Nah. "Looky over yonder--comin' down that railroad track" is better. Or "If you don't love it, leave it,--let this message that I'm singin' be a warnin. When you're runnin' down our country you're walkin' on the fightin' side of me". That's a good one to teach your children. How about the entire song "The Battle Hymn of the Republic"? Have a nice day.
I don’t know. Harry Chapin (Cat’s in the Cradle), James Taylor (Fire and Rain), Kenny Rogers (The Gambler), CSN (Teach Your Children), and Buffalo Springfield (For What It’s Worth) all have phenomenal lyrics too. Just to name a few songs that also carry potent advice.
The 1st generation not to dress like a small version of their parents when they left school . The best time to be young and alive , the hair , clothes and music just reflected that change . The air crackled with the optimism we held for the future . I'm ages with you and wish I'd croaked about 10-20 years ago , it's so sad and life sapping to see what it's become .
@@laurencesmith2199 that was a powerful response you wrote. I agree in a way. I think all that is happening in this country and the world and I think why it could not of come after I left this planet.
MrRude333 I thought it was rude of him to even think it’s a ballad that Paul wrote with a lot of emotion, That’s what I think I would hold my breath too
I'd hold my breath for an awful rendition. Out of all the musicians in the world, Tyler's the best they could do? It wasn't for me. Look up 'Goodnight Saigon' by Garth Brooks when he honored Billy Joel, now that was a proper tribute.
lmao you're completely making this up, I don't see him holding his breath or anything. Looks like he's thinking "interesting take on that song, he does XX differently"
I love how proud Paul looks and so he should be, the master songsmith. I also love how he always shows respect to his fellow artists. Great job by Steven
1:53 imagine being that guitarist, finally you get the opportunity to play one of, if not the best beatles guitar solos of all time in front of Sir Macca himself, only to be barely audible in the mix. He looks so excited while doing it too.
STEVEN TYLER can take a classic...written,performed, & made into a hit by the legendary PAUL McCartney.. and breathe new life into it. ST is now a legend himself!!
@@ggabriel3d exactly... as a singer i heard him NOT have his voice yet.. and then screamed it out and voila!!!.. nice crazy good voice for the rest of the song!!.. easy!!.. haha..
I grew up listening to the Beatles and I’m 58. I remember playing their singles on our turntable, throwing them on, I was probably a bit less careful than I should be, but I played when my sisters were at school and my mom often slept in, LOL… So I had a great time listening to music!!! 😂😂😂 What a great band they were and still is, we’re so lucky to at least have their records to enjoy now!!! ❤❤❤
Whenever I feel I need a lift, I watch this video from Steven Tyler's part over and over again, just love it. You can feel the emotion he has for Paul in his performance for sure!
To have written this and know people started music because of you, they love you, their entire lives have been shaped to you and used your music as a soundtrack...the feat of four men who soared to fame on a nighttime talk show. The Beatles will never die ❤️
What's so douchey about it? If you like good music, then chances are the Beatles are inspiring. Conscious awareness of one's self isn't going to change that.
you can tell You can tell from his face at 0:38 that this song MEANT so much to him............as it has done so for so many of us 50 years on !!!!!!!!!!
It's like when you remember something so big that you feeñ all the nostalgia you can get in one second. I'm 27, never really listened to the Beatles. Yes, I arrived thanks to the Peter Jackson Documentary. I'm still trying to figure out how legendary is the band.
The exhale of a man looking back at his life and saying "yeah, I contributed something of worth to the world." (and that's a massive understatement!). And yes, Steven was superb.
I can only imagine being there for this! I was alive when nirvana and pearl jam released their seminal albums and it felt like electricity hearing Smells like teen spirit" the moment it debuted on mtv. We didn't even know what to do with it.
@@billboggs6641 If I was Nancy, I'd be pissed off that Oprah was sitting next to my husband instead of me. How does that woman always seem to make herself a part of everything?? I find her insufferable!!
So lovely the way Paul's wife Nancy embraced him from behind to offer emotional support! Sniffle, sniffle. So happy for both of them that they found love again.
Not even top ten anymore. They were a pop group from 1963 ...they long since ceased to be relevant to nowadays and....they are seldom played in reality.
Went to IU in the late 80s when we was a huge part of the Mellencamp band…then he even crushed it more with his stint with the BoDeans Check out the live You Don’t Get Much video
There was pure, raw emotion coming out of S. Tyler as he delivered this to Sir Paul and the world. He hit it out of the park and everyone, including the inductee knew it.
Wow, better listen to Dream On right now! lol One of the greatest rock ballads ever and vintage Tyler at the height of his powers. Here, one of the greatest performances of it of all time. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-EbKvBT9F0Vo.html
I met Paul & Linda at Paul’s father’s house, I was seventeen, in my sixth form uniform and must have looked like a stunned goldfish. He truly is a lovely person.
Knowing Steven Tyler only from older Aerosmith songs, I clearly underestimated his singing abilities (no, I do not think he is a bad singer or anything, just that I never heard him sing like this). This is quite different from his renditions of "Crazy", "Walk this Way" etc. and I can totally understand Sir Pauls reaction. Great work here by Tyler, who clearly enjoys singing this classic.
Such an excellent salute to Paul. It was wonderful. The only people that could have played it any better would have been the Beatles themselves. If only John and George were still alive, how different might things be? I do not look forward to the day we lose another one of them. Luckily, their music is eternal and will span the vast corridors of time like that of other great artists from our history.
...he failed the tone at the very first phrase, that's why he screamed and then smiled (like saying "I got this...!"). Besides the energy liberation, for sure it served him to go to the next phrase with more confidence and strength. He was visibly nervous, which is understandable, as well as a great-to-see moment of humbleness for a super star like him.
did you have a new one someone told me you had grandkids! thanks Steven Tyler and cool be safe in a world of chaos and when the church comes around or celebrations of life for others I will praise be to my family with some differences too. And wait for my husband too getting back for the stuff he has to go though and my ma and family too. Mwah a kiss on the cheek!
He was best on the middle part but honestly I forgive his weakness on the ballads just for the pure joy he showed in getting to sing this. I always think it's cute when famous people fanboy over other famous people.
I was 6 when the Beatles performed for the first time on Ed Sullivan. My life became so exciting from then on because of them and how they influenced other musicians. No one sou dedicated like them at that time. Such a great time to grow up along with rock and roll.
Owned the vinyl lp. One of the greatest album sides of all time. The flip side wasn't so shabby either. Thanks for the timeless tunes, Paul. They've meant a lot to us over the decades. (Wow. Is that ever an understatement.)
Golden Slumbers é uma canção dos Beatles composta por Paul McCartney, creditada a dupla Lennon/McCartney, e lançada no álbum Abbey Road de 1969. A gravação teve início em 2 de julho de 1969, e concluída em 19 de agosto de 1969. Dura 1'31" e é seguida, sem intervalos, por Carry that Weight. Na realidade, as duas músicas foram gravadas juntas, como se fossem uma só música. Paul McCartney criou a canção baseado em um verso do poeta renascentista inglês Thomas Dekker de 1606, que ele viu no caderno de música de sua irmã Ruth. A canção tem o início semelhante a The Fool on the Hill do álbum Magical Mistery Tour, e é em forma de canção de ninar. Paul McCartney canta e toca piano. George Harrison toca baixo e Ringo Starr toca bateria. John Lennon não participou da gravação por estar em convalescença de um acidente de carro na Escócia. A parte orquestral é composta por: 12 violinos , 4 violas, 3 trompetes, um trombone, um trombone baixo e 4 cornetas. O arranjo é de George Martin. (By Marcus Trindade)