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itsRemco | Piano | Earl Hines - Fifty Seven Varieties 1928 (Fast Stride Piano Synthesia) @itsRemco | Uploaded 6 months ago | Updated 6 hours ago
Fifty-Seven Varieties by Earl Hines

Transcribed by Paul Marcorelles from @blueblackjazz
check out the transcription: blueblackjazz.com/en/transcription/340/340-earl-hines-fifty-seven-varieties-c-maj-transcription-pdf

And of course check out his site for all available transcriptions: blueblackjazz.com
Original recording: youtu.be/RnBSRAaEMHE

Info about Earl Hines:
Earl “Fatha” Hines was one of the greatest jazz pianists of all time. Frequently he would play ringing octaves with his right hand (called “trumpet style piano”) that allowed him to be heard over the loudest ensembles. Dubbed by some as “the first modern jazz pianist,” Hines could play stride piano with the best, keeping time with his left hand by jumping between bass notes and chords, but he also loved to challenge himself by taking death-defying breaks.

Led by what could be considered the trickiest left hand in jazz, he often defied time and played wild passages with his two hands before somehow returning without missing a beat. This sounded very modern in 1928 and was still a bit futuristic in 1978. Among his many admirers were Duke Ellington, Nat King Cole, and Art Tatum.

Earl Hines had a long and episodic career. He was born December 28, 1903 in Duquesne, Pennsylvania, which is close to Pittsburgh. Since his father played cornet with a local brass band, that became Hines’ first instrument before he switched his focus to the piano when he was nine. He took some classical piano lessons and played organ in his Baptist church while largely creating his own style.
(Source: syncopatedtimes.com/profiles-in-jazz-earl-fatha-hines)

This video quote:
"I don't think I think when I play. I have a photographic memory for chords, and when I'm playing, the right chords appear in my mind like photographs long before I get to them." - Earl Hines
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Earl Hines - Fifty Seven Varieties 1928 (Fast Stride Piano Synthesia)Joseph F. Lamb - Firefly Rag 1959 (Ragtime Piano Synthesia)Cecil Macklin - Très Moutarde (Too Much Mustard) 1911 (Ragtime Piano Synthesia)James P. Johnson - Jungle Drums 1945 (Classic Jazz Piano Synthesia)Pete Johnson - Dive Bomber 1944 (Fast Boogie Woogie Piano Synthesia)James P. Johnson - Weeping Blues 1923 (Blues / Stride Piano Synthesia)Charles L. Johnson - Cloud Kisser 1911 (Ragtime Piano Synthesia)L. Edgar Settle - X. L. Rag 1903 (Ragtime Piano Synthesia)Thomas Fats Waller Rhythm Medley No. 1 (Harlem Stride Piano Synthesia)Erroll Garner - Love For Sale 1947 (Stride Piano Synthesia)Abe Holzmann - Smoky Mokes 1899 (Ragtime Piano Synthesia)Scott Joplin - Rosebud March 1905 (Ragtime Piano Synthesia)

Earl Hines - Fifty Seven Varieties 1928 (Fast Stride Piano Synthesia) @itsRemco

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