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Buddy Rich: He was a star, but also unpredictable with a short fuse and a foul mouth

  Рет қаралды 3,968

onetrackjazz

onetrackjazz

4 ай бұрын

Bernard "Buddy" Rich was an American jazz drummer, songwriter, conductor, and bandleader. Clearly a genius, but there was another side to him. This is his biography
Playlist - • Jazz Legend Biographies
#buddyrich #buddyrichbiography #jazz #jazzdrummer #buddyrichbiography #buddy documentary #franksinatra #sinatra #genekrupa #johnnycarson

Пікірлер: 36
@kidthump
@kidthump 4 ай бұрын
Sounds like a perfectionist, and that's why he was one of the greatest.
@brianpite0893
@brianpite0893 4 ай бұрын
I got to see him a couple times with his big band. Absolutely phenomenal! In 1974 I got to speak to him for a few minutes. He was a gentleman. I heard that the feud he had with Sinatra was so bad that Frank got a couple friends to beat Rich up. You did a good documentary! Thanks
@boomerguy9935
@boomerguy9935 4 ай бұрын
A musician friend of mine with inside knowledge about Buddy Rich said that his orchestra consisted primarily of young players who simply wanted to put in their time for their resumes. After every concert, they expected their regular chewing out (aka "being cussed out") for 20 minutes after getting on the bus to leave for the next gig. I watched the The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson every night, just so I could catch one of his guest appearances. Johnny Carson kept bringing him back as a guest to help Buddy's waning career because America was losing interest in big bands. Buddy was always extremely sarcastic to Johnny and everybody else on the show and yet, Johnny kept bringing him back. Buddy is primarily responsible for my interest in jazz drumming, in spite of his "Brooklyn attitude". Buddy is the only drummer from this era that I ever heard anything negative about. Louis Bellson, Papa Jo Jones, Gene Krupa, Joe Morello and others were very positive in every way and would only say good things about Buddy. From what I understand, Buddy was respectful to other drummers who played on his level. Overall, it was either "Buddy's way or the highway" for his band members.
@donpaulweatherpluspaul2670
@donpaulweatherpluspaul2670 3 ай бұрын
Buddy's career was NOT waning when Carson began having him on. His big band helped to reenergize interest in contemporary big jazz ensembles. Carson idolized Rich as a drummer and gladly have him on, and your views on "sarcasm" toward Johnny and show staff don't seem to get it. Carson expected a poor man's Rickles out of Rich, and he always got it.
@wheezvonklaw284
@wheezvonklaw284 28 күн бұрын
​@@donpaulweatherpluspaul2670 You say his career wasn't waning yet within the same sentence you say it helped reignite interest in big band music. So Big Band was out of style but Buddy was still popular like in the days of Dorsey. Buddy just refused to quit (which I admire) but he was NOT selling any fucking records in the 70s.
@donpaulweatherpluspaul2670
@donpaulweatherpluspaul2670 28 күн бұрын
@@wheezvonklaw284 His shows were generally SRO ( I saw the Rich band more than 25 times). So were the Basie bands, and other big jazz ensembles. Record sales are nowhere near the sole arbiter of career strength. Sinatra record sales were down considerably from the 70s onward, but he remained the most prominent and revered popular singer well into old age.
@wheezvonklaw284
@wheezvonklaw284 28 күн бұрын
@@donpaulweatherpluspaul2670 The Big Band era was OVER. And yes, you are only really as good as your last record. To pretend that Rich was somehow relevant in the era of psych, rock, disco and punk is laughable. Buddy's mind was frozen in one style -and never moved forward. It really bothered him that he could never be a frontman/singer (even though he TRIED)like his old roommate Sinatra. I am a drummer and grew up playing out of some of Rich's ghostwritten books. I think I'm more fascinated by Buddy's utter lack of respect and hatred towards other forms of music.He just HATED everything except jazz-which I find hilarious and kind of pathetic at the same time.
@donpaulweatherpluspaul2670
@donpaulweatherpluspaul2670 27 күн бұрын
@@wheezvonklaw284 You sound nearly as filled with as much anger as Rich sometimes had. Maybe it's frustrating not to be able to approach his level of virtuosity and, yes, he could be cruel. (His bass player, Joel di Bartolo who later played in the Tonight Show Band on NBC for years, told me Buddy was a pussycat if you played up to his exacting standards.) I saw Rich perform at the Fillmore East following Procul Harum, and, a year later, just ahead of the at-their-peak at the 1970 Rutgers Jazz Festival. Nothing but standing ovations by young audiences. Rich got a more screaming response from the "hippy" audience than PH did, & BS & T got a tepid response after being stupidly scheduled as the headliner last act immediately after the infinitely more exciting BR Big Band (should have been more separation). In other words, you don't know what the hell you're talking about. I hate the expression "end of story,"...but... end of story.
@brianchisnell1548
@brianchisnell1548 3 ай бұрын
Had no time for non-perfection. Pure genius!!
@kevinsplinter8595
@kevinsplinter8595 4 ай бұрын
Cool. Thanks for sharing.
@user-rj5ld7jh7n
@user-rj5ld7jh7n 4 ай бұрын
He was a terrible person but a great drummer
@kevinsplinter8595
@kevinsplinter8595 4 ай бұрын
@@user-rj5ld7jh7n why do you say that?
@user-rj5ld7jh7n
@user-rj5ld7jh7n 4 ай бұрын
@@kevinsplinter8595 heard it all my life from jazz musicians who knew Buddy
@user-rj5ld7jh7n
@user-rj5ld7jh7n 4 ай бұрын
Yor welcome nice piece
@user-rj5ld7jh7n
@user-rj5ld7jh7n 4 ай бұрын
Nice piece
@aminahmed2220
@aminahmed2220 4 ай бұрын
What a fantastic video have a wonderful day ❤❤❤❤❤❤😊😊😊😊😊😊
@LeonardSmith-qv8do
@LeonardSmith-qv8do 4 ай бұрын
I have this joke with my wife when she says "No one is perfect" and I always give her the same answer "WRONG ,Buddy Rich was " LOL
@jeffreywegener8841
@jeffreywegener8841 Ай бұрын
“ short fuse “ & “ foul mouth “ 🤣. Buddy’s almost a new Rock musician .
@CaiusV.
@CaiusV. 4 ай бұрын
Thank you 😎
@johnhewitt1324
@johnhewitt1324 Ай бұрын
Interesting comments and commentary from people who never knew Buddy personally rather third person.
@kennyjraldrich6811
@kennyjraldrich6811 18 күн бұрын
I knew him first person I absolutely loved him I managed to work w many of his.sidemen thru the years many who had.to bear his rantings..but. ot ONE guy bad mouth him in the least..all of the sidemen I giged with highly respected buddy for what he instilled in them..I have worked extensively Ely ( 25years) w Dave Dana of "buddy and soul" fame. I also worked with a few of his bass players again?? Same thing David said of him I also worked w a few.horn cats of his.later bands and in fact I was I who spilled the.rant tape on the world when I was.doing a show in brdg port ct. Where a horn player asked if I liked buddy I said HELL YEAH I DO HE SAID JAVE.I GOT.A.TAPE.YOU GOTTA HEAR HE LEFT ONE I FOUND A DUPPING CASSETTED DECK DUPED OFF ONE COPY made a copy for a few of my friends I made the Pro.ise me they wouldnt.release it..sadly they did buddy was still alive when I got that tape I absutely regret letting it out of the bag I tried.. but what can I do? 😢 I believe he was already suffering that brain tumor ( as far back as late 85 ) anyway through the years I spoke with br exten sively.smoked weed w him rode on a closed roller.c oaster w him at lake comPounce in Bristol ct right after his quad bypass..I'm sorry I just have to say it. I loved this guy to death I loved his dedication to the art his e nthusiasm for the big band sounds I loved nearly every tune in that book and on and on on
@davep7296
@davep7296 10 күн бұрын
I think a lot of Buddy's "dark side" came from really not having a childhood. He was a performer from the time he could walk and had the responsibility of being the family's breadwinner at an age when other children were having fun in grade school . According to Mel Torme's BR biography, he was regularly beaten by his father and his mother was jealous of his talent and fame. That would be enough to turn any person into a troubled adult.
@edellis515
@edellis515 2 ай бұрын
He was the greatest knuclelhead
@kennyjraldrich6811
@kennyjraldrich6811 18 күн бұрын
But he could spell
@michaelgarcia2050
@michaelgarcia2050 2 ай бұрын
If the boss tells you to shave your beard, you shave your beard.
@johnsradios484
@johnsradios484 2 ай бұрын
Dusty did not take his nonsense!
@edellis515
@edellis515 2 ай бұрын
Don Menza!!!!!!!!!
@rillloudmother
@rillloudmother Ай бұрын
This guy, this is not my kind of guy.
@chrishorner7679
@chrishorner7679 3 ай бұрын
'Greatest' - hardly. But certainly very very great.
@kennyjraldrich6811
@kennyjraldrich6811 18 күн бұрын
Show me better..have you never seen him in person? Not the same as any tapes.we see it as beyond scary
@edellis515
@edellis515 6 күн бұрын
Greatest. Period
@edellis515
@edellis515 6 күн бұрын
​@kennyjraldrichin person u brain fried6811
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