Peanuts Begins by Charles Schulz for December 07, 2020

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    Templo S.U.D.  almost 4 years ago

    My older brother was a trombonist in middle school and high school (and community college); played classical and jazz thereon.

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    bigcatrik  almost 4 years ago

    Last time this one came around someone commented that just over a decade later Schroeder would introduce one of the most popular jazz pieces ever.

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    sheplives  almost 4 years ago

    Schroeder, meet Vince Guaraldi… ;)

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    Kaputnik  almost 4 years ago

    Beethoven just rolled over.

    I don’t know if he told Tchaikovsky the news.

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    iggyman  almost 4 years ago

    How about “Classical Jazz” {Mason Williams)! OK number!

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    Wren Fahel  almost 4 years ago

    Just don’t ask him about Polkas, Scottishes, and Waltzes! (I can still see Snoopy with his accordion.)

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    Ralph Newbill  almost 4 years ago

    Roll Over Beethoven!

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    tripwire45  almost 4 years ago

    I love jazz.

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    Cary Rodda Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    Wait…I saw Schroeder playing jazz on A Charlie Brown Christmas just the other day. :D

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    gantech  almost 4 years ago

    “Um, what kind of music do you usually get here?”

    “Oh, we got both kinds…country and western!”

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    Wichita1.0  almost 4 years ago

    Welllll, they DO call it ‘cool jazz’.

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    verticallychallenged Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    Schroeder’s playing Bach’s “Prelude in C” from the Little Notebook for Anna Magdalena (Bach’s 2nd wife, if I recall). Some of you might find it more familiar as the accompaniment to the Bach-Gounod “Ave Maria.”

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    I❤️Peanuts  almost 4 years ago

    Schroeder is a purist. He would react similarly to the atonal twelve-tone music that attracted composers and alienated listeners in the twentieth century.

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    ChessPirate  almost 4 years ago

    “Relax, you’ll be OK, Take Five…”

    “AAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!!” ☺

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    raybarb44  almost 4 years ago

    Mozart in the 1950s would have been Jerry Lee Lewis…..

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    bryan42  almost 4 years ago

    So, is that a Schrudder, then??

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    bwsevier Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    Always found it interesting that I have preferred classical AND jazz to other forms of music all my life, which others seem to find odd.

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    Jogger2  almost 4 years ago

    I Love To Sing-a

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    fritzoid Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    Start the car,

    I know a whoopee spot

    Where the gin is cold

    But the piano’s hot!

    It’s just a noisy hall

    Where there’s a nightly brawl

    And all that jazz!

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    Lightpainter  almost 4 years ago

    Wonder what Schroeder would think of Rock.

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    evsxrk  almost 4 years ago

    Schroeder (at least at this point) was way too narrow minded. Actually there was plenty of mutual respect between classical and jazz musicians. When George Gershwin wanted to study with Maurice Ravel, Ravel supposedly told him, “Why become a second-rate Ravel when you’re already a first-rate Gershwin?” As for piano playing specifically, leading classical pianists were big admirers of Art Tatum. It’s said that one asked Tatum how long it took for him to memorize the complicated things he played, not realizing that Tatum was improvising. My impression is that generally speaking, it is fans who are more likely to be dismissive of genres other than the one they are into. Most of the best musicians tend to respect talent regardless of genre.

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    Charlie Fogwhistle  almost 4 years ago

    Well, there’s cool jazz and then there’s hot jazz. I never heard of ice cold jazz, though.

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