This was/is super bad... Can you imagine going into battle in Vietnam flying on a helicopter With this blasting And you really ain't up for no BULLSHIT... ALL YOU GOT IS WE GONNA GET UM REAL BAD T O D A Y
I remember the best thing about Led Zeppelin was that every album was different from the last. Took me a long time to get next to Houses of the Holy, and it wound up being my favorite. Still is.🎉
Great reaction! Amira won Holland's Got Talent at age 9 singing opera. Her performance was seen by Famous Conductor Andre Rieu who invited her to sing with him. She just turned 10 when she sang in front of 10,000 people who gave her a long, long standing ovation. This has been viewed an amazing 89 MILLION times. "O Mio Babbino Caro" ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-jDqa4esWbb4.html
I follow Diana and watch her reaction videos. But not this one. The performer should if possible be the largest thing on the screen, not a barely visible postage stamp. Sorry guys
Good reaction, guys!👍Gordon Lightfoot is such a master story teller, you can almost visualize the tragedy. Suggestions for more Lightfoot songs? Look no further than his "Canadian Railroad Trilogy" from the album "Gord's Gold". It's a 7-minute upbeat song, so descriptive it'll make you feel like you're watching a movie. 🙂
This is simply not true. According to Wikipedia: "The first half of the Beatles' career-from the early 1960s until 1966-rarely saw the band use any extra musicians, though George Martin (their producer) occasionally added keyboard instruments to augment their sound.[4][5] As their career progressed and their influences widened, the group began to experiment in the studio." "Martin started to orchestrate for the band; his first major orchestration for the group was the string quartet on "Yesterday".[6] In 1966, the band stopped touring and concentrated on studio experimentation,[7] creating soundscapes and orchestrations that required numerous musicians (the orchestra on 1967's "A Day in the Life" was accommodated in Abbey Road's large Studio One, rather than the group's usual room in Studio Two[8])." " It was also around this time that the Beatles visited India, and-particularly Harrison-became influenced by Indian culture and music,[9] leading to the group's use of traditional Indian instruments in their arrangements. Shortly before the group's demise at the end of the decade, keyboardist Billy Preston was brought in to add to their sound while they tried to return to their rock 'n' roll roots.[10] " "The group wanted what was to become their final album, Let It Be, to be raw with minimal overdubs.[11][12] After producer Glyn Johns left the project, Phil Spector hired in numerous session musicians to provide orchestral overdubs, in contrast to the group's original back-to-basics ideas."
Maybe John saw himself as being the complete genius of the Beatles. Looking back at the early Beatles I see as corny and silly but they were all kids. Their music evolved into something extremely powerful but I think John was ashamed of it. It's like a kid who grew up and someone reminds him the silly things what he used to do he would almost be embarrassed about it. John acts that way I think. One could probably say , grow up John.
John oversaw the fact that without without the work of the early Beatles the brilliant latter stuff and even after that would never had happened. John only had the ability to see the now and couldn't see the evolution of the genius of the Beatles. The early Beatles evolved into what music evolved into back in that Era.
I don't know why anyone would call that a "sea shanty", it's got nothing to do with the sea. Quite the opposite, it's about coal mining, and living in the company town, forced to shop at the company store.