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Live with no help from any electronic devices to enhance his voice. Bobby Hatfield was one of a kind. There will never be another masterful voice such as he had. Also your reaction was stunning to say the least. I really enjoyed watching you. I'm 72 and remembered slo-dancing to this song back in the day. Thank you for letting me enjoy this Timeless Masterpiece with you.
carole webber Bobby Hatfield died in a motel room in Kalamazoo, Michigan, the night before a show. Bill Medley still lives, but since losing his singing partner (Bobby), his career hasn’t been the same. They got their name from a black Chicago DJ who would exclaim after their records played “That’s RIGHTEOUS, Brother!”, and the name stuck. It wasn’t until later people realized these Southern California blue-eyed soul singers were white.
... & apparently also a head cold. Absolutely brilliant. Can't think of many... if any... better live performances that Bobby Hatfield with this classic...
Not a boomer here, just a Gen Xer, but it makes me sad. All the auto tune bs came from the obsession with looks; with mtv, looks became more important than whether someone could actually sing. 🙄 😢
Thank you! and Im not quite a boomer. 49 and have experienced both worlds. There is some fun to be had with new and old music but with every passing year I do appreciate older stuff more, because you didnt get famous unless you had effing superior vocal skills until about 1982 then vocal skills went to shit.
Over 50 years ago it's crazy to see the young people enjoying it like we all did. Music was so much better back then and brought people together. God bless all of you ❤️
I was 13 when this song was a hit on the radio. Now I'm watching young people react to what I've known all along. The late, great Bobby Hatfield sings this love song like nobody else can. Miss you so much Bobby.
Yes sir! More remarkable when, if the bio I read was factual, stated he never had a music or voice lesson. THATS ALL, raw talent. He puts so many " artists " to shame. In a world full of karaoke bars, ANY guy could sing that song, LIKE THAT,,, He would never go home alone.🤭
@@twobrokeguyz1214 ...Actually he had a 4 octave range. He, Freddy Mercury and Elvis had them, although Elvis had a lot of trouble near the end.The most amazing range of any singer was probably Mariah Carey who had a 5 plus range.
When he did this song his mother was in the audience . He was 25 years old and nervous as could be. Look how he grabbed his lip at the end. He knew he nailed it.
thank you for the history; it adds so much to what I thought couldn't be enhanced. An historic voice and song I revisit often!! Long live Bobbie Hatfield through this song and performance of Unchained Melody.
So sweet to watch beautiful young people give our older generations greats a chance.. and actually appreciate them. Great video. You’re a doll. Keep looking back.
I love your reaction….Bobby singing this live is the very best live performance you will ever see. His voice is just so beautiful and soulful, blue eyed soul at its finest!
As a 66 year old woman I am so excited for the younger generation opening up to my generation music. There were so many great songs. Lots of soul, talent, and love in these tunes. Thanks for your input.
... and he knew he nailed it. His little smile at the very end shows he knew how good his performance was. It's not bragging after completing what could well be the greatest solo ever.
This song, Whitney Houston's rendition of "The Star-Spangled Banner" and Don McLean's version of Roy Orbison's "Crying" are my top-three live performances of all time.
When she rewinds to 2:12. “I have to hear that again. This guy’s good!” All I think is, “Honey, you just wait!” What a thrill it would be to hear this beautiful song for the first time.
@60s teen: I remember when I heard the Righteous Brothers for the first time. I was about your age or a bit older. I was immediately enthralled and stay just as fascinated with their voices. I got to see Bill Medley on stage twice. He was still fantastic many years later. Wish you could have gone with me.
How many realize that Bobby actually sings 20 separate notes (not counting tremelos or slides) over three (yes, 3!!!) full octaves during this simple lyric love ballad? Now, try THAT in the shower, boys and girls!
I don't know if that has anything to do with it, but I have watched about 25 different reactions to this and You've Lost That Loving Feeling and, without fail, every. single. time. I get such extreme goosebumps it is *uncomfortable*. I love it.
I can sing it in the shower, or down at the local karaoke night with a few friends watching, but standing on stage with hundreds, maybe thousands of people watching, cameras rolling, no autotune, completely without a net... that's a whole different ballgame.
Woman’s reaction is spot on. Countless women felt this way. He takes words or lyrics and breathe life into them. He sings with conviction heart, love, and soul
Ah yes, the time when it was socially acceptable to beat your wife was so loving and tender. Romance is not perfect now, but let’s not act like people were perfect “back in the day”
That was Bobby Hatfield of the Righteous Brothers. His partner Bill Medley and him teamed up for some musical gems.Their music was called "Blue-eyed Soul."
If you like a deep, soulful baritone voice, then Medley is the man. You've Lost That Loving Feeling and Soul and Inspiration are two great ones that feature both Hatfield and Medley.
This is one o' the songs of my teen years that always brought about a "TURN IT UP!" and all conversation stopped till it was over. (said to whomever was holding the transistor radio.)
It is a true classic. I love the weaving of his singing and the music. It is exciting to watch young people discover and fall in love with great music and artists from the past.
If I ever get married, this song will definitely be on the playlist. Such an amazing song. I've been hearing this since I was a kid, but still get goosebumps every time.
The Righteous Brothers are a duo. Some times they take turns singing solo. Try "You Lost That Loving Feeling" one of the biggest songs recorded and their biggest hits song by both as a duo.
I'm so thankful that I was born and grew up in this beautiful era. The Righteous Brothers were one of my favorites. Such beautiful voices and harmonies singing memorable songs.
Several years ago I took my teenage daughter to see America and the Righteous Brothers in concert. She wanted to leave the show after America was done. The RB opened with Unchained Melody. I looked over at her and she was balling her eyes out.
I watched this live on The Andy Williams Show in 1965 with my folks.. I was 15. I still have have all the 78 vinyls they recorded. That was when music had something to say to the heart and soul, it touched your inner being. if music doesn't touch you in that eternal place, then it's just noise. and noise is gladly forgotten. real music is timeless.
I can't remember how old I was the first time I found this song on one of my parents old records. It's ages ago and I've heard it hundreds and hundreds of times. Still the lyrics, his voice - all of it - it tears me up every time.
I am so proud to be of the same generation as the Righteous Brothers. Blue eyed soul. They were and are the greatest in the 20th century or any other century.
According to Bill Medley (He is the tall one of the duo) , they adopted the name "The Righteous Brothers" for the duo because black Marines from the El Toro Marine base started calling them "righteous brothers". At the end of a performance, a black U.S. Marine in the audience would shout, "That was righteous, brothers!", and would greet them with "Hey righteous brothers, how you doin'?" on meeting them.
@@cardiac19 Yes! It IS true! I summarized what Bill Medley said in his book, "The Time of My Life: A Righteous Brother's Memoir". You can read an actual excerpt from the book here: books.google.com/books?id=8pX_AgAAQBAJ&pg=PA12#v=onepage&q&f=false The relevant part starts with the last 2 paragraphs of page 11. I'm 70, and despite growing up in a small town where the only thing that was "Black" were a few cats and a crayon in your box of crayolas, I always enjoyed R&B and soul music. Of course I had a great teacher, my Dad. In the late 50's an older sister's class was going to put on a "Minstrel Show" (which was a big thing back then). My Dad wouldn't let her participate. When the school asked him why he said, "because it is being disrespectful to them."
He was so handsome. I was 15 yrs old when I watched him sing this beautiful in 1965 on the Andy Williams show. I melted and fell in love with him. OMG this was Bobby song! RIP Bobby! 💞💞💞
Bobby was one of the greatest singers ever! They had many great songs. For once on my Life, Little Latin Lupe Lu, Soul and Inspiration, You'll never Walk Alone. Bill Medley other brother did a great solo in 68 Brown Eyed Woman along with the Blossoms. Best version is at Playboy Club (family friendly). Hood you react to that. Darlene Love great singer was with the Blossoms, great performance
i just enjoyed the reactions of so many ladies listening to him, every single time. Your eyes nearly pop out, girl. Anyway, awesome reaction. God created moments like this for us to enjoy. Thank God. We need more like this. A moment in time. So lucky for us to be able to witness and cherish this during our lifetime.
Bobby Hatfield was incredibly talented. What a GREAT high tenor voice. The voice control, the range, the tone, intonation, phrasing is just unbelievably good & he makes it look easy.
This is what we called pantie dropping music back in the day, and it was all done live with no second chances and no auto tune, god I miss real music. Old boomer
They called this Blue Eyed Soul back in the day. This song actually came out in 1955 for a prison movie called Unchained. At the time there were three other versions on the top 40 charts. Righteous Brothers cover was the 4th cover. Unchained Melody is the most requested song of the 20th century. That performance showed his true talent.....no auto tune back then if you couldn’t sing you didn’t make it in the business. They sang it on the Andy Williams Show and Andy asked them why Bobby Hatfield was singing it by himself and Bill Medley said because he didn’t think it would become a hit. They toured the bars in Southern California near the Naval Bases and one night after singing a sailor yelled at them “That was righteous brother” and that’s how they came up with their name. That is the song that was sung in the movie Ghost with Demi Moore and Patrick Swayze. If you wNt to hear Bill Medley sing a solo watch the movie Dirty Dancing with Patrick Swayze and Jennifer Grey. The song is Time of Your Life it plays in the final dance scene of the movie....I guarantee you’ll love it !
Bobby Hatfield's version back in 1965 has become the quintessential version of them all. Here he is singing live (1965) on the Andy Williams show. This is an epic performance by Bobby Hatfield of the 'Righteous Brothers' who has hit 20 notes on one of the greatest songs ever written. Alex North wrote the music (1910-1991) and Hy Zaret wrote the lyrics (1907-2007). Their song was used as the soundtrack for the film 'Unchained' (1955). Todd Duncan who sang the song in the movie was an African American opera singer, actor and professor at Howard University. He was the first to sing 'Unchained Melody. Since 1955 almost every major recording artist from around the world have recorded 'Unchained Melody.' Making it one of the most recorded songs in the history of music. It wasn't until the performance of 'Unchained Melody' by Bobby Hatfield in 1965. That his quintessential version would go on to be the version every artist has used and uses today. That version you are watching here on You Tuber 'THEJAYJSHOW.
I love this song! My favorite performance of all time! And I am 76 and still get the chills the way I did the very first time I heard it, over 50 years ago.
There's a tradeoff. People talk about how good these guys were but you forget how it was always the same four groups making hit songs for months at a time. It got so boring.
So glad my parents introduced me to all kinds of music at a young age. I've also did this for my kids and they listen to all kinds as well. Kudos for going outside the box and checking out other music... guess what? The whole world has different music!!
This is my favorite song of all time. Bobby Hatfield is a legend and nobody has come close to replicating this timeless masterpiece in all of these years. Check out You've lost the loving feeling by the righteous brothers. Their dynamic was astonishing.