An evening with GRAMMY award-winner McCoy Tyner in conversation with Robert Santelli, Executive Director of The GRAMMY Museum
- Title
- An evening with GRAMMY award-winner McCoy Tyner in conversation with Robert Santelli, Executive Director of The GRAMMY Museum [videorecording].
- Published by
- 2008.
- Author
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Displaying 1 item
Status | Format | Access | Call number | Item location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Status Available by appointment at Performing Arts Research Collections - Recorded Sound | FormatDVD | AccessUse in library | Call number*LDV 1233 DVD | Item locationPerforming Arts Research Collections - Recorded Sound |
Details
- Additional authors
- Description
- 1 videodisc (77 min.) : sd., col.; 4 3/4 in.
- Summary
- McCoy Tyner discusses being born and raised in West Philadelphia; mother working as a beautician; kind and supportive neighborhood; using mother's beauty shop as a rehearsal space; setting up a band and playing for customers with brother Jarvis; jazz musicians catching wind of these beauty shop gigs and stopping by; starting to play piano at age 13; growing up in the 1940s; studying ballet and African dancing as a teenager; influence of church and studying classics such as Bach and Beethoven; Bud Powell moving into the neighborhood; following Powell through the streets with his friends; Powell once playing Tyner's piano and listening in on the beauty shop practices; meeting John Coltrane at age 17; first impression of Coltrane who was playing with Miles Davis at the time; Coltrane coming in to a beauty shop jam session and later asking Tyner to join his band; listening and trying to support Coltrane's sounds; naming Thelonious Monk and Bud Powell as main influences; life on the road; how being on the road is his schooling - his college; recording My favorite things with Coltrane; Coltrane as band leader; constantly challenged to follow Coltrane; music as life, as a product of feeling; The real McCoy in 1967; Bob Thiele encouraging solo work; how writing and composing tells him what he is about at the time of writing; aspiring to be the kind of band leader that is an inspiration and feels like a big brother or friend; Sahara in 1972 when experimenting with sounds influenced by earlier classical and African music used during dance lessons in his youth; working with Burt Bacharach; flexibility in music as a way to constantly be challenging yourself, learning and growing.
- Series statement
- Duke jazz talks
- Subject
- Contents
- [Opening announcements (0:00-7:39)] -- [Interview (7:40-56:57)] -- [Question and answer (56:58-65:20)] -- Piano performance (65:21-76:34).
- Call number
- *LDV 1233
- Note
- Duke jazz talks is a collaboration between The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, The GRAMMY Museum, and The Recording Academy®, New York chapter.
- Copy of program available under *LDCO 676.
- Separate audio recording of this performance is held under *LDCO 676.
- Event (note)
- Videotaped at the Bruno Walter Auditorium, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Oct. 29, 2008, by Penny Ward and Kay Hines ; sound engineer, Larry Loewinger.
- Funding (note)
- Recording made possible by a grant from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation.
- System details (note)
- DVD.
- Author
- Tyner, McCoy.
- Title
- An evening with GRAMMY award-winner McCoy Tyner in conversation with Robert Santelli, Executive Director of The GRAMMY Museum [videorecording].
- Imprint
- 2008.
- Series
- Duke jazz talks
- Event
- Videotaped at the Bruno Walter Auditorium, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Oct. 29, 2008, by Penny Ward and Kay Hines ; sound engineer, Larry Loewinger.
- Performer
- McCoy Tyner, interviewee, piano ; Robert Santelli, interviewer.
- Funding
- Recording made possible by a grant from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation.
- System details
- DVD.
- Added author
- Santelli, Robert. Interviewer
- Ward, Penny, videographer.
- Hines, Kay. Videographer
- Loewinger, Lawrence. Recording engineer
- GRAMMY Museum.
- National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (U.S.). New York chapter.
- Doris Duke Charitable Foundation
- Research call number
- *LDV 1233