Estoy súper agradecido con Jehová por permitirme disfrutar de esta wonderful music the blues is something special, que continúe la función , tankyou. , desde, medellín,Colombia.
Wow. just read that Sippie Wallace released her first single in 1923 at the age of 25. Incredible. What an amazing history she had and all the changes she witnessed. God bless her.
i believe Blues is the only music you can take a 4 minute song and turn it into a 16 minute song like this .And during the perfomance...you never want it to end.
What a RARE treat seeing blues matriarch Sippie Wallace on stage!!! Sippie was a huge influence on Bonnie Raitt, who recorded a number of Sippie’s tunes on her first album, including the blues classic, “Women Be Wise.”
John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers -- John Mayall keyboards, Mick Taylor guitar, John McVie bass, Jon Hiseman drums with Blues Greats -- Sippie Wallace vocals, Etta James vocals, Buddy Guy, guitar, Albert King, pipe and guitar, Junior Wells, harmonica and vocals
Great soulful artists that make our culture great and rich. Blues, jazz and more. Your contributions are enormous to our culture and a gift to the world.
I usually can't stand it when there's so many players on stage on the same time,.........but THESE cats.......these legends made it work. WOW. Not a slouch among theme. Blues turned up to 12. John Mayall was the glue holding them together as such a great band leader. Thank you !
Nobody can come close to the sound of Albert King. Hell the older I get, the better he sounds. He could make those strings really cry, and then start laughing, as he'd lift his head and smile like no one else!
@@genej8828 Already have, long ago, and several times. I lived in Austin Texas for 3 months in 1977, remember Stevie's placards stapled to the power poles. Would rather listen to Albert than Stevie any day. Not that Stevie wasn't good, I just preferred Albert.
@@jungleninja8415 Blues and music and art is not a competition and the voices we hear are all part of great human expression. And I don’t agree anyway and I love Magic Sam too.
I got free tickets for BB King from his manager while getting high near the back door of the Keswick theater in '97, night before I turned 19, home from college and stayed out till 2:30 waiting in line to get on his bus and meet the legend. Outstanding night until my mom got pissed at me for staying out late. I was 19, what did she expect
Great meeting of máster of The Blues Mr Albert King, John Mayall, Mick Taylor, Buddy Guy, Etta James, Junior well The bassist of Flettwoodmac great Show 🎸🎸🎸🥁🎹
John McVie is who played the bass and yes indeed, he`s the one and only Bassist of FleetwoodMac 😘! Can somebody please put some light on the Drummer`s name, for sure it`s not Mick Fleetwood who was part of the Bluesbreakers too 🤔🙄?
@ Ramon Sanchez; @ Pablo Pérez! Thank you very much for your prompt reply 🤗😘! I`m not sure if I ever stumbled over Colin Allen in the past, so I`d better do some research on him 😘👍🏻!
Wow. One of the greatest line-ups of Blues legends. Killer Video. Big Albert with that Pipe. Junior Wells was just one greatest Harp showman to grace the planet. Buddy playing that Guild-now that’s a rare site- biting blues tone from that axe. The great Etta James could crank it up like Janis or sing sweet. Mayall’s Band and Slide player was just unbelievable. And a 83 year old Sippe’ who recorded in the 1930s. Unbelievable Video🇺🇸
I see this has been watched a whole lot since 2015 because this is American Corn Read and Chitin's Royalty. I'sa born 1949 and grew up in Arkansas, I listen WLAC Nashville Blues on radio. Dewey "Pigmeat" Markham & Moms Mabley I learned guitar 1962 and in 1967 was good enough to get mama buy a Gibson ES 330 in Little rock. Of course I was influenced my The Blues. Especially Freddy King.
I got to see Albert King in 1978 at a small theater while in college. Small crowd. Afterwards I went up onstage and talked to him! So friendly he even let me pick up and hold his famous Flying V! Will never forget it. Saw John Mayall about then also. Wow
I have been so blessed to have seen so many of these amazing entertainers/ musicians. I’ve seen Albert, Etta, Buddy and Junior and John Mayall. Great show.
Mott eem biekomm..bainn stoan in de fik ..heb zojuist mn medicijnen ingenomen moeten nog inwerken ..ben het wel gewend ..niet klagen maar dragen zeggen ze ...is makkelijk praten ..je went er nooit aan
I saw Muddy with Clapton, Met Mick at a club in Jacksonville,fl, Saw Page with Paul Rodgers, saw Greg Almond at a club in Siesta Key,Fl. Say Albert and BB;;;
Thanx so much for sharing! Ain't nothin' like sweet sweet blues. Rock on, Legends, wherever you are, and thanx so so very very much for the magic, music, and memories.
Sometimes this platform recommends great stuff, even from channels that haven't posted in a long time. This is real music from the soul. Thank you very much and cheers from Brazil.
Mick Taylor was still with the Stones when this was recorded, 73-74, he would leave the band a year later, Kieth was Jamming with Ron Wood during this time, Mick Taylor left the band during recording Black and Blue, where Ron Wood made his debut. Regardless, the Stones frequently jammed with other artists and venues, Marley, Rod Stewart, and so on......
Wow! Grande bell'ensemble di musicisti e cantanti blues. Neri e/o bianchi, quando si suona e si canta il blues, che tutti accomuna, non ci sono barrierer di nessun genere. Questa è una musica "nera" che i bluesman/woman hanno voluto condividere con i "bianchi". Oggi, questa, è la musica interrazziale per eccellenza, senza confini o muri. Solo il piacere di suonare insieme e di sentirsi tutti affratellati o ... assorellati. Viva il blues! :-)
SO inspiring! My favorite part: when Buddy takes his lead, and Junior Wells starts trash talking to Albert King: 'DId you hear what he do? DId you hear? I KNOW you heard that!."
Only musician I ever saw in concert appearing on this stage was Buddy Guy. It was at the Atlanta Blues Festival at Lakewood Amphitheater. Somehow, by the time Buddy was on stage I was front row, center. During his concert he got off stage and was playing right in front of me for a couple of minutes. I must have looked like an idiot ... I'm sure my jaw was on the floor! A concert I'll never forget! (Wish I had been able to see these other greats too, though)!
Starting with Albert King Shredding, Etta James killing it , Junior Wells on the harp don't need to tell him anything but just blow man.And of course Buddy Guy shreds . And not to miss MIck Taylor doing a great job of shredding too.
Junior Wells was a pain in the ass when fucking Buddy Guys solo up and started beating at Mick Taylors guitar too. So unprofessional - on drugs or booze
what a treat John Mayall deserves everything he gets. He's been a music education treasure for decades. this brought back a memory of the rippingest C.C.Rider I've seen live I won't swear this is exactly how it went down, and I'd love to hear a tape of the show, but this is what may memory has made of the highlights, maybe filling some gaps on its own, over the years Legion Of Mary was a mid70s collaboration of Merle Saunders and Jerry Garcia with various others, most notably (in my memory anyway) John Kahn and Martin Fierro a lot of deadheads know Garcia's work with the Grateful Dead and the '80s JGB w/ Melvin Seals but Garcia and Saunders played a wider range of stuff than those bands, and I found my favorite Garcia guitar work in the awesome jazz covers he and Saunders did, check out several on-line versions of My Funny Valentine anyway this one night in the tiny Keystone Berkeley in mid70s they played a very jazz jamming first set in which Garcia was at his most sweetly inventive best throughout this gorgeous first set in which he clearly was in a jazz mood it was one of those nights where the musicians went where they'd never been beautifully the whole 1st set but this was the BayArea '70s over-the-top drug extravaganza era, and there was a guy sitting on the balcony railing way higher than that maybe doing too much coke+whiskey w/ or w/o doses so 40min into this mindbending jazz set he starts bawling out at the top of this raucous voice "Rock'n'Roll Rock'n'Roll Rock'n'Roll " over&over non-stop and louder than the band until Garcia got pissed off and cut the first set shorter than usual to take an early break when they came back they had a guest singer joining in, a young black guy with a cowboy hat who I only saw this once The first or second song they broke out a very high intensity fast-paced C.C.Rider for what seemed 10,15,20 minutes (15 minute songs were not at all unusual with that band, usually a few in each show back then) said good night and left so don't be the bozo in the balcony when you go see a great band go to hear what THEY came to do not what you want them to
@@threeg6966 Mick Taylor is still going strong. He plays all genres but mostly blues. There's a lot of gems here on RU-vid. At least he doesn't have Junior Wells to bug him on stage no more. Geez if that little prick started hammering my Strat, he would get even shorter. John Mayall told in an interview, that Junior was drunk and they had a hard time with him during the rehearsal. On stage Albert King had a serious talk with him, as we can see a little later in the session. Albert King was the definition of a blues gentleman.
@@AffiBlues My thoughts exactly... You better know somebody pretty damn well if your going start wacking their axe with your harp... Taylor was not impressed... Thanx for posting some inside from Mayall's interview... Ya those guys could get into the sauce! I don't think this was the first-time Wells was in that condition... I have a feeling there were some reliability issues too... Back in the Mid 80's he was touring with BB, he didn't make the show that night, BB covered for him -- Wells had a cold OR something... Got to hang with BB, guard Lucile... touched Lucile!!! Quite a gentile man... Called me "Son,"... I was walking 3 ft off the ground!
I saw John mayal in college in Amherst Massachusetts around 1982 or 1983. He finished his last set, and looked spent. I was about 3 feet from the stage , I knew his energy was depleted! When he returned for an encore, just a few minutes later, he was energized, and playing around with his nose! I was close enough to ask him a pertinent question…John, “ how, is that cocaine” I know he heard me, cause he told me to be quiet! True story! I also saw James cotton, and muddy waters, around that same time. James cotton, was also into cocaine, at the time. But muddy waters, was true to his song..” champagne and reefers”. No cocaine for muddy, he was too smart for that shit! He saw many players fall prey!!! The 1st music I ever bought, was an 8 track tape of John mayal, playing ..” room to move”. I am a harp player now, been blowing every day since the early 70’s. John mayal -James cotton and magic dick from j geils .. muchas gracias!!
This clip shows, Mick Taylor was way too good for Rolling Stones. Anyway what a band of American blues artists and Brit blues performers. Thanks a lot for sharing this gem. I just wanted it to continue forever ❣️
What a stupid comment. His was one of the worst professional move in history. I am sure he thought that considering how far he has gone in his twenties that the sky was the limit. But he never did anything after that.
@@thornil2231 You obviously know Jack Shit of the blues/rock history. Mick Taylor is still an icon as a musician. What is Ronnie Wood? Where are the great guitar solies in the Stones productions. Show us one single rock n roll solo of Ronnie Wood - ex member of the Small Faces 🤣🤣🤣 Btw calling people stupid because of a disagreement suits a high school drop out. It's plain ignorant! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-LDKBB47ACHY.html
@@threeg6966 I agree. Can you imagine, Mick Taylor, standing in the shadow of Keith Richards and Mick Jagger? No offence, 'cause they are great songwriters and outstanding entertainers. However, I'm pretty sure, rock n roll fans expect some brillant guitar playing. Mick Taylor brought that to the band, and most fans of Stones agree, their prime time was with Mick Taylor on guitar. Anyway they went their separat ways. The greatest rock n roll band make a lot of money. Mick Taylor does his music and he can fit in everywhere! He's in it for the music.