians Guild
    Reed Organ Society Member
    St. Louis, MO 63034
    (314) 838-5587
    dahechler@charter.net
    www.hechlerpianoandorgan.com
    --
    Home & Business user of Linux - 9+ years
    
    
    No virus found in this incoming message.
    Checked by AVG Free Edition.
    Version: 7.5.516 / Virus Database: 269.17.8/1196 - Release Date: 12/25/2007
    12:18 PM
    


  • 22.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-26-2007 10:50
    From "William Benjamin" <pianoboutique@comcast.net>
    
    Les and all,
    
    I am glad I have gotten to a place in life where I appreciate people's difference rather than tolerate them.
    
    There are many types of music that does not draw me, but if it is exacuted well, that is what counts.
    
    Mr. Peterson does have a total command of the key board and I sure wish I could pull off runs like that.
    
    Regardless, Merry Christmas to all and to all a good night.
    
    William
    
    
    PIANO BOUTIQUE
    William Benjamin
    The tuner alone,
    Preserves the tone.


  • 23.  Oscar Peterson

    Registered Piano Technician
    Posted 12-25-2007 21:01
    From "David Love" <davidlovepianos@comcast.net>
    
    One thing is certain, if you can't hear it you'll never play it.  Peterson
    was one of the true greats, maybe the greatest jazz pianist ever.  I'm
    saddened not only that you can't appreciate it, but that unable to
    appreciate it or understand it you choose to denigrate not only the music
    but the man.  On a day such as this is, and when the world mourns the loss
    of a true legend, shame on you.   
    
    David Love
    davidlovepianos@comcast.net
    www.davidlovepianos.com 
    
    


  • 24.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-26-2007 11:11
    From JSmith3109@aol.com
    
    In a message dated 12/26/07 5:56:56 AM, kswafford@gmail.com writes:
    
    
    > http://tinyurl.com/3dcpv9
    > 
    
    Yeah! That track sounds much like the early Art Tatum sides. Oscar Peterson 
    always said that Tatum was a big influence on his playing.   Why anyone would 
    not recognize this enormous talent is beyond me. 
    JS
    
    
    **************************************
    See AOL's top rated recipes 
    (http://food.aol.com/top-rated-recipes?NCID=aoltop00030000000004)
    


  • 25.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-26-2007 12:41
    From Jurgen Goering <pianoforte@pianofortesupply.com>
    
    For quite some time, I have had close-ups of postage stamps featuring 
    and honoring Oscar Peterson on my web site.
    http://www.pianofortesupply.com/stamps.html
    
    I still have a few of the Canadian Oscar Peterson stamps - I bought a 
    few sheets when they were issued a few years ago.
    enjoy.
    
    Jurgen Goering
    Piano Forte Supply
    (250) 754-2440
    info@pianofortesupply.com
    http://www.pianofortesupply.com
    


  • 26.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-28-2007 00:39
    From Richard Brekne <ricb@pianostemmer.no>
    
    Ah ! Ah !
    
    I have to say I have been very very fortunate in this regard.  Having 
    tuned for Molde International Jazz Festival for over 18 years, Natt Jazz 
    Festival in Bergen for 25 years, and more recently both Bergen 
    International Festival (Festspillene i Bergen) and Vossa Jazz I have run 
    into many of the Jazz world all time greats.
    
    Those first years I was in awe of them all... In fact I remember being 
    back stage when exactly Nils Henning, Oscar Peterson and a French 
    guitarist stepping in for Joe Pass came in to get ready for their gig 
    here in Bergen. Nils took one look at my big admiring eyes and steered 
    himself a wide path around :)
    
    Since then I've learned that these are all just guys and gals doing what 
    they like best and most want to be treated like ordinary folks.  A few 
    want all kinds of special treatments... and a very few are downright 
    jerks very full of themselves.  I've had most of them through... one of 
    the absolute nicest was Chick Corea was and is still. McCoy Tyner likes 
    to hum horribly with his playing... Oscar always liked to be treated 
    with lots of respect... Even got to tune for Jack DeJonette on one of 
    those rare occasions he toured as a pianist... and he was indeed hot ! 
    
    Cool these past years comparing the classical stars and supporting 
    enviroments with the Jazz.  All in all I like the relaxed atmosphere of 
    the Jazz world, but then again I like the challenge and demanding 
    exactness of the classical world.
    
    I think any of us who've had this kind of pleasure to work for these 
    folks has enormous amounts to be greatful for.
    
    Cheers
    RicB
    
    
        Ah! One of my favourites is "Fats" Waller's "Your Feets Too Big". I
        sometimes entertain the kids miming the words and making gestures while
        playing the CD and they find it absolutely hilarious.
    
        It's the genius of the likes of Oscar Peterson that probably gives us
        technicians the will to suffer in the hope that one day we will meet
        some of
        these icons in the line of duty. The closest I have got so far is
        Darius
        Brubeck, the son of Dave Brubeck. At that time I was not a tuner, but a
        sound engineer.
    
        Marcel Carey, you must really be proud of that photo.
    
        AF
    


  • 27.  Oscar Peterson

    Registered Piano Technician
    Posted 12-28-2007 18:44
    From David Doremus <algiers_piano@bellsouth.net>
    
    Richard Brekne wrote:
    >  
    >
    > I think any of us who've had this kind of pleasure to work for these 
    > folks has enormous amounts to be greatful for.
    >
    
    
    
    Thats very true. And the times I have tuned for McCoy Tyner the humming 
    didnt bother me at all, I was so lost in his playing. Among young 
    players Marcus Roberts has impressed me quite a lot. One of the  tough 
    things about being in New Orleans is we really dont get a lot of big 
    name jazz guys through, we are so wrapped up in our own styles which are 
    much more R&B and blues based. And let me add in terms of musicians 
    wanting to be treated with respect, most of the older jazz players came 
    up with little or no respect and deserve a ton of it. Some years ago my 
    wife answered the phone and didnt recognize Ahmad Jamal, boy did that 
    take some apologizing :-)
    
    I just got onto this thread and am amazed that there is someone out 
    there who doesnt get Oscar Peterson? Thats like not getting Schnabel, or 
    Horowitz. You may not love the interpretations, I do understand the 
    criticism that he can be too technical, and personally I like Bill Evans 
    and Bud Powell the best, but to reject the playing completely and in 
    such a harsh way is a little bizarre. Maybe Duaine was hitting the 
    chronic a bit too much before Christmas dinner.
    
    
    
    --Dave
    
    >
    


  • 28.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-28-2007 18:56
    From David Andersen <david@davidandersenpianos.com>
    
    On Dec 28, 2007, at 5:43 PM, David Doremus wrote:
    
    > Maybe Duaine was hitting the chronic a bit too much before  
    > Christmas dinner.
    
    That's what I think. Duaine got more baked than usual because he  
    bought a new bong and had to break it in it in...<g>
    
    You've got one of the greatest stride/blues/early jazz pianists on  
    the planet right there in New Orleans: Jon Cleary.
    A worthy successor to Professor Longhair, Jelly roll Morton, et. al.  
    He's also Bonnie Raitt's piano player.....insanely good.
    
    David A.
    


  • 29.  Oscar Peterson/Jon Cleary/NOLA

    Registered Piano Technician
    Posted 12-29-2007 11:28
    From David Doremus <algiers_piano@bellsouth.net>
    
    David, you're right. I used to work on his old upright back when he was 
    living in a Johnny Guitar Watson shrine on Port St. Now he's big time 
    and no one deserves it more. But, he is still solidly based in an R&B 
    tradition, rather than modern jazz. Another NOLA pianist with fearsome 
    ability is Henry Butler. Unfortunately neither he nor Cleary have really 
    been recorded adequately. An honorable mention should go to Tom 
    McDermott who is a true student of world piano styles and David 
    Torkanowsky who can play with any act and shines as an accompanist, a 
    harder job than many realize. Check him out at ** 
    <http://tinyurl.com/32o4hb>*http://tinyurl.com/32o4hb*
    That is Harry Shearers web channel, not for the narrow minded.
    
    
    David Andersen wrote:
    >
    > You've got one of the greatest stride/blues/early jazz pianists on the 
    > planet right there in New Orleans: Jon Cleary.
    > A worthy successor to Professor Longhair, Jelly roll Morton, et. al. 
    > He's also Bonnie Raitt's piano player.....insanely good.
    >
    > David A.
    >
    


  • 30.  Oscar Peterson/Jon Cleary/NOLA

    Posted 12-29-2007 18:26
    From stuka@mindspring.com
    
    Henry Butler is now in Colorado, displaced by Katrina.  Just missed getting tickets to see him downtown a couple of weeks ago, they sold out...dang... I've been going over and over Jon Cleary's version of Tipitina at http://www.joncleary.com/av/index.htm to try and pick up licks. He's a monster... can't seem to get any of the file players I've got (WinDoze Media Player, WinDVD, NeroMedia Player, NeroShowtime, etc) to play it at slower speed in the .wmv format.  Still working on it, though...
    
    Matt
    
    


  • 31.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-29-2007 02:21
    From Gregor _ <karlkaputt@hotmail.com>
    
    RicB wrote:> > I think any of us who've had this kind of pleasure to work for these > folks has enormous amounts to be greatful for.> 
     
    Not all of us! About 20 years ago there was a jazz festival with Keith Jarrett in my hometown (M?nster, Germany). Unfortunately, I missed that concert, but my friends told me this story: after a while Keith Jarrett interrupted the concert and claimed that the piano was not perfectly in tune. The tuner was still there. Because it would had taken too much time for some thousand people to leave the hall, they made an anouncement: special request, please keep absoluteley quiet for the tuner to touch up the tuning. And that worked. This collegue had to tune in front of the audience. Horror! And embarrasing too. The piano should not have been in a condition that a player has a reason to complain. No idea if the tuning was actually so bad. However: poor collegue!
     
    This year Keith Jarret played in Frankfurt, Germany and one guy in the audience had to cough. Jarrett interrupted his playing very angry, slammed the piano lid and said: I can wait outside if you want to cough. In Madrid he affronted the audience because someone took photos.
     
    On the other hand: at the legendary K?ln Concerts (1974) he played on a worn out piano with a poor tuning. The moving company had the job to carry the B?sendorfer Imperial from basement to stage. But they mixed up the piano and brought and old and short B?sendorfer to stage, which usually was used for choir practicing only. The organizer convinced him to play on that piano and he really did. And said: I do that only for you (the organizer was a 18 years old girl). After half an our the tuner had to touch up the tuning live on stage.
     
    Gregor
    _________________________________________________________________
    Express yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! Download today it's FREE!
    http://messenger.msn.click-url.com/go/onm00200471ave/direct/01/


  • 32.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-29-2007 04:49
    From Richard Brekne <ricb@pianostemmer.no>
    
    Hi Gregor.
    
    I have two stories to tell that are relevant to your post.  I owe Keith 
    Jarrett quite a lot... in an indirect way.  On one of  is European tours 
    in the early 80's he complained about every single piano on his tour 
    except his last concert... which was my instrument... a nicely restrung 
    Steinway D that Molde International Jazz Festival had just purchased.  
    The Festival folks were of course very nervous before he came on stage 
    for sound check... and it of course put this gigantic feather in my hat 
    when he did his 3.78 second chromatic run from middle C upwards to the 
    top to <<check>> the piano.  That was all he needed to approve the thing 
    believe it or not. It held up nicely the whole concert and my position 
    at Molde was sealed for as long as I wanted it... which was up until 
    1999 when I figured that 18 years service was enough.  I could tell the 
    long version of this story... but suffice to say that I got lucky in 
    several ways that day and that luck had as much to do with the whole 
    affair as anything else.
    
    The other story was more recently.  About 7 years back Chick Corea came 
    to town and accompanying him was a CF III.  This was to be tuned by a 
    fellow in Stavanger who had been chosen to follow the thing around 
    Norway for Chicks concert... but for reasons I wont get into the local 
    Yamaha dealer did the tuning.  It was to be a live recording concert.  
    The tuning went totally bonkers during the first set and Mr. Corea 
    insisted it be retuned. The fellow who'd done the job had gone home and 
    was 45 minutes away from being able to sit down at the instrument to 
    retune... I was in the audience and the regular tuner at this venue ... 
    so they asked me back stage to talk with Mr. Corea about it.  I 
    explained there were 300 people sitting out there and it would be 
    probably difficult to improve the situation much. As it turned out... it 
    was easy to clean up the octaves and unisons significantly... for two 
    reasons.  The audience was very cooperative, and piano was really very 
    much out of tune.  I was given 20 minutes to do the best I could out of 
    the situation.  When Mr Corea came on stage... he spoke up about the 
    life and situation of piano tuners as he had experienced it... and he 
    was very kind to the fellow who'd done the original tuning... too kind 
    really but then that was they way Mr Corea was (and probably still is).  
    I perhaps would have found it embarrassing had I done the original 
    tuning... but as it was not my <<fault>>... I just found the experience 
    "interesting".  Never have before or since had to tune with an audience 
    in the hall.  Tho I work regularly around lights and sound folks during 
    pre-concert situations. One learns how to work together with these... in 
    the end the audience was not all that different.
    
    My point is... its all part of the job..  these are the kinds of things 
    among many others both positive and less so that make such work 
    interesting and challenging. And if you are good... you'll do well most 
    of the time if not nearly always. If you are not so good... well you 
    have the opportunity presented to get better in what ever ways you need 
    too.  And that can be everything from basic tuning skills to people 
    skills... i.e. dealing with a pianist in a stressing situation.  I just 
    have to go back to my original statement... and say it leaves us all in 
    all with enormous amounts to be greatful for.  Not the least of these 
    that wonderful feeling of satisfaction when you have done a fine job.... 
    sitting in the audience or back stage listening to a master make the 
    instrument you just tuned for him/her come alive with music.  A bit of 
    you is up there on stage.... hopefully providing some of the inspiration 
    for the pianist to cut loose with the best music they can offer.
    
    Cheers
    RicB
    
    
            RicB wrote:> > I think any of us who've had this kind of
            pleasure to work for these > folks has enormous amounts to be
            greatful for.>
    
         
        Not all of us! About 20 years ago there was a jazz festival with
        Keith Jarrett in my hometown (M?nster, Germany). Unfortunately, I
        missed that concert, but my friends told me this story: after a
        while Keith Jarrett interrupted the concert and claimed that the
        piano was not perfectly in tune. The tuner was still there. Because
        it would had taken too much time for some thousand people to leave
        the hall, they made an anouncement: special request, please keep
        absoluteley quiet for the tuner to touch up the tuning. And that
        worked. This collegue had to tune in front of the audience. Horror!
        And embarrasing too. The piano should not have been in a condition
        that a player has a reason to complain. No idea if the tuning was
        actually so bad. However: poor collegue!
         
        This year Keith Jarret played in Frankfurt, Germany and one guy in
        the audience had to cough. Jarrett interrupted his playing very
        angry, slammed the piano lid and said: I can wait outside if you
        want to cough. In Madrid he affronted the audience because someone
        took photos.
         
        On the other hand: at the legendary K?ln Concerts (1974) he played
        on a worn out piano with a poor tuning. The moving company had the
        job to carry the B?sendorfer Imperial from basement to stage. But
        they mixed up the piano and brought and old and short B?sendorfer to
        stage, which usually was used for choir practicing only. The
        organizer convinced him to play on that piano and he really did. And
        said: I do that only for you (the organizer was a 18 years old
        girl). After half an our the tuner had to touch up the tuning live
        on stage.
         
        Gregor
    


  • 33.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-29-2007 10:51
    From Gregor _ <karlkaputt@hotmail.com>
    
    HI Ric,
     
    respect! I think I would have got a heart attack if I was to tune with audience in such a stressing situation. The worst I did was a tuning on a stage at a village fair and it was an Yamaha CP 80. Many eyes stared at me and that made me nervous.
     
    But you are right: it?s really nice to listen to a concert where you tuned the piano. I love this job :-)
     
    Gregor
     
    > Date: Sat, 29 Dec 2007 12:48:47 +0100> From: ricb@pianostemmer.no> To: pianotech@ptg.org> Subject: Oscar Peterson> > > Hi Gregor.> > I have two stories to tell that are relevant to your post. I owe Keith > Jarrett quite a lot... in an indirect way. On one of is European tours > in the early 80's he complained about every single piano on his tour > except his last concert... which was my instrument... a nicely restrung > Steinway D that Molde International Jazz Festival had just purchased. > The Festival folks were of course very nervous before he came on stage > for sound check... and it of course put this gigantic feather in my hat > when he did his 3.78 second chromatic run from middle C upwards to the > top to <<check>> the piano. That was all he needed to approve the thing > believe it or not. It held up nicely the whole concert and my position > at Molde was sealed for as long as I wanted it... which was up until > 1999 when I figured that 18 years service was enough. I could tell the > long version of this story... but suffice to say that I got lucky in > several ways that day and that luck had as much to do with the whole > affair as anything else.> > The other story was more recently. About 7 years back Chick Corea came > to town and accompanying him was a CF III. This was to be tuned by a > fellow in Stavanger who had been chosen to follow the thing around > Norway for Chicks concert... but for reasons I wont get into the local > Yamaha dealer did the tuning. It was to be a live recording concert. > The tuning went totally bonkers during the first set and Mr. Corea > insisted it be retuned. The fellow who'd done the job had gone home and > was 45 minutes away from being able to sit down at the instrument to > retune... I was in the audience and the regular tuner at this venue ... > so they asked me back stage to talk with Mr. Corea about it. I > explained there were 300 people sitting out there and it would be > probably difficult to improve the situation much. As it turned out... it > was easy to clean up the octaves and unisons significantly... for two > reasons. The audience was very cooperative, and piano was really very > much out of tune. I was given 20 minutes to do the best I could out of > the situation. When Mr Corea came on stage... he spoke up about the > life and situation of piano tuners as he had experienced it... and he > was very kind to the fellow who'd done the original tuning... too kind > really but then that was they way Mr Corea was (and probably still is). > I perhaps would have found it embarrassing had I done the original > tuning... but as it was not my <<fault>>... I just found the experience > "interesting". Never have before or since had to tune with an audience > in the hall. Tho I work regularly around lights and sound folks during > pre-concert situations. One learns how to work together with these... in > the end the audience was not all that different.> > My point is... its all part of the job.. these are the kinds of things > among many others both positive and less so that make such work > interesting and challenging. And if you are good... you'll do well most > of the time if not nearly always. If you are not so good... well you > have the opportunity presented to get better in what ever ways you need > too. And that can be everything from basic tuning skills to people > skills... i.e. dealing with a pianist in a stressing situation. I just > have to go back to my original statement... and say it leaves us all in > all with enormous amounts to be greatful for. Not the least of these > that wonderful feeling of satisfaction when you have done a fine job.... > sitting in the audience or back stage listening to a master make the > instrument you just tuned for him/her come alive with music. A bit of > you is up there on stage.... hopefully providing some of the inspiration > for the pianist to cut loose with the best music they can offer.> > Cheers> RicB> > > RicB wrote:> > I think any of us who've had this kind of> pleasure to work for these > folks has enormous amounts to be> greatful for.>> > > Not all of us! About 20 years ago there was a jazz festival with> Keith Jarrett in my hometown (M?nster, Germany). Unfortunately, I> missed that concert, but my friends told me this story: after a> while Keith Jarrett interrupted the concert and claimed that the> piano was not perfectly in tune. The tuner was still there. Because> it would had taken too much time for some thousand people to leave> the hall, they made an anouncement: special request, please keep> absoluteley quiet for the tuner to touch up the tuning. And that> worked. This collegue had to tune in front of the audience. Horror!> And embarrasing too. The piano should not have been in a condition> that a player has a reason to complain. No idea if the tuning was> actually so bad. However: poor collegue!> > This year Keith Jarret played in Frankfurt, Germany and one guy in> the audience had to cough. Jarrett interrupted his playing very> angry, slammed the piano lid and said: I can wait outside if you> want to cough. In Madrid he affronted the audience because someone> took photos.> > On the other hand: at the legendary K?ln Concerts (1974) he played> on a worn out piano with a poor tuning. The moving company had the> job to carry the B?sendorfer Imperial from basement to stage. But> they mixed up the piano and brought and old and short B?sendorfer to> stage, which usually was used for choir practicing only. The> organizer convinced him to play on that piano and he really did. And> said: I do that only for you (the organizer was a 18 years old> girl). After half an our the tuner had to touch up the tuning live> on stage.> > Gregor> 
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  • 34.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-29-2007 13:14
    From "Joey Recker" <joey@onkeypiano.com>
    
    Being from a town of 680 folks (the population never changes?   every time a
    woman gets pregnant, a man leaves town!), I?ve only had one stressing tuning
    situation, but it sticks out in my mind as being one of my proudest.
    
     
    
    Former President Jimmy Carter is friends with David Osborne (Google him?
    Vegas Performer) and asked him to come to our small town to play for a local
    church.  They rented a Steinway D from a local retailer for the concert.
    The concert was to begin at 7pm.  About 6:30 I got a frantic call from
    ?Jimmy? asking me if I would tune the piano.  I told him that I didn?t work
    on Sundays and that I was on my way to my own church.  He told me he was
    desperate and would pay whatever price I charged.  I drove over (2 minutes
    from home) and the congregation was full.  Mr. Osborne told me that the
    movers simply delivered the piano and left, no tuning was provided and that
    it was horrible. He also showed me a few notes in which the dampers were
    ringing and asked me to try to help with that also.  I had approximately 20
    minutes to ?do my best?.
    
     
    
    The piano was way below pitch and sounded as if it hadn?t been tuned in
    years!  I decided to tune it ?where it was? rather than attempt to pull it
    up.  (It was about 15 cents low).  I went through it quickly and cleaned up
    the octaves and unisons as quickly as I could?  (all this with much crowd
    noise).  While David was being introduced, I finally looked at the offending
    dampers he mentioned.  I did a quickie wire bend, looked at David while he
    came to the piano, and said ?hope that works?, cleaned up my tools and sat
    down to listen to the concert (might as well?  I?d already missed my own
    church service).
    
     
    
    At the completion of the concert, David thanked me and explained to the
    audience what happened and bragged on my skills.  My business almost doubled
    in the 2 months following this incident due to his glowing recommendation.
    He told me personally that it was one of the best ?rescues? he had ever
    seen.   That made it worth everything to me.  (well not everything?  I still
    charged Jimmy 3x my tuning rate!).  
    
     
    
    Not much compared to Keith Jarrett or Chick Corea?  but still proud moment
    for this small town boy.
    
     
    
    Joey
    
     
    
      _____  
    
    From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf
    Of Gregor _
    Sent: Saturday, December 29, 2007 12:51 PM
    To: Pianotech List
    Subject: RE: Oscar Peterson
    
     
    
    HI Ric,
     
    respect! I think I would have got a heart attack if I was to tune with
    audience in such a stressing situation. The worst I did was a tuning on a
    stage at a village fair and it was an Yamaha CP 80. Many eyes stared at me
    and that made me nervous.
     
    But you are right: it?s really nice to listen to a concert where you tuned
    the piano. I love this job :-)
     
    Gregor
     
    
    
    > Date: Sat, 29 Dec 2007 12:48:47 +0100
    > From: ricb@pianostemmer.no
    > To: pianotech@ptg.org
    > Subject: Oscar Peterson
    > 
    > 
    > Hi Gregor.
    > 
    > I have two stories to tell that are relevant to your post. I owe Keith 
    > Jarrett quite a lot... in an indirect way. On one of is European tours 
    > in the early 80's he complained about every single piano on his tour 
    > except his last concert... which was my instrument... a nicely restrung 
    > Steinway D that Molde International Jazz Festival had just purchased. 
    > The Festival folks were of course very nervous before he came on stage 
    > for sound check... and it of course put this gigantic feather in my hat 
    > when he did his 3.78 second chromatic run from middle C upwards to the 
    > top to <<check>> the piano. That was all he needed to approve the thing 
    > believe it or not. It held up nicely the whole concert and my position 
    > at Molde was sealed for as long as I wanted it... which was up until 
    > 1999 when I figured that 18 years service was enough. I could tell the 
    > long version of this story.... but suffice to say that I got lucky in 
    > several ways that day and that luck had as much to do with the whole 
    > affair as anything else.
    > 
    > The other story was more recently. About 7 years back Chick Corea came 
    > to town and accompanying him was a CF III. This was to be tuned by a 
    > fellow in Stavanger who had been chosen to follow the thing around 
    > Norway for Chicks concert... but for reasons I wont get into the local 
    > Yamaha dealer did the tuning. It was to be a live recording concert. 
    > The tuning went totally bonkers during the first set and Mr. Corea 
    > insisted it be retuned. The fellow who'd done the job had gone home and 
    > was 45 minutes away from being able to sit down at the instrument to 
    > retune... I was in the audience and the regular tuner at this venue ... 
    > so they asked me back stage to talk with Mr. Corea about it. I 
    > explained there were 300 people sitting out there and it would be 
    > probably difficult to improve the situation much. As it turned out... it 
    > was easy to clean up the octaves and unisons significantly... for two 
    > reasons. The audience was very cooperative, and piano was really very 
    > much out of tune. I was given 20 minutes to do the best I could out of 
    > the situation. When Mr Corea came on stage... he spoke up about the 
    > life and situation of piano tuners as he had experienced it... and he 
    > was very kind to the fellow who'd done the original tuning... too kind 
    > really but then that was they way Mr Corea was (and probably still is). 
    > I perhaps would have found it embarrassing had I done the original 
    > tuning... but as it was not my <<fault>>... I just found the experience 
    > "interesting". Never have before or since had to tune with an audience 
    > in the hall. Tho I work regularly around lights and sound folks during 
    > pre-concert situations. One learns how to work together with these... in 
    > the end the audience was not all that different.
    > 
    > My point is... its all part of the job.. these are the kinds of things 
    > among many others both positive and less so that make such work 
    > interesting and challenging. And if you are good... you'll do well most 
    > of the time if not nearly always. If you are not so good... well you 
    > have the opportunity presented to get better in what ever ways you need 
    > too. And that can be everything from basic tuning skills to people 
    > skills... i.e. dealing with a pianist in a stressing situation. I just 
    > have to go back to my original statement... and say it leaves us all in 
    > all with enormous amounts to be greatful for. Not the least of these 
    > that wonderful feeling of satisfaction when you have done a fine job.... 
    > sitting in the audience or back stage listening to a master make the 
    > instrument you just tuned for him/her come alive with music. A bit of 
    > you is up there on stage.... hopefully providing some of the inspiration 
    > for the pianist to cut loose with the best music they can offer.
    > 
    > Cheers
    > RicB
    > 
    > 
    > RicB wrote:> > I think any of us who've had this kind of
    > pleasure to work for these > folks has enormous amounts to be
    > greatful for.>
    > 
    > 
    > Not all of us! About 20 years ago there was a jazz festival with
    > Keith Jarrett in my hometown (M?nster, Germany). Unfortunately, I
    > missed that concert, but my friends told me this story: after a
    > while Keith Jarrett interrupted the concert and claimed that the
    > piano was not perfectly in tune. The tuner was still there. Because
    > it would had taken too much time for some thousand people to leave
    > the hall, they made an anouncement: special request, please keep
    > absoluteley quiet for the tuner to touch up the tuning. And that
    > worked. This collegue had to tune in front of the audience. Horror!
    > And embarrasing too. The piano should not have been in a condition
    > that a player has a reason to complain. No idea if the tuning was
    > actually so bad. However: poor collegue!
    > 
    > This year Keith Jarret played in Frankfurt, Germany and one guy in
    > the audience had to cough. Jarrett interrupted his playing very
    > angry, slammed the piano lid and said: I can wait outside if you
    > want to cough. In Madrid he affronted the audience because someone
    > took photos.
    > 
    > On the other hand: at the legendary K?ln Concerts (1974) he played
    > on a worn out piano with a poor tuning. The moving company had the
    > job to carry the B?sendorfer Imperial from basement to stage. But
    > they mixed up the piano and brought and old and short B?sendorfer to
    > stage, which usually was used for choir practicing only. The
    > organizer convinced him to play on that piano and he really did. And
    > said: I do that only for you (the organizer was a 18 years old
    > girl). After half an our the tuner had to touch up the tuning live
    > on stage.
    > 
    > Gregor
    > 
    
    
    
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  • 35.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-29-2007 13:28
    From "Dean May" <deanmay@pianorebuilders.com>
    
    What a great story! Thanks for sharing.
    
     
    
    Dean
    
    Dean May             cell 812.239.3359 
    
    PianoRebuilders.com   812.235.5272 
    
    Terre Haute IN  47802
    
      _____  
    
    From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf
    Of Joey Recker
    Sent: Saturday, December 29, 2007 3:14 PM
    To: 'Pianotech List'
    Subject: RE: Oscar Peterson
    
     
    
    Being from a town of 680 folks (the population never changes?   every time a
    woman gets pregnant, a man leaves town!), I?ve only had one stressing tuning
    situation, but it sticks out in my mind as being one of my proudest.
    
     
    
    Former President Jimmy Carter is friends with David Osborne (Google him?
    Vegas Performer) and asked him to come to our small town to play for a local
    church.  They rented a Steinway D from a local retailer for the concert.
    The concert was to begin at 7pm.  About 6:30 I got a frantic call from
    ?Jimmy? asking me if I would tune the piano.  I told him that I didn?t work
    on Sundays and that I was on my way to my own church.  He told me he was
    desperate and would pay whatever price I charged.  I drove over (2 minutes
    from home) and the congregation was full.  Mr. Osborne told me that the
    movers simply delivered the piano and left, no tuning was provided and that
    it was horrible. He also showed me a few notes in which the dampers were
    ringing and asked me to try to help with that also.  I had approximately 20
    minutes to ?do my best?.
    
     
    
    The piano was way below pitch and sounded as if it hadn?t been tuned in
    years!  I decided to tune it ?where it was? rather than attempt to pull it
    up.  (It was about 15 cents low).  I went through it quickly and cleaned up
    the octaves and unisons as quickly as I could?  (all this with much crowd
    noise).  While David was being introduced, I finally looked at the offending
    dampers he mentioned.  I did a quickie wire bend, looked at David while he
    came to the piano, and said ?hope that works?, cleaned up my tools and sat
    down to listen to the concert (might as well?  I?d already missed my own
    church service).
    
     
    
    At the completion of the concert, David thanked me and explained to the
    audience what happened and bragged on my skills.  My business almost doubled
    in the 2 months following this incident due to his glowing recommendation.
    He told me personally that it was one of the best ?rescues? he had ever
    seen.   That made it worth everything to me.  (well not everything?  I still
    charged Jimmy 3x my tuning rate!).  
    
     
    
    Not much compared to Keith Jarrett or Chick Corea?  but still proud moment
    for this small town boy.
    
     
    
    Joey
    
     
    
      _____  
    
    From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf
    Of Gregor _
    Sent: Saturday, December 29, 2007 12:51 PM
    To: Pianotech List
    Subject: RE: Oscar Peterson
    
     
    
    HI Ric,
     
    respect! I think I would have got a heart attack if I was to tune with
    audience in such a stressing situation. The worst I did was a tuning on a
    stage at a village fair and it was an Yamaha CP 80. Many eyes stared at me
    and that made me nervous.
     
    But you are right: it?s really nice to listen to a concert where you tuned
    the piano. I love this job :-)
     
    Gregor
     
    
    
    > Date: Sat, 29 Dec 2007 12:48:47 +0100
    > From: ricb@pianostemmer.no
    > To: pianotech@ptg.org
    > Subject: Oscar Peterson
    > 
    > 
    > Hi Gregor.
    > 
    > I have two stories to tell that are relevant to your post. I owe Keith 
    > Jarrett quite a lot... in an indirect way. On one of is European tours 
    > in the early 80's he complained about every single piano on his tour 
    > except his last concert... which was my instrument... a nicely restrung 
    > Steinway D that Molde International Jazz Festival had just purchased. 
    > The Festival folks were of course very nervous before he came on stage 
    > for sound check... and it of course put this gigantic feather in my hat 
    > when he did his 3.78 second chromatic run from middle C upwards to the 
    > top to <<check>> the piano. That was all he needed to approve the thing 
    > believe it or not. It held up nicely the whole concert and my position 
    > at Molde was sealed for as long as I wanted it... which was up until 
    > 1999 when I figured that 18 years service was enough. I could tell the 
    > long version of this story.... but suffice to say that I got lucky in 
    > several ways that day and that luck had as much to do with the whole 
    > affair as anything else.
    > 
    > The other story was more recently. About 7 years back Chick Corea came 
    > to town and accompanying him was a CF III. This was to be tuned by a 
    > fellow in Stavanger who had been chosen to follow the thing around 
    > Norway for Chicks concert... but for reasons I wont get into the local 
    > Yamaha dealer did the tuning. It was to be a live recording concert. 
    > The tuning went totally bonkers during the first set and Mr. Corea 
    > insisted it be retuned. The fellow who'd done the job had gone home and 
    > was 45 minutes away from being able to sit down at the instrument to 
    > retune... I was in the audience and the regular tuner at this venue ... 
    > so they asked me back stage to talk with Mr. Corea about it. I 
    > explained there were 300 people sitting out there and it would be 
    > probably difficult to improve the situation much. As it turned out... it 
    > was easy to clean up the octaves and unisons significantly... for two 
    > reasons. The audience was very cooperative, and piano was really very 
    > much out of tune. I was given 20 minutes to do the best I could out of 
    > the situation. When Mr Corea came on stage... he spoke up about the 
    > life and situation of piano tuners as he had experienced it... and he 
    > was very kind to the fellow who'd done the original tuning... too kind 
    > really but then that was they way Mr Corea was (and probably still is). 
    > I perhaps would have found it embarrassing had I done the original 
    > tuning... but as it was not my <<fault>>... I just found the experience 
    > "interesting". Never have before or since had to tune with an audience 
    > in the hall. Tho I work regularly around lights and sound folks during 
    > pre-concert situations. One learns how to work together with these... in 
    > the end the audience was not all that different.
    > 
    > My point is... its all part of the job.. these are the kinds of things 
    > among many others both positive and less so that make such work 
    > interesting and challenging. And if you are good... you'll do well most 
    > of the time if not nearly always. If you are not so good... well you 
    > have the opportunity presented to get better in what ever ways you need 
    > too. And that can be everything from basic tuning skills to people 
    > skills... i.e. dealing with a pianist in a stressing situation. I just 
    > have to go back to my original statement... and say it leaves us all in 
    > all with enormous amounts to be greatful for. Not the least of these 
    > that wonderful feeling of satisfaction when you have done a fine job.... 
    > sitting in the audience or back stage listening to a master make the 
    > instrument you just tuned for him/her come alive with music. A bit of 
    > you is up there on stage.... hopefully providing some of the inspiration 
    > for the pianist to cut loose with the best music they can offer.
    > 
    > Cheers
    > RicB
    > 
    > 
    > RicB wrote:> > I think any of us who've had this kind of
    > pleasure to work for these > folks has enormous amounts to be
    > greatful for.>
    > 
    > 
    > Not all of us! About 20 years ago there was a jazz festival with
    > Keith Jarrett in my hometown (M?nster, Germany). Unfortunately, I
    > missed that concert, but my friends told me this story: after a
    > while Keith Jarrett interrupted the concert and claimed that the
    > piano was not perfectly in tune. The tuner was still there. Because
    > it would had taken too much time for some thousand people to leave
    > the hall, they made an anouncement: special request, please keep
    > absoluteley quiet for the tuner to touch up the tuning. And that
    > worked. This collegue had to tune in front of the audience. Horror!
    > And embarrasing too. The piano should not have been in a condition
    > that a player has a reason to complain. No idea if the tuning was
    > actually so bad. However: poor collegue!
    > 
    > This year Keith Jarret played in Frankfurt, Germany and one guy in
    > the audience had to cough. Jarrett interrupted his playing very
    > angry, slammed the piano lid and said: I can wait outside if you
    > want to cough. In Madrid he affronted the audience because someone
    > took photos.
    > 
    > On the other hand: at the legendary K?ln Concerts (1974) he played
    > on a worn out piano with a poor tuning. The moving company had the
    > job to carry the B?sendorfer Imperial from basement to stage. But
    > they mixed up the piano and brought and old and short B?sendorfer to
    > stage, which usually was used for choir practicing only. The
    > organizer convinced him to play on that piano and he really did. And
    > said: I do that only for you (the organizer was a 18 years old
    > girl). After half an our the tuner had to touch up the tuning live
    > on stage.
    > 
    > Gregor
    > 
    
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  • 36.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-29-2007 11:42
    From Richard Brekne <ricb@pianostemmer.no>
    
    Grin...
    
    I think you go into a kind of O-zone state... you just do it, sweat a 
    bit.... and when the time is up it is. Yamaha CP 70 eh ?... I'd be 
    nervous too :)
    
    Cheers
    RicB
    
    
        HI Ric,
         
        respect! I think I would have got a heart attack if I was to tune
        with audience in such a stressing situation. The worst I did was a
        tuning on a stage at a village fair and it was an Yamaha CP 80. Many
        eyes stared at me and that made me nervous.
         
        But you are right: it?s really nice to listen to a concert where you
        tuned the piano. I love this job :-)
         
        Gregor
    
     
    


  • 37.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-29-2007 10:05
    From "David Ilvedson" <ilvey@sbcglobal.net>
    
    You mention the Koln concerts...not the recorded ones, right?   I thought it was a Hamburg Steinway?
    
    
    
    David Ilvedson, RPT
    
    Pacifica, CA 94044
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    Original message
    
    From: "Gregor _"
    
    To: "Pianotech List"
    
    Received: 12/29/2007 1:21:16 AM
    
    Subject: RE: Oscar Peterson
    
    
    
    
    
    RicB wrote:
    
    
    
    >
    
    > I think any of us who've had this kind of pleasure to work for these 
    
    > folks has enormous amounts to be greatful for.
    
    >
    
    
    
    
    
    Not all of us! About 20 years ago there was a jazz festival with Keith Jarrett in my hometown (M?nster, Germany). Unfortunately, I missed that concert, but my friends told me this story: after a while Keith Jarrett interrupted the concert and claimed that the piano was not perfectly in tune. The tuner was still there. Because it would had taken too much time for some thousand people to leave the hall, they made an anouncement: special request, please keep absoluteley quiet for the tuner to touch up the tuning. And that worked. This collegue had to tune in front of the audience. Horror! And embarrasing too. The piano should not have been in a condition that a player has a reason to complain. No idea if the tuning was actually so bad. However: poor collegue!
    
    
    
    This year Keith Jarret played in Frankfurt, Germany and one guy in the audience had to cough. Jarrett interrupted his playing very angry, slammed the piano lid and said: I can wait outside if you want to cough. In Madrid he affronted the audience because someone took photos.
    
    
    
    On the other hand: at the legendary K?ln Concerts (1974) he played on a worn out piano with a poor tuning. The moving company had the job to carry the B?sendorfer Imperial from basement to stage. But they mixed up the piano and brought and old and short B?sendorfer to stage, which usually was used for choir practicing only. The organizer convinced him to play on that piano and he really did. And said: I do that only for you (the organizer was a 18 years old girl). After half an our the tuner had to touch up the tuning live on stage.
    
    
    
    Gregor
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
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  • 38.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-30-2007 01:32
    From Gregor _ <karlkaputt@hotmail.com>
    
    Yes, the recorded ones. The story about the B?sendorfer mix up comes from a German magazin called Piano News.
     
    Gregor
    
    
    From: ilvey@sbcglobal.netTo: pianotech@ptg.orgSubject: RE: Oscar PetersonDate: Sat, 29 Dec 2007 09:05:17 -0800
    
    
    
    You mention the Koln concerts...not the recorded ones, right?   I thought it was a Hamburg Steinway? 
     
    David Ilvedson, RPTPacifica, CA 94044
    
    
    Original messageFrom: "Gregor _"  To: "Pianotech List"  Received: 12/29/2007 1:21:16 AMSubject: RE: Oscar Peterson
    RicB wrote:> > I think any of us who've had this kind of pleasure to work for these > folks has enormous amounts to be greatful for.>  Not all of us! About 20 years ago there was a jazz festival with Keith Jarrett in my hometown (M?nster, Germany). Unfortunately, I missed that concert, but my friends told me this story: after a while Keith Jarrett interrupted the concert and claimed that the piano was not perfectly in tune. The tuner was still there. Because it would had taken too much time for some thousand people to leave the hall, they made an anouncement: special request, please keep absoluteley quiet for the tuner to touch up the tuning. And that worked. This collegue had to tune in front of the audience. Horror! And embarrasing too. The piano should not have been in a condition that a player has a reason to complain. No idea if the tuning was actually so bad. However: poor collegue! This year Keith Jarret played in Frankfurt, Germany and one guy in the audience had to cough. Jarrett interrupted his playing very angry, slammed the piano lid and said: I can wait outside if you want to cough. In Madrid he affronted the audience because someone took photos. On the other hand: at the legendary K?ln Concerts (1974) he played on a worn out piano with a poor tuning. The moving company had the job to carry the B?sendorfer Imperial from basement to stage. But they mixed up the piano and brought and old and short B?sendorfer to stage, which usually was used for choir practicing only. The organizer convinced him to play on that piano and he really did. And said: I do that only for you (the organizer was a 18 years old girl). After half an our the tuner had to touch up the tuning live on stage. Gregor
    
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  • 39.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-31-2007 08:23
    From "Prof. Euphonious Thump" <lclgcnp@yahoo.com>
    
    Well, Ruth Etting and Bix Beiderbecke were from
    Indiana, Tatum was from Toledo, Ohio, Hines was from
    Pittsburgh, Jones was a  Pennsylvania coal miner,
    Tucker was from Hartford and  Thomas "Fats" Waller was
    from Harlem, where his father was a Deacon at the
    Baptist church ( and he learned to play, on the organ
    ). But I'm "with you" as far as the beauty, skill and
    potency of these artists'  music is concerned, and its
    vast superiority  vs much of what has been created,
    since ! 
    
    Peace,
         Thump
    
    P.S. If you likle this sort of stuff, you may be very
    interested in TCM's new "Box Set" of "The Jazz Singer"
    ( 1927 ) which includes 2-1/2 extra hours of
    "Vitaphone" shorts, from about 1926 onward, with many
    of the musical/Vaudevilian Artistes of the day !!!
    
    
    
    --- Richard Brekne <ricb@pianostemmer.no> wrote:
    
    > Hi Duaine
    > 
    > Ok... since I for one actually draw some measure of
    > humorous moments 
    > from your pandoric paranoia preponderments relative
    > to Microsoft, and 
    > because of the rather interesting list of artists
    > below.... you can 
    > consider yourself redeemed for my part :)
    > 
    > A bit odd tho that you can dig some of the below and
    > have trouble with 
    > Oscar.  I mean... bop was rather easy to follow....
    > its not like it we 
    > were talking about free bag or anything.  Try
    > Ornette Coleman on for 
    > size :)  Or perhaps some of Don Pullan and George
    > Adams stuff...
    > 
    > Cheers
    > RicB
    > 
    >     List,
    > 
    >     First of all, I'm late with this reply because I
    > just got of the
    >     hospital from infection of the esophagus.
    > 
    >     Now, trying to redeem myself.
    > 
    >     I love - most - forms of music especially what I
    > feel is - true - jazz,
    >     blues and boogie-woogie that came from the south
    > from the 20's and
    >     30's -
    >     Earl Hines, Cab Calloway, Ma Rainey, Ruth
    > Etting, Josephine Baker, Isham
    >     Jones, Art Tatum, Lionel Hampton, Frankie
    > Trumbauer, Fats Waller, Ben
    >     Pollack, Ben Selvin, Billy Cotton, Ted Lewis,
    > Sophie Tucker, Bessie
    >     Smith, Bix Beiderbecke, Cow Cow Davenport, Meade
    > Lux Lewis, Jane Green,
    >     and Walter Barnes & His Royal Creolians
    >     -- just to name a few.
    > 
    >     Not to mention my beloved artists from my era -
    > the 70's - ELO, STYX,
    >     HEAD EAST,  and the like.
    > 
    >     OH, and must not forget about all the ragtime
    > greats
    > 
    >     Ready for the flames again ......
    > 
    > 
    > 
    > 
    
    
    
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  • 40.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-31-2007 09:22
    From "Annie Grieshop" <annie@allthingspiano.com>
    
    Acutally, Bix was from Iowa -- Davenport, to be exact.  Must be something
    about growing up in river cities, huh:  Davenport, Toledo, Pittsburgh, even
    Hartford and Harlem.  Thanks for the tip on the new box set -- sounds great!
    
    Annie Grieshop
    
    > 


  • 41.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-31-2007 14:06
    From "Prof. Euphonious Thump" <lclgcnp@yahoo.com>
    
    My goof! Sorry! Been up since 3 A.M......
         Thump
    
    --- Annie Grieshop <annie@allthingspiano.com> wrote:
    
    > Acutally, Bix was from Iowa -- Davenport, to be
    > exact.  Must be something
    > about growing up in river cities, huh:  Davenport,
    > Toledo, Pittsburgh, even
    > Hartford and Harlem.  Thanks for the tip on the new
    > box set -- sounds great!
    > 
    > Annie Grieshop
    > 
    > > 


  • 42.  Oscar Peterson

    Posted 12-31-2007 14:21
    From Annie Grieshop <annie@allthingspiano.com>
    
    Oh, never to worry!  It was fun looking up the information and thinking 
    about rivers and blues and jazz.  Turns out, Ruth Etting was from 
    Nebraska -- and a land-locked town, at that!  So, my hypothesis might 
    not hold much water, either. <g>
    
    How you going to party tonight if you haven't been to bed?
    
    Annie
    
    Prof. Euphonious Thump wrote:
    > My goof! Sorry! Been up since 3 A.M......
    >      Thump
    > 
    > --- Annie Grieshop <annie@allthingspiano.com> wrote:
    > 
    >> Acutally, Bix was from Iowa -- Davenport, to be
    >> exact.  Must be something
    >> about growing up in river cities, huh:  Davenport,
    >> Toledo, Pittsburgh, even
    >> Hartford and Harlem.  Thanks for the tip on the new
    >> box set -- sounds great!
    >>
    >> Annie Grieshop