The Most INSANE Music Interview

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Rick Beato

Rick Beato

4 ай бұрын

In this episode I break down what I think is the greatest music interview ever: Dick Cavett interviewing Oscar Peterson in 1979.
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Пікірлер: 5 500
@sirhcseroom2723
@sirhcseroom2723 4 ай бұрын
My late Father was a jazz pianist, based in West London, UK. He was well known locally but he wasn't famous. Oscar Peterson was his hero, and one evening in the early 1980's he had the greatest privilege of having dinner with Oscar at a hotel in central London. Oscar's people even sent a limo to pick my father up. My Father had the best night of his life, and always remarked how charming and funny Oscar was. He was truly humbled by him. But the funniest part of the story is that Oscar was actually late down to dinner, keeping his guests waiting. And the excuse Oscar gave was that he was watching the Muppet Show on TV. Absolutely true story. Hero's don't get any cooler than that that do they?
@neiladlington950
@neiladlington950 4 ай бұрын
I remember years ago Count Basie was doing a gig in Canada and CBC was interviewing him but Basie had to interrupt the interview to give a glowing shout out to Oscar who lived in Toronto back then. Princes and Kings; your choice which is which.
@SeekerSmith
@SeekerSmith 4 ай бұрын
No, they do not Sir!
@bananabob2185
@bananabob2185 4 ай бұрын
I’m SO glad your Dad had that experience! My Dad too was a jazz musician (sax, drums, arranging) and he loved Oscar too. 🥲
@thesuncollective1475
@thesuncollective1475 4 ай бұрын
Great story, your Dad was connected. You must be proud of him, that's a great name drop and I worked in TV !
@Kosmo999
@Kosmo999 4 ай бұрын
Great story!
@nancyfredericks5949
@nancyfredericks5949 4 ай бұрын
Cavett was one of the great interviewers. Very laid back and genuinely interested. They played reruns of his various shows on local TV until about a year ago, and they were always riveting, no matter who it was. Back when American had an attention span. Rick, you could not have found a better role model, and it shows. Love your interviews.
@petterw5318
@petterw5318 4 ай бұрын
His KZfaq channel is a gold mine, from the famous Gore Vidal / Norman Mailer confrontation, to Muhammad Ali, to a terrific conservation with a young and very sardonic post-Beatles George Harrison.
@Caturday123
@Caturday123 4 ай бұрын
Dick Cavett was a brilliant interviewer ❤
@klchu
@klchu 4 ай бұрын
Dick Cavett was an S Tier interviewer. He is one of the top 5 of all time.
@Weshopwizard
@Weshopwizard 4 ай бұрын
He was one of a kind. Homer Simpson was not a big fan though.
@justinkundert3383
@justinkundert3383 4 ай бұрын
Cavett was/is the best all-round interviewer ever (I hate to admit it, but when he wants to be serious, Howard Stern's pretty good in today's world). I recently found a Cavett/Arthur Ashe interview, and I, as a life-long tennis afficianado, learned more about tennis in that 60 minutes than I had learned in the previous 30 years of my life. After all, there's a reason Janis Joplin enjoyed having Cavett join her for a ride in her limo whenever she was in the area. Beato, dude, I actually didn't used to like your interviews. The sound was awful, the editing was ridiculously bad and sluggish, the questions themselves were so far from any logical order, etc., but doggonit, you've completely turned that around in the last year (I know, like I'm some sort of expert). Now I'm actually looking forward to them. But then there's Oscar. Holey moley .. how many levels of genius can there possibly be?
@peasantsoul
@peasantsoul Ай бұрын
Seeing Beato so fired up about Cavett's Oscar Peterson interview made my day.
@ronmurphy5042
@ronmurphy5042 3 ай бұрын
One word comes to mind when I hear the word Rick Beato: "unselfish"..... its never about Rick....its all about the music and Rick always pushes the spotlight away from him to focus on the matter at hand....thats why I never tire of Rick Beato.
@riddleofsteel9156
@riddleofsteel9156 4 ай бұрын
I was 18 years old in 1994, and had just joined the Navy. I came from a small cow town in Texas, and didn’t know much about music, other than some country and grunge. We were in the Pacific Ocean, heading west to the Persian Gulf, when I went into our ship’s store one day. It was a matter of having some money and no place to spend it, so I made it to the little CD music section of the shop. To this day I don’t know how stocked the store with CDs but whoever it was, changed my life. I ended up finding lots of Verve jazz music there over the next couple years, before I left the service, but the first thing I ever bought was an Oscar Peterson CD. It blew me away. Somehow I had existed in the world without having known the world of music could be so complex, playful, beautiful and sad. Many years later, I listen to a wide variety of music-from classical to metal-but I’ll never forget that it was the great Oscar Peterson who woke me up from my sleeping self. God bless his memory!
@aglees2b
@aglees2b 4 ай бұрын
Cheers for a recommendation of where to start and where to go next
@brendonmurley8276
@brendonmurley8276 4 ай бұрын
What a beautiful heartfelt story!
@kitchen6036
@kitchen6036 3 ай бұрын
You’re a rare breed
@sicnarf423
@sicnarf423 Ай бұрын
Then everyone clapped
@eongoosm
@eongoosm Ай бұрын
On the IKE?
@MaestroPippo
@MaestroPippo 4 ай бұрын
When I was doing my undergrad degree in music, Oscar Peterson was professor emeritus. Even when he was really sick, he still came and watched our Jazz ensembles play! We'd be scared out of our wits when we saw him sitting at the back, blowing our silly undergrad solos, but he always had time for a kind word when we worked up enough courage to go talk to him after our set. Such an incredibly kind man and an eternal icon to the music.
@dubasciver3234
@dubasciver3234 4 ай бұрын
Makes me wonder if you went to York?
@333ministries
@333ministries 4 ай бұрын
Oscar Peterson in your undergrad studies??!!!!! WoW😮😮😮😮😮😊😊😊😊
@louistusz3646
@louistusz3646 4 ай бұрын
@@dubasciver3234good on ya! Gotta plug our Canadian institutions to the worldwide audience. Rick nods to us from time to time, but look at his heros: Joni, Gordon, Rush, The Band…
@JasonKucherawy
@JasonKucherawy 4 ай бұрын
I’m a York University grad too. Not music, but I remember Oscar being one for dropping by, and I heard he was always generous with his time when it came to students. A gem.
@JasonKucherawy
@JasonKucherawy 4 ай бұрын
At York U, I got to hang out for a couple hours with Grammy Award-winner Rob Bowman to chat about the music industry. I look back at the access I had to brilliant people who were willing to give away their time and knowledge to keeners like me and I miss it.
@tomranier3387
@tomranier3387 2 ай бұрын
I agree completely about Dick Cavett but also wanted to say you are in a class by yourself...as a musician and an interviewer.....and you provide an immeasureable service and blessing to so many ......thank you Rick
@christophertaylor9100
@christophertaylor9100 Ай бұрын
Generally Cavett was kind of annoying in his interviews, way too elitist and artsy, very pretentious, but he does really well here, because he has no personal things to add in or act like he's an expert in it.
@pjmlegrande
@pjmlegrande 15 күн бұрын
@@christophertaylor9100interesting … I didn’t find him elitist or artsy, but I recognized his manner as maybe sounding too east coast, Ivy League educated for some folk’s tastes (although he is Yale educated, he’s from Nebraska, I think). I’m not of that background myself, but I wasn’t put off by his manner. It seemed natural to him and not affected. He generally asked great questions no matter the interviewee . Maybe the only knock was that he sometimes took too much time explaining why he was asking a question before he asked it. A minor tic, in my view.
@fogwalker4803
@fogwalker4803 3 ай бұрын
As usual ...Extremely well spotted Rick. Dick Cavett was always the consummate pro interviewer...And Oscar was just mind blowing talented. His hands could truly groove at any speed or feel or style he desired .Or even better... just carve out a new and even more bewildering and miraculous one of his own. He has never failed to astonish me for my entire life...even watching today. Thank you so much for this Rick. Really !
@user-su5xm1tb6s
@user-su5xm1tb6s 4 ай бұрын
I was the 2nd Recording Engineer on 2 of Oscar’s albums .. he was unreal .. simply unreal… even the takes we didn’t end up using was jaw dropping
@opiumdennis7249
@opiumdennis7249 4 ай бұрын
I knew a fellow named Sam who drummed for Oscar for a while... nothing but amazing stories...
@hlcepeda
@hlcepeda 4 ай бұрын
You lucky... lucky... b_____d! How did you mic those sessions? More than one mic? Any 'unusual' locations to speak of?
@user-su5xm1tb6s
@user-su5xm1tb6s 4 ай бұрын
@@hlcepeda These were both studio albums, no remote locations.. at the time, this studio was the second biggest recording room in Canada .. second to the Glenn Gould. One of the Albums was Oscar Peterson meets Roy Hargrove and Ralph Moore. The picture on the cover was the studio recording floor. beautiful sounding room , very airy. 30 foot ceilings.. hard to find a room like that today. We had to bring in a 12 foot Bosendorfer, 2 weeks prior so it would climatize to the room, tuned 3 days before session, don't even think u can find one anymore.... Jazz quartet style micing with ambient spot mic's. I remember Niels-Henning on Bass was a monster player as well.. I just remember putting the machines in record and watched them play
@williamperri3437
@williamperri3437 4 ай бұрын
⁠​⁠@@user-su5xm1tb6sI love Roy Hargrove so I gotta find that album. Was Oscar Peterson only on one album with Roy?
@user-su5xm1tb6s
@user-su5xm1tb6s 4 ай бұрын
@@williamperri3437 Roy and Ralph were guests on only that album that we worked on. The other Album I believe was a Christmas album with his regular touring ensemble at the time.. but Oscar recorded so many albums .. there was no punch-in's .. no re-do's .. no overdubs.. just the complete take from the floor .. and yes 60% ad lib. Oscar gives them a frame work or stucture .. and than they just go off... and I'll share another tid bit.. they're warm up at times grew into a full on jam session .. I can remember during the Roy and Ralph album .. there was a warm up standand they did that just grew into the best playing of the whole recordings cause they were just loose and fooling around.. and of course that never made it on the album ..
@trenthorne
@trenthorne 4 ай бұрын
Interviews like this don't happen anymore because we don't have intelligent hosts like Dick Cavett anymore and we don't have audiences wishing to increase their knowledge or skills - they just want to be entertained. And I think, Rick, that is why you're channel is so popular because you are offering exactly the recipe for greatness that you are calling out here with Dick and Oscar. Thank you!
@ji604
@ji604 4 ай бұрын
Nardwuar (The Human Serviette) is a great example of someone who does such impeccable research about the subjects and their craft that he completely disarms and fascinates the person being interviewed.
@coronaflo
@coronaflo 4 ай бұрын
The problem is that corporations that own the networks now want talk show hosts to push their advertising and not in depth interviews.
@alanking6240
@alanking6240 4 ай бұрын
Another talk show host that was really great was Phil Donahue. He wanted his audience really get to know his guests. I remember his Neil Diamond interview, awesome. He not only talked music but discussed Neil's hopes and fears while performing. They discussed his music and how he got his idea's and how he put them to music. It was great.
@ukestudio3002
@ukestudio3002 4 ай бұрын
We have them in boatloads. They’re just not hired . (Guys like Rick.)
@ericcoates8361
@ericcoates8361 3 ай бұрын
Very true
@sandrafrida
@sandrafrida 3 ай бұрын
I'm blown away!! My mother used to have all kinds of jazz musicians coming to our flat in Copenhagen in the 60's and 70's, Dexter Gordon, Ben Webster, NHØP, and maybe even Mr. Peterson..? I remember a lunch in Tivoli with Miles Davis and his cousin Herman. Miles asked my mother if she would swap rings with him..!!!! I still have that ring - of course. All of these guys were so incredibly nice to me and mostly very softspoken and showed a genuine interest towards this little Danish kid. Just fantastic.
@philfitzsimmons616
@philfitzsimmons616 2 ай бұрын
Rick, I like the way your interviews leave space and time for an individual’s personality to reveal itself, which answers so many questions all at once.
@bobfesmire9721
@bobfesmire9721 4 ай бұрын
Dick Cavett was probably the best of the breed for what he did. So intelligent and articulate--and he never EVER dumbed it down. He respected his audience enough to keep it at that high level. His interview with Hendrix is another gem.
@jefffawcett
@jefffawcett 3 ай бұрын
We used to have things that would attempt to educate and elevate the audience. Now the audience wants 30 second snippets of disposable amusement.
@sulevisydanmaa9981
@sulevisydanmaa9981 3 ай бұрын
@bobfesmire9721 + with Janis, and she does Bobby in it. Also Cavett s voice quality is clear and masculine, contrary to today s whining monkeyzzzz ... 🇫🇮
@DenOndeMister
@DenOndeMister 3 ай бұрын
It wasn’t the audience that changed the content but the owners or the delivery system. And they did it because of capitalist reasons. Cheapest possible production cost for highest possible attention retention. It’s not a bug it’s a feature. Quality costs so much that given enough time, the concept of efficiency will erode it completely.
@finnmcginn9931
@finnmcginn9931 3 ай бұрын
Mike Douglas was good interviewing musicians. Helps that he was one himself
@oldsocrates
@oldsocrates 3 ай бұрын
@@DenOndeMister Oh please....spare me. FYI, we were capitalist back in the 70's too, so that's a horrible take. If you want to blame greedy people, then I'm with you 100%. But if you want to blame the concept of capitalism, then that's just dummmm.
@OuterGalaxyLounge
@OuterGalaxyLounge 4 ай бұрын
Cavett's first autobiography is an incredible read. Highly recommended. I grew up in this era and remember when talk shows were inclined to elevate their audiences instead of dumb them down and pander to them.
@seabulls69
@seabulls69 4 ай бұрын
Excellent observation.
@ManchurianCounterweight
@ManchurianCounterweight 4 ай бұрын
right on.
@pookz3067
@pookz3067 4 ай бұрын
@@freeherenow52the culture has always been devolved. From the periods of classical music through today what we consider elevated culture was enjoyed by a small percentage of the population. What’s changed is how much of the media panders to that side of us, which naturally will grow to a larger percentage under democratic capitalism no matter what.
@savizzlekeys
@savizzlekeys 4 ай бұрын
I love this so much! As a pianist myself, I am truly in awe of Oscar. I am also a giant fan of Rick and especially his interviewing skills. He really gets the most out of his guests.
@brentwalker8596
@brentwalker8596 4 ай бұрын
Yep. We're at rock bottom right now.
@douglaselliott9064
@douglaselliott9064 2 ай бұрын
Great piece!! So glad you highlighted this interview!!!
@johngeorges1510
@johngeorges1510 3 ай бұрын
I saw the original show. I was in tears of joy. Still going there! Thank you!
@sandragoodman2059
@sandragoodman2059 4 ай бұрын
Dick Cavett was not just amazing and unusual for daytime television, he was amazing and unusual for television, period. There had never been anyone like him on television before, and there hasn't been anyone like him on television since. He got his guests to talk about things that were actually important to them and to us, and he had a wonderfully dry sense of humor that didn't seem to be about himself, but about the conversation.
@buggyboogle9
@buggyboogle9 4 ай бұрын
Agreed. And he had great interviews with John Lennon, Marlon Brando, George Harrison and Muhammad Ali et al. And you’re right again, no one interviews like that anymore. In depth, well thought out questions, with no other agenda than to be interested and make it nteresting for the audience.
@meh49
@meh49 4 ай бұрын
There was a selflessness to his interview technique. He also seemed genuinely sincere and interested in his guests.
@mb7196
@mb7196 4 ай бұрын
@@buggyboogle9 There are some really good interviewers out there. First one that pops into my mind is George Stroumboulopoulos. One of the best interviewers I've ever seen. He's not doing as much any more but he's got an impressive library of interviews over the past 20 + years.
@sportsjefe
@sportsjefe 4 ай бұрын
@@meh49 He's one of the only people who could bring out the charming side of Bobby Fischer that few people know and less people believed existed.
@jadezee6316
@jadezee6316 4 ай бұрын
nonsense..Peterson the genius is the star here
@TaberBucknell
@TaberBucknell 3 ай бұрын
When I was 15-years-old I worked part time at a Radio Shack store in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada. One day I helped a customer select a microphone and portable audio mixer, that customer was Oscar Peterson. 😯 The store manager asked me if I knew who my customer was after he left … I did not at the time. Ever since then every time I see / hear anything Oscar Peterson did I am blown away by his talent and I am more honoured to have met him! In that brief interaction with him Mr. Peterson was humble, gentle, and kind.
@sianwarwick633
@sianwarwick633 3 ай бұрын
😊. That is cool
@k.t.1641
@k.t.1641 Ай бұрын
A radio shack mic huh.... Might as well of used a can on a string lol. I worked there too and the products were extremely cheap
@phil2207
@phil2207 Ай бұрын
What store? Where exactly?
@marshall1864
@marshall1864 2 ай бұрын
I just rewatched this and noticed again the eye you have for a great interviews, your enjoyment of them and how it informs your own conversations with artists. Bravo again!
@fatherdmj
@fatherdmj 2 ай бұрын
I keep coming back to this video because it’s just that good. I’m glad you found it, Rick. Great stuff!
@John_Doe657
@John_Doe657 4 ай бұрын
Rick you are doing something important for the music community, infact more important than most people understand. By interviewing all these famous artists you are actually archiving their genius for future generations. Their music, litterature and interviews is all we have left from them once their gone.
@RebeccaRK
@RebeccaRK 4 ай бұрын
❤ agreed!
@jeffeager
@jeffeager 4 ай бұрын
"archiving their genius" ... very well said!
@wespeters8147
@wespeters8147 4 ай бұрын
I agree 100% - I’m Rick’s age and have played almost all my life and know how hard to access music was in the old days. You are opening up the access for the current generation and for my generation that missed a lot of stuff! Really appreciate what you are doing for music and musicians.
@Mr._Moonlight
@Mr._Moonlight 4 ай бұрын
*genius
@23dvs
@23dvs 4 ай бұрын
I agree - I’m sure the artists Rick interviewes appreciate not having to answer the same old ‘strings and picks’ questions.
@sayrerowan734
@sayrerowan734 4 ай бұрын
Dick was the man His interviews with everyone from Louis Armstrong to Sky Stone are pure gold
@FortuneFinders
@FortuneFinders 4 ай бұрын
He still is the man!!
@vibratingstring
@vibratingstring 4 ай бұрын
His Armstrong interview is a must watch! I learned so much from that one!
@thezzach
@thezzach 3 ай бұрын
Rick’s enthusiasm is sweet and infectious
@ag_piano_jazz1610
@ag_piano_jazz1610 2 ай бұрын
Thank you SO much for sharing Rick ! And for all the amazing (really) interviews you do ! Learning so much and having so much fun !
@drunkbikewrenchen6400
@drunkbikewrenchen6400 4 ай бұрын
Dick was head and shoulders above nearly every other TV talk show host in his time, all of his interviews were top notch.
@louballou8584
@louballou8584 3 ай бұрын
Hear, hear.
@dalisllama
@dalisllama 3 ай бұрын
Of this time as well
@neoman1858
@neoman1858 3 ай бұрын
Except with George Harrison
@TheJunehog
@TheJunehog 3 ай бұрын
Even his mistakes were instructive.
@grbggaming6885
@grbggaming6885 2 ай бұрын
Yeah also above everyone now. Closest anyone would come is Letterman but he's obviously retired. Fallon, Kimmel, what a joke we have now. Literally just talking puppets.
@user-gm3hv9gh6z
@user-gm3hv9gh6z 4 ай бұрын
Rick Beato is a national treasure. Seriously. Very rarely do talent and humility appear in equal measure in a person.
@dianecourtney2724
@dianecourtney2724 4 ай бұрын
Agree ✌🏼
@daveyvane9431
@daveyvane9431 3 ай бұрын
He is good, knowledgeable and articulate. National treasure? Get real groupie.
@kevinmorrow2788
@kevinmorrow2788 3 ай бұрын
The truely talented are usually humble also! In my experience
@kettonite
@kettonite 3 ай бұрын
I disagree - he is an international treasure!
@jeyfoxaigal
@jeyfoxaigal 3 ай бұрын
​@@daveyvane9431😅
@juancalatroni592
@juancalatroni592 2 ай бұрын
Love it !! Great having you on this planet Rick ;)
@fishdrew1111
@fishdrew1111 2 ай бұрын
Your aim has proved successful: You DO perform the best interviews of musicians that I've seen. I always learn SO MUCH whenever I watch your interviews/reviews.
@mmyrrh
@mmyrrh 4 ай бұрын
No better tribute to Dick Cavett than this right here! I really hope that he sees this! GREAT video Rick!
@HC-sb1ru
@HC-sb1ru 4 ай бұрын
Cavett was next level
@stevenhandford3728
@stevenhandford3728 4 ай бұрын
One thing that never changes in these videos is Ricks unabashed love and joy of music. It's tangable!
@judwatkins9478
@judwatkins9478 Ай бұрын
I agree with everything Rick Beato says here, and I want to add that Rick, himself, is a bit of a genius for highlighting Oscar P.'s greatness. Much appreciated, Rick!
@frankprocup6042
@frankprocup6042 2 ай бұрын
Rick, thank you so much for your "conversations" with musicians. Your format is as comfortable as 2 friends shooting the breeze while being informative. Your channel sustained me during lockdowns. Truly a gifted musician and presenter. Cheers from 🇨🇦
@dooleyfan
@dooleyfan 4 ай бұрын
Our family saw Oscar Peterson perform at an outdoor venue in Toronto in the 70’s, I would have been 11 or 12 years old. I distinctly remember asking my Dad what the heck he was playing, it just sounded like random notes to me. My father, who wasn’t a musician, answered that jazz players don’t play the notes, they play around the notes. That stuck with me my whole life, and has informed my playing and listening.
@rfphill
@rfphill 4 ай бұрын
My music mentor in my youth said it close to the same way, he said they live between the notes... Something like that. But it stuck with me...
@dubasciver3234
@dubasciver3234 4 ай бұрын
As someone who just starting to learning jazz piano, I found that observation helpful. Although I would contend the beginners like myself need to start to learn to play the notes/melody in a standard for example, before we can learn to play around the notes.
@simonwatkins3236
@simonwatkins3236 4 ай бұрын
You have to know the rules before you can break the rules @@dubasciver3234
@toddpinsky8077
@toddpinsky8077 4 ай бұрын
Shelly Manne: "A true jazz musician is a cat who never plays it the same way once."
@davidcowell3924
@davidcowell3924 3 ай бұрын
Great job Rick!!! My Dad was a blind piano tuner in London Ontario. He used to tune Oscars piano when he would come to London. Dad finished tuning the piano and some guy asked him if the piano was all tunerewneed up. My dad said yes and so this gent sat beside him and let it RIP!! It was Oscar. They had a nice conversation together. My father listened to your episode and thoroughly enjoyed it. Thank you!
@Dan16673
@Dan16673 3 ай бұрын
No sh7t?
@minervameza2686
@minervameza2686 3 ай бұрын
I had an upright piano that he use to practice on when he would visit Camlachie Ontario, in Sarnia. Canada was blessed with having such a brilliant musician like him. A gift that keeps on giving.
@citythink
@citythink 3 ай бұрын
@@Dan16673my Dad saw Oscar in Bristol UK. He and my mom moved to London Ontario in 1965. And dad and I are still here. We watched the video discussed recently. 😊👍🏼 a true Canadian hero.
@philotomybaar
@philotomybaar 2 ай бұрын
Damn, I sometimes am tuning the wrong string on my piano with sight! Those high unisons must have been tough on a spinnet.
@Dan16673
@Dan16673 2 ай бұрын
@@citythink wow. lucky man
@michaelcapaccio4283
@michaelcapaccio4283 2 ай бұрын
Rick, I am slowly watching all of your sessions with various musicians and artists. Saw the one with Stewart Copeland where you say you do conversations and not interviews. And that you don't prepare. Now I see that you explain the context of that statement, that you've been preparing all your life. I think we'd all be very happy to see you call what you do "conversations", like "A Conversation With ..." Love what you do and support you continuing to do much more of it!! Thank you sincerely for your talent, dedication and enthusiasm!
@carolynross98
@carolynross98 2 ай бұрын
Glad you shared this one. Always a favorite, so wonderful!
@NealFox
@NealFox 4 ай бұрын
I met Oscar at a Synclavier seminar weekend at Dartmouth College. He demonstrated the synth but also gave us a private concert at the end of the weekend. Pat Matheny was also there to show us the instrument. Both very nice human beings besides incredible talents.
@nomasnofuss8393
@nomasnofuss8393 4 ай бұрын
love what you say about them being very nice human beings....it really does show in this interview...such amazing talent...an absolute master of music but also shows humour and a gentle human being which is very uplifting to watch in these times we live today.
@NealFox
@NealFox 4 ай бұрын
@@nomasnofuss8393 Absolutely! We sure can use more of that.
@vecernicek2
@vecernicek2 4 ай бұрын
Dick Cavett was such an intelligent intervewer. You don't see that on mainstream TV anymore.
@luke5100
@luke5100 4 ай бұрын
Conan is really great, especially on his podcast. He interviewed the surviving members of Nirvana along with producer Steve Albini a while back and it’s brilliant. I think you’d really appreciate it. Like KZfaq, podcasts allow people to go much more in-depth and spend time with their guest
@CorbCorbin
@CorbCorbin 4 ай бұрын
@@luke5100 Conan is able to do now, what Dick wanted to, back in the 60’s.
@joedwyer3297
@joedwyer3297 4 ай бұрын
Watched all his interviews with Muhammad Ali and Joe Fraiser he was a brilliant interviewer
@luke5100
@luke5100 4 ай бұрын
@@CorbCorbin definitely. The reason why shows like Jimmy Fallon and Jimmy Kimmel are so lame is because with those huge corporate networks, it’s all about squeezing every dollar of revenue out of the business model, not bringing people actually good, substantive late night content. It’s like, what are the dumbest, lowest,-denominator gags and recurring sketches that get the most views and attract the biggest advertisers. this is why I say network TV is largely a joke nowadays
@redberdyaev6648
@redberdyaev6648 4 ай бұрын
Just checked, Dick Cavett is still alive.
@matthewdean5807
@matthewdean5807 Ай бұрын
This is amazing. I've never seen this - what a killer improv duel- the interviewer and intervieweree almost question each other, which parallels life. Hard to see the line between- Dick quoting music journalists, or critics perhaps- and cracking his own jokes - and not skipping a beat, Oscar - bringing every reference to light- with the grace of a master and the training of a samurai- so heart warming to see you talking about your passion of interviewing and music highlighted here. Your interviews are really my fav thing to watch, on youtube and I always get excited beyond compare when j see a new one posted. Keep it up R B!!!!🧡huge fan!!!
@martinsiano5610
@martinsiano5610 2 ай бұрын
Rick this is, as most of your interviews, amazing. I'm not a musician nor came form a musical family, but I love jazz and blues and read a lot about them... and the juice you get from all your guests it's amazing. greating form Argentina!
@djpenton779
@djpenton779 4 ай бұрын
Excellent video, Beato. Not only was Cavett's interview great, but when I first watched it years ago it changed my musical tastes. As a garage band rock drummer I had never listened to much jazz piano, but Peterson illustrated those style differences so beautifully that I just had to run out and buy some LPs of Oscar. I nearly wore those albums out.
@bernadetteapps9303
@bernadetteapps9303 4 ай бұрын
Another brilliant video Rick, thank you.
@Svenskaraket
@Svenskaraket 4 ай бұрын
You absolutely nailed it. No one conducts interviews like that on mainstream television anymore. The respect shown to his guest, Oscar Peterson, but also the audience, by not dumbing things down, not asking silly, shallow questions is remarkable. Two adults sharing an adult conversation with hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions, of viewers. So sad that this is largely a thing of the past for broadcasting but, as you point out, available still to broad but scattered internet audiences.
@josephr.lejeune4539
@josephr.lejeune4539 3 ай бұрын
A true gem of an interview. Thank you for digging it up and sharing!
@jasonpearson8212
@jasonpearson8212 2 ай бұрын
Rick, you hit the nail on the head about today’s entertainment. Thank goodness for cats like you and your channel. Maybe, just maybe you helped educate a potted plant that stumbled upon your wonderful channel. Keep it up!
@BasedGenZGuy
@BasedGenZGuy 4 ай бұрын
Rick, I can’t wait for you to interview Sir Paul McCartney! It would break the internet!
@manuelgaddala
@manuelgaddala 4 ай бұрын
Oh yes it would
@danegoodwin3057
@danegoodwin3057 4 ай бұрын
Imagine if he interviewed John Lennon 👻
@vecernicek2
@vecernicek2 4 ай бұрын
I'd love that. I'm sure Rick's trying the best.
@davearonow65
@davearonow65 4 ай бұрын
my holy grail for Rick would be Tom Scholz.
@BasedGenZGuy
@BasedGenZGuy 4 ай бұрын
@@danegoodwin3057 💀
@paul771
@paul771 4 ай бұрын
Another great video, Rick…when I was 25 I played a gig on guitar with Oscar and his trio along with the Buffalo Philharmonic. I was the outsider and during one of the tunes Oscar nodded for me to take a solo. He couldn’t have been a sweeter man and though I was nervous and excited, he kept a big encouraging smile on his face the whole time. Thanks for this…!
@stevenbackstrom4767
@stevenbackstrom4767 Ай бұрын
Rick, I can't even put into words how much I love this and all your videos. I've always loved watching Cavett interview musicians. Love the rapport he had with his guests, ie Lennon, Joplin, Hendrix and Oscar in this interview. Such pointed questions that piano players who love Oscar might want to ask him. Not shallow or trivial yet light and easy. You tube is such a great platform. It makes my life better for entertainment and learning. Keep it up. You are the bomb!
@nerkbaker
@nerkbaker 2 ай бұрын
Rick, you make the study of music and musicians truly interesting!! Keep up the great work!!
@robertesplin8875
@robertesplin8875 4 ай бұрын
I've seen this interview before and it's one of the best things I've ever seen: he is like the most intelligent and empathetic professor you've ever had. The subtlety and mastery is unrivaled, really, everybody should watch this as a life lesson...
@joeg7843
@joeg7843 4 ай бұрын
💯
@jimguerra2509
@jimguerra2509 4 ай бұрын
My favorite thing about your comment is that it applies equally to both Cavett and Peterson. 😊
@papwithanhatchet902
@papwithanhatchet902 4 ай бұрын
Oscar Peterson may be the greatest piano player of all time. His understanding of timing, his phrasing, his depth of knowledge, his feel... so incredible. And Dick Cavett was, to me, the best at his job, unparalleled since. You’re good, Rick, and Cavett is a perfect model to fashion your interviews after. Another great video!
@brentlawson6626
@brentlawson6626 2 ай бұрын
Most excellent interview, well spotted! But I always feel I learn something amazing in your interviews as well! Endlessly fascinating. Cheers from Canada
@WAX6428
@WAX6428 2 ай бұрын
THANK YOU FOR THIS!!!! One of the finest interviews EVER!!!
@joelosnoss5371
@joelosnoss5371 4 ай бұрын
You nailed this on the head Rick. Cavett was a great interviewer and Oscar Peterson was generous in sharing his talent - effortlessly.
@clovenwizard
@clovenwizard 4 ай бұрын
We have been honoured to have been born in this era Rick, I'm 63 and a gigging touring guitarist 70+ gigs per year 25 years so far.. To watch masters like Oscar and the Virtuoso musicians on KZfaq is so inspiring even in my time of life.. Excellent stuff!
@user-oi3jz6fv8p
@user-oi3jz6fv8p 4 ай бұрын
I can't physically play anymore, and I still find myself inspired. Dick Cavett was amazing in so many things, but Oscar Peterson is a rare gift to the world beyond measure.
@ottovangogh9477
@ottovangogh9477 4 ай бұрын
Note: "gigging" is one letter short of laughing. 🤣🤣😯⚡🤯⚡😆
@bnm0312
@bnm0312 4 ай бұрын
ESPECIALLY in our time of life. I could listen to Oscar all day. And I have.
@canuckslions3439
@canuckslions3439 14 күн бұрын
Love your channel!! Please keep it going!! Great job you’re doing!! Darin in Calgary.
@gedpianist
@gedpianist 2 ай бұрын
Thankyou.. this is one of my favourite interviews.. and it changed me.. I'm pleased you have surfaced it again.. also.. the rapour
@bsbrum
@bsbrum 4 ай бұрын
I have the lifelong memory of seeing Oscar Peterson play live in San Francisco in 1986, and I have been a *massive* OP fan ever since. I love that you are introducing people to him, he was absolutely phenomenal.
@jetydosa1
@jetydosa1 4 ай бұрын
I just watch a guy like this and chuckle. The amount of work, dedication, and ridiculous natural talent, just makes me smile in my soul. Rick brings things like this to us for free about once a week. What a time to be alive
@Sacrifice13
@Sacrifice13 2 ай бұрын
Love it, love you man! This is awesome. Learned so much watching Rick and his guests! Thank you Rick!!!
@seanjones4817
@seanjones4817 23 күн бұрын
This clip was amazing. Thank you Rick. Sharing and educating is as important as typical lessons. Your videos are like great musician hangs. You pick up a lot of ideas by listening to great musicians talk about other music they studied and played. Hearing why they chose to play certain things in context. Keep up the fantastic work.
@mcpribs
@mcpribs 4 ай бұрын
I’m just too young to remember Cavett, but the algorithm introduced him to me about a year ago. Whether it’s a pop star, an actor, a writer, or a world leader, he was a consistent and engaging interviewer. So incredibly thoughtful and quick witted. What an example this interview makes! Great video, as always!
@soundandsavor7955
@soundandsavor7955 3 ай бұрын
i have watched this interview countless times over the years. Stunned this was actually allowed on tv. A genius of a musician is given tremendous respect, awesome questions and the space to answer the questions with truly stunning demonstrations on the piano. Fun humour interjected but never at the expense of the music or the musician. One of the greatest musician interviews, ever!
@Zeno_334
@Zeno_334 Ай бұрын
I can't help but think about all the times this brilliant, incredibly talented musician and compassionate human must have confronted racism from fellow Americans.
@SBCBears
@SBCBears Ай бұрын
@@Zeno_334 And yet, as Rick points out, when would you ever see this on TV in today's progressive times.
@Alexander_Grant
@Alexander_Grant 27 күн бұрын
@@SBCBears It's more a function of the money than anything today. Why spend enormous amounts of money on creating quality shows like this when you can get the same amount of eyes on screen for garbage. Capitalism has reduced all popular art to what makes the most money instead of what is the highest quality.
@artslife3876
@artslife3876 3 ай бұрын
Totally blissed out watching this!!! Thank you, from Ireland x x x 💚🤍🧡
@hughboyle
@hughboyle 3 ай бұрын
So good Rick! That performance, that interview, and your very effective way of introducing your audience to amazing music and skill like this. Thank you.
@petermendelsohn4944
@petermendelsohn4944 4 ай бұрын
I've always loved Dick Cavett; he's got a fierce intelligence, a dry sense of humor, and a deep humility. I saw Oscar play duets with Joe Pass in the seventies in Honolulu. Oscar was an incredible talent. We'll not see his like again. Cavett, too, is one of a kind. Great video!
@leslieclipp9303
@leslieclipp9303 3 ай бұрын
I love him too!! I never got a full night sleep all the way through high school because his show ran until 1:00 AM and I never missed it. Too bad for me he wasn’t on in the afternoon then, maybe I would have been a better student!
@boomer3150
@boomer3150 3 ай бұрын
@@leslieclipp9303 Same here.
@brianpatterson7332
@brianpatterson7332 3 ай бұрын
Oscar and Joe Pass made some wonderful recordings with Stephane Grappelli and Nils Hennig Orsted Pederson. There's also an album featuring Oscar, Stephane, NHOP and a drummer of equal brilliance, Kenny Clarke (who is generally regarded as the fist exponent of what came to be known as the be bop style of drumming). I highly recommend checking those out.
@shaire99
@shaire99 4 ай бұрын
Glad you'll be doing pieces on Cavett's interviews with artists from a multitude of genres, even outside of music. His success comes with his curiosity about everything and his ability to 'learn' from that curiosity. He's always meticulously prepared and that's what puts him far above virtually all other interviewers from the mainstream media.
@michelangelocaravaggio1610
@michelangelocaravaggio1610 Ай бұрын
Rick, thank you so much for all that you do for us! You have given us so much, and through others. It is amazing. Music was a mystery to me before I listened to you describe it. I enjoy music so much more now. Most important, you share your perspective in a natural, informative way. I just love it!
@cargotrailerkenny4481
@cargotrailerkenny4481 3 ай бұрын
The first minute I saw of your interviews hooked me. The fact that you already know so much about music in the first place gives a more in-depth approach to the interview anyone can immediately see how much the musician you are interviewing appreciates their interaction with you. Very informative and entertaining.
@tommeyer6033
@tommeyer6033 4 ай бұрын
Rick! Im so glad you did this… I’ve watched this interview so many times, and it never gets old. Cavett really knew how to be humble yet clever in a perfectly informed way. Not being a musician but a lover of music, clearly defined their noncompetitive relationship. But really, Oscar had something to contribute beyond many of those other musicians he interviewed. He and Cavett seem to have a rapport that existed before the interview even started. Dick made it quite clear who the star was, without fawning or pandering. Quite a skill.
@Dan-zq5wt
@Dan-zq5wt 4 ай бұрын
This is so brilliant! Our current society has dumbed itself down to a frightening level. You’d never hear anything like this on TV now.
@jesusislukeskywalker4294
@jesusislukeskywalker4294 4 ай бұрын
👍🏻 we need another renaissance or something 🙏
@luke5100
@luke5100 4 ай бұрын
Society isn’t dumbed down. It’s just that there’s not one central repository where all of us are getting our information and entertainment, like TV and Radio were to previous generations. I don’t know anybody who watches network TV anymore. Even my 75-year-old mom mostly watches KZfaq and other streaming services. If anything, we have greater access to more amazing and intellectually rich content than we ever did before, and the popularity of channels like Rick’s is evidence that there’s still a strong appetite for it
@jimfritz2087
@jimfritz2087 4 ай бұрын
I agree with most of what you said. But , America certainly is dumbed down. And that is another conversation for another day. Best Wishes
@RoeShamBoe
@RoeShamBoe 4 ай бұрын
@@luke5100 First, KZfaq is literally a "central repository" just like TV and radio of previous generations... they curate what you see. Same with apple music or spotify, everything is still curated for you by someone else... just because there's more of something (more channels, more avenues to get content), that's not a substantial difference... it's merely a difference of degree and not kind but it's still "meet the new boss same as the old boss" Also, society has def gotten dumber and studies have shown it.... every successive generation up to 1975 was smarter than the previous generation. Since 1975 every successive generation has gotten dumber. it's a scientifically proven fact. just google "dumber since 1975" and you'll see. Kids born today are literally generations dumber than people born before 1975.
@luke5100
@luke5100 4 ай бұрын
@@jimfritz2087 I don’t know. Maybe it’s not quite so binary? Perhaps in some respects, society is “dumbed down,” for lack of a better term, but in other areas we are more sophisticated and technologically advanced than ever before. We are able to do things now that people 50 years ago would have only dreamed of, so I don’t think it’s that simple. I guess if we simplify it either way, we are guilty of it ourselves aren’t we? Lol. Good chat, man. Have a good one
@cjsinger4103
@cjsinger4103 Ай бұрын
You nail all of your interviews much the same way. You cover all the aspects of the music/artist, in a way that won’t bore the non musician who is watching and also feed the aficionado! Love this clip!!
@grahamrankin5557
@grahamrankin5557 Ай бұрын
Great video, Rick, simply loved all of it. Cheers!
@333ministries
@333ministries 4 ай бұрын
Rick, you've done it again. I have seen this interview many times, and I still enjoy seeing it again. Your presentation of it and explanation of how to do an interview is also well done. I remember the Sting interview, and I gained appreciation more for Sting like I did for Oscar Peterson in Cavetts interview. Thank you for bringing this. You started my day. I wish you well this year 😊😊😊😊😊
@jadezee6316
@jadezee6316 4 ай бұрын
what do you mean he has done it again??? this has been on youtube forever and i have seen it 10 times...you people are funny
@OneCharmedLife
@OneCharmedLife 4 ай бұрын
⁠@@jadezee6316the commenter is being kind and respectful, as was Cavett, as was Oscar. That’s much of what makes a good interview. I think it's also much of what makes a good comment.
@flapjackson6077
@flapjackson6077 4 ай бұрын
Well stated! 👍
@deepmusic-sjfsrmusicdepart7837
@deepmusic-sjfsrmusicdepart7837 4 ай бұрын
Hey Rick! I'm a grade school music teacher and try to remind my students as often as possible that I was born without talent, but rather found inspiration and practiced a lot because I loved music! It's crucial for kids to understand this. I actually want them to dispel the myth of inborn talent as soon as possible. I mean, even if natural talent does exist, I'd rather they don't believe in it..if you know what I'm saying!
@oomlive
@oomlive 4 ай бұрын
There is such a thing as the "genius of hard work". Keep up the good work over there.
@jcee6886
@jcee6886 4 ай бұрын
As a vocal coach, I completely agree.
@ClaireHoldich
@ClaireHoldich 4 ай бұрын
Fellow music teacher here and I agree, it’s not instant and never should be hailed as such
@peepsieD
@peepsieD 4 ай бұрын
1000 percent agree! 👏🏻👏🏻
@davidfleuchaus
@davidfleuchaus 4 ай бұрын
I heard Pat Metheny sound bad one evening whenever he played someone else’s tunes. He had just joined a new tour and wasn’t yet up to speed on the new material. I was floored. It caused me to realize that Pat HAD to work hard to become so masterful.
@mitchellgreene867
@mitchellgreene867 3 ай бұрын
Proud to share my Canadian Heritage with such a brilliant musician… Great interview, I will be sure to go find that full episode!
@JasonPengo
@JasonPengo 3 ай бұрын
Thank you for bringing this to our attention! This was great!
@otismanousakos3946
@otismanousakos3946 4 ай бұрын
Rick, more of this please. I can’t articulate what it is you’re doing but I feel like it’s an extension of What Makes This song Great. Our past helps us rediscover our roots. You’re providing a contextual understanding of the soul of the past. Big love to you and the family!
@babyboy1971
@babyboy1971 4 ай бұрын
My late father was a satirist, advertising man, recording artist and radio actor. His name was Stan Freberg. He was on Dick Cavett and said that Cavett was by far the best interviewer there was, and dad was on Carson, Larry King, tons of others. I love your channel. Dad was also a huge fan of Oscar Peterson. Great show, I’d love to see more of these where you comment on the show you’re watching. Very cool. And yes, KZfaq is definitely the new TV!!! Keep up the great comment.
@225marklin3
@225marklin3 4 ай бұрын
My brother and I were together over the holidays and were reminiscing about our childhood. At one point, we began to quote the Salada Tea and Chung King commercials that always entertained us as kids. "Collar? Teenie, mink collar?" Your dad was a very talented and funny man.
@dennisbarrett2241
@dennisbarrett2241 4 ай бұрын
Your father basically invented the concept of funny commercials. They were often far more entertaining than the shows they sponsored. To this day, I can't walk down the asian food aisle in the supermarket without thinking about him.
@siriusra2692
@siriusra2692 4 ай бұрын
............Dick Cavett was the best..........he even got Jimi Hendrix to open up and joke around with him on National TV....you gotta be good to pull that off......
@TIMOTHYALLEN-playdrums
@TIMOTHYALLEN-playdrums 4 ай бұрын
As a session musician and later, TV producer/director, I have to say that Stan Freberg was absolutely legendary for his creativity and talent. Legendary. If I could have dinner with five other people throughout history, he’d be on my invite list.
@LL-bl8hd
@LL-bl8hd 4 ай бұрын
That's so cool! I hope he was as fun and wonderful as a father as I imagine he was. He was a legend in multiple areas of entertainment, including animation.
@mixroomonestudioengineerin2176
@mixroomonestudioengineerin2176 3 ай бұрын
Rick, i really love all video's you do and how you are such a great guy to watch. You are so intensely honest and about music from A-Z. Thank you for doing all this for us!🎉❤
@kalzone60
@kalzone60 Ай бұрын
Thank you for featuring my man Cavett, and esp the Oscar interview/lesson. Your passion for this kind of thing brings tears to my eyes as I can't compare that happening today but for KZfaq archives, certain musicians and folks like you who refuse to relent to current obsequience. Create it, post it, and we will come.
@terryanding2735
@terryanding2735 3 ай бұрын
My father was a pop/ classics professional pianist. 40’s-70’s. He Loved Peterson! You brought back memories of him pulling fake books out of the bench, and going off into piano world. With tears in my eyes, here’s a thank you hug. ❤️
@rdg1266
@rdg1266 4 ай бұрын
A smile came over my face when I saw you featuring this interview! I happened to watch this video a couple of years ago and was equally blown away (I play the piano a bit, and am old enough to know all the musicians being discussed). Oscar was truly one of a kind, a master, and arguably as good a piano player as anyone who ever lived, in my opinion. One might not expect someone like him to be as personable and accessible as he was. Being able to play different styles as he does without needing to pause and think about either what or how he's going to play while carrying on a conversation at full speed is just remarkable. Can such proficiency be achieved nowadays, with the advent of smartphones? I can't help but wonder!
@popoff7808
@popoff7808 3 ай бұрын
Hands down one of my favorite clips on KZfaq even before I saw it here. Not only is the interview education and deep but most importantly it is just straight up fun! They are having so much fun.
@monylacerda9341
@monylacerda9341 2 ай бұрын
Hey Rick this pick of interview was awesome. Great job!!
@gdkjones
@gdkjones 4 ай бұрын
It’s no small thing to say that you Rick, are the modern day standard bearer of that type of interview. Kudos to you and LONG may you continue to do what you do SO well. LOVE your work ✌️
@CasperLD
@CasperLD 4 ай бұрын
100%
@SeeCSeesCC
@SeeCSeesCC 4 ай бұрын
Great comment❤
@chanceotter8121
@chanceotter8121 4 ай бұрын
There is a great Dick Cavett interview with Paul Simon in early ‘70s where Cavett asks Simon how he writes and gets Paul to go through a song he is trying to complete that turned out to be “Still Crazy After All These Years.” Cavett was a one of a kind. His interviews with artists he admired, from Katherine Hepburn to Jean-Luc Godard, are wonderful examples of the interview as art form long ago lost.
@stevebelville4656
@stevebelville4656 2 ай бұрын
Rick, I love your interviews. This was a great one with Dick Cavett and Oscar. But I tell you, I absolutely LOVE seeing the notifications for any of your new interviews. You have the rapport and the music chops to ask intelligent and relevant questions and I know the musicians appreciate that! We do too!
@benjamingeorg2027
@benjamingeorg2027 Ай бұрын
Thank you for your wonderful work on this gem! ❤
@Robert-yc9ql
@Robert-yc9ql 4 ай бұрын
As a "Boomer", I was incredibly lucky to have witnessed things such as this. I love how Mr. Cavett's genuine interest puts Oscar at ease enough to sing. Class acts, both of them.😊
@petemyers9428
@petemyers9428 4 ай бұрын
Oscar Peterson wrote me once, and it was one of the thrills of my life. Oscar enjoyed photography, and I had written an article about my work as a fine art photographer that resonated with him. For him to take the time to write me shows both his humility and his passion to constantly know more about the creative process. I am so grateful for my moment with him.
@ThePolypam
@ThePolypam 4 ай бұрын
Wow. What an honour to be acknowledged by a giant of a fellow artist.
@Danny-fs1hk
@Danny-fs1hk 2 ай бұрын
Thank you Rick for walking us through this interview. You are a master interviewer and musician.
@Debukochi
@Debukochi Ай бұрын
Great video, Rick. Peterson and Cavett were at the top of their game at the time of this interview, and I couldn't agree more that it's mindboggling that this quality of program aired on broadcast TV in the afternoons. I'm grateful that you took the time to produce and share this video with us.
@ToddKoornneef-iy6jf
@ToddKoornneef-iy6jf 4 ай бұрын
I absolutely love how you bring insight into artists that I would never listen to and bring excitement that I haven't seen with music before. Thank you for bringing this to all of us.
@frankiegutierrez5737
@frankiegutierrez5737 4 ай бұрын
I'm not a pianist but this brought chills to my spine, what an unbelievable talent and interview. BTW the beard looks great, Rick
@ruedigerhauptstein9941
@ruedigerhauptstein9941 2 ай бұрын
Rick, you are a great music professional yourself, in your videos you always put your own skills behind the skills of your colleagues and explain with true enthusiasm what great things they are doing. That's exactly what makes your videos so great. Big compliment from Germany.
@Ernie-zk3gb
@Ernie-zk3gb 4 күн бұрын
This is a great video sir. Absolutely fantastic. I love it. Kudos to you and the seemingly true hunger and appreciation of talent and music as a whole.
@gcharouhas
@gcharouhas 4 ай бұрын
Dick Cavett was an incredible interviewer, and this is a perfect example. But you, sir, have absolutely taken the art of the interview to a whole new level. Yours are always such a pleasure to watch because you yourself are an artist and you know your subjects. Your channel consistently breaks new ground. Excellent work!
@robwessels6899
@robwessels6899 4 ай бұрын
Dick was a master of the interview. His interviews of Hendrix and Bruce Lee are a few of my favorites. I never thought of it until now but you have some of Dick’s qualities in your interview style. You’re just more direct :)
@larry8664
@larry8664 4 ай бұрын
Yes Cavett was a good interviewer but hearing the questions he asked, I would not be surprised if he got those questions from Terry Gibbs,who was the leader of the house band on his show and a fine musician.
@OneCharmedLife
@OneCharmedLife 4 ай бұрын
Completely agree
@Daniel-nr6iw
@Daniel-nr6iw 4 ай бұрын
It seemed like Dick Cavett had a natural ability to put these artists at ease. I always especially enjoyed his interviews with Janis Joplin.
@jimjones-pz1tt
@jimjones-pz1tt 4 ай бұрын
@@larry8664 Terry Gibbs led Steve Allen's (post Tonight Show) band. Bobby Rosengarden led Dick Cavett's band. Since Bobby was a drummer, I doubt Dick got a lot of notes from him. The questions sound more like trombonist Bill Watrous.
@ShaunWorthen
@ShaunWorthen Ай бұрын
Much love! So nice to hit the KZfaq icon on my phone, see your channel pop up / following, click on most any random topic or interview of yours, and know I’ll enjoy whatever I watch. So very much appreciated as always 👏☺️
@frumexicano4112
@frumexicano4112 3 ай бұрын
Great indeed! And major kudos to you, Rick, for making us aware of these gems.
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