Steve Crain . . . now i'm 67 (Suzie Q the Cat ... 6 Years!!!) I SO AGREE . . . Those Were The Days My Friend ... We Thought They'd Never End . . . OMG . . . I MAY HAVE A BEGINNING OF A NEW SONG!!! ;-) Just Give Me Two Weeks Of That Again!!! BE HEALTHY . . . BE HAPPY!!!
YES,i'm 54 years old but i consider myself one of that witness about much more good music than now and I love this long suite even now!!!Make please a greeting from me to the cat SUZIE Q (I love cats!)bye SUZIE!!!
I'm 67 years old (young at heart) and I remember listening to this song/album in December 1968 when I was stationed at the Naval Hospital in Boston. Many cold winter nights in the barracks listening to this classic. Oh yeah!
Carl Loud I'm 14 and my dad introduced me to classics like this and this is real music I wish i lived that the 60's when music was much better than today's.
SellingKhatrusByThePound same dude nobody these days at my school like this music but I love all classics and I'm 13 and everyone these days like rap, pop not even real music to me
Greatest song/album ever, this was my first album I bought from my cousin for $1 in 1969. Wore it and my parents out, I just couldn't listen to it unless the volume was cranked to 11!
I first became aware of this when the two hippie drummers in our junior school band learned the drum solo together as a call and response thing on their kits. I had to hear the whole song after that, and fell in love. I bought the live album and never looked back.
I had this tune down when I was a percussionist in the late 1960s to 2000, when I was paralized for 4 months and now have severe peripheral neuropathy in both arms and hands along with migraines that made me have to put the sticks down for life, sucks!
I was 13 when I got this album-and that's when my dad put me in the basement bedroom-didn't help him though-still went through all three floors-now I'm 55 and it's still a killer!
I'm also 55, but didn't discover this song/album until my later teens, living in my own place, shopping ast second hand store for $1 LPs to play on my giant-ass HIFI, that dominated(I had my priorities straight!) my itsy bitsy living room! Along with stacks of records (100s! Still have most (now my vinyl LP collection is nearing 2K!); this was a big influence on my music tastes for the years ever since!
+Debbie Mur Murphy Turned 59 myself on April 29 and I love this song and band more than ever....Was one of the 1st albums I listened to at age 13/14 ( eons ago)
Great to meet here folks who are just as enthusiastically. IB, they were the reason that I played as a teenager drumming and tried to get close. I did not, think so. But it was worth trying. And as a girl you were not taken seriously on drums.
Debbie Mur Murphy - turned 59 this myself. This brings back lots of great memories of my mis-spent youth in days of better living through chemistry. What a cult song!
Vincent Blackburn How's your sister these days, Vinnie ? Still in good health? I don't mean to sound rude, I'm kinda high right now. But when you call your sister lovely, do you mean that in an incestuous way?
@@UltimateThanos Darling u say u don't mean to sound rude and ur high on WHAT? But asking some dude if he remembers fucking his sister IS DOWN RIGHT BEYOND RUDE AND FUCKED UP. What's worse INCEST OR BEASTIITY OR BEING A NECROPHILIAC (TED BUNDY)( ED GEIN) This song was played at the end of the movie MANHUNTER WICH WAS REMADE AS RED DRAGON WICH IS A PREQUEL TO SILENCE OF THE LAMBS. BUFFALO BILL AND GOODBYE HORSES AND HANNIBAL LECTER ASKING THE SENATOR "DID U NURSE KATHERINE YOURSELF? DID U BREASTFEED HER? IF YOU AMPUTATE A MAN'S LEG HE CAN STILL FEEL IT PRICKLING, (PHANTOM PAIN) TELL ME MOM WHEN YOU'RE LITTLE GIRL IS ON THE SLAB WERE WILL IT PRICKLE U?" TAKE THIS THING BACK TO BALTIMORE. 5'10 ABOUT 180 POUNDS AND STRONGLY BUILD BLONDE HAIR AND EYES PALE BLUE. HE SAID HE LIVED IN PHILADELPHIA BUT MAY HAVE LIED. JODIE FOSTER COMES TO THE RESCUE AT Bellvadear in OHIO were she enters the weirdo buffalo BILL LAIR WITH THE CORPSE CEMETED IN THE BATHTUB AS THE LAST THING SHE SEES BEFORE EVERYTHING TURNS PITCH BLACK. JODIE HAD THE DROP ON THE CREEP WHEN HE AIMS HIS .357 MAGNUM AT THE BACK OF HER HEAD AND THAT SOUND OF THE HAMMER BEING PULLED BACK AND JODIE FOSTER TURNS AROUND SLICK FAST AND BLASTED THE SERIAL KILLER 5 OR 6 TIMES WITH HER WIMPY 38 SERVICE TRAINING PISTOL AND SHE DROPS THE CREEP AND SAVES THE BIG OLE FAT GIRL AND GRADUATED FROM TRAINING DAY AT THE FBI ACADEMY. JODIE FOSTER WAS SEXY IN THAT MOVIE WICH GAVE HER BEST ACTRESS AND THE ONLY HORROR FILM TO WIN THE BEST PICTURE OSCAR AWARD. THE EXORCIST GOT NOMINATED IN 1973 AND SHOULD HAVE WON BEST PICTURE. IMO THE EXORCIST IS HANDS DOWN THE SCARIEST HORROR FLICK THAT'S BASED ON A TRUE STORY IN 1950 AND A 12 YR OLD BOY IN MISSOURI?.. THE BOY ACTUALLY SURVIVED AND LIVED. THE EXORCISM OF EMILY ROSE WAS ANOTHER CASE BASED ON A TRUE STORY BUT THETEENAGE GIRL DIES AT THE END. ANNELISE WAS HER 1ST NAME AND IT HAPPENED IN THE 70S.
+joyce kunzelman I was 10 and my dad would crank it up on his old Capehart Hi-Fi ( with the double8-track built in) and had a speaker in all four corners of the living room... I swear you could hear the drummer walking around the room during the drum solo! Simply put ... AWESOME!
I found my 1968 transistor radio in my mom's hoarder time museum. Am afraid if I power it up, the right stations won't be there anymore, so I have no idea if it works.
seen these guys play this twice, live. Once in the Capital Theater in Port Chester, N.Y. in the late 60's with about 12 people in the audience. No one ever heard of them back then but I did. Can't remember the other place -- Ha....
play this at my funeral, towards the end, so people who never heard of it will keep checking their phone for the time wondering why its still going on fifteen minutes later
I was only 13 when i bought this album. it had some awesome songs on it.we had an organ back then ,and I played all the organ parts right with the music.wish i could bring those years back.
WOW LOVE THIS. BROUGHT BACK MANY MEMORIES. I WAS THE ONLY ONE IN THE GROUP WHO COULD DANCE TO THIS AND ALSO LAST THE WHOLE SONG. LOVE THOSE OLD DAYS. THANKS FOR THE SHARE AND MEMORIES.
The first time i heard this song (im younger) it was on XM radio and they played this version and i was kind of sick and we were on a road trip and it hit a high note for a longer time and it was high enough of a note to bring tears to my eyes. interesting reaction to hearing a song for the first time if i do say so myself
I never heard the red wine thing; though it could well have been participating in - what I interpreted as - the massive chemical reactions through the wonder of the blood-brain barrier. In other words, he was deeply effed when he recorded this 😅
I was lucky enough to grow up in a house that my folks mainly my dad has wooden fruit crates of LPs like iron butter fly to ac/dc . Even if I didn't I would still listen to this stuff! Never gets old! Such talent . I hate all the cookie cutter music today
Ah the memories. I had a strobe light, a black light, and a rotating multi-colored disco ball keeping me entertained for hours. Half the time I'd forget to plug them in.
A love song from Adam to Eve! Written as "in the garden of Eden" but he was so drunk after drinking a full gallon of Red Mountain wine, he slurred so badly, his teammate could only derive these words. A lot of this fuller version was later fleshed out in live jam sessions, alone(garage band style), in the studio, or performing live in a club. A true rock icon of a bygone era! Was the longest by far, until Rush's "2112"!
I am sitting here playing all my Momma Dawgz jamz, praying that she will come back from her stroke. I love u R.A.S.W ur my fawking hero and we all hoping u pull thru. 🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽❤🖤❤🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽
My college age brothers came home from college with long hair and this album on cartridge disc. I was 12 and fell in love with that song and all the music they listened to. Still love it all.
Instead of harrassing someone for listening to the same music a few years later, we should be celebrating that they're not listening to the regurgitated, studio-created, originality-lacking music of today. There's enough space in the world to let everyone have their own happiness.
Have you ever noticed oh little town of Bethlehem' in the song at approximately 11:40 to 12:15 you can hear Oh little town of Bethlehem' played on the organ you will get a rush when you realize that it really in touch a amazing rock song !!!
We got a copy of both the short single and the album (this tract -- the entire B side of the album) in the late summer of 1968 at the radio station I worked for (KDNT-AM) in Texas. Before I had the chance of audition this I was invited by a friend to a Jefferson Airplane concert in Dallas where Iron Butterfly was the opening act. Knowing it was going to be long, when the song started I poked the guy next to me (another friend) and said "time this!" (he had a watch but I didn't). It was 27 minutes long!! Airplane was good, but Iron Butterfly stole the show.
One of my faves, as a baby dad played this for me, and I think of the phonograph stacking up with the beatles, lily tomlin, credence, simon and garfunkel, bill cosby, etc. Etc.
This is music folks..you can't call today's artists musicians. I was born in 1975 so I didn't get to see this stuff live but my soul was there at a young age and I know music.....good music. :)
Who would believe that 48 yrs after this record was recorded that,one you can find an original recording anywhere. Well,look no more, because,not only do I have a copy of this record,but,its not open and still wrapped in its original plastic. Any interested in purchasing it please send me a message and we can talk. I actually have two copies,one slightly played.
Those of us who bought this also bought Steppenwolf, Led Zep, The Doors, Jefferson Airplane, King Crimson, and so many more. But the radio stations didn't play this stuff in the early days. They played Osmonds and Jackson 5, lol.
Jay Warren It is a potentiometer ("pot") on each input an audio console that determines how much audio from that input is shifted to the right channel or left channel in the mix. The radio in your car probably has one that shifts the sound from the left to right speakers. When the channel separation of each instrument or vocal is mixed appropriately, it has a more pleasing sound that all of one instrument being completely in one channel. Apple studios in London had the first console with this feature and "Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" was the first project to sue the technique.
Dave Mitchell They also used an early version of a Phaser that reverses the polarity of a balanced signal that makes it sound as though the audio is slowly turning over. It is hard to describe but you can easily recognize the effect
in the spring of 1969 our senior class at mcdonogh school put on a senior follies to raise money for our senior prom. I was the singer in a throw together group who played this song. the senior class has asked me to put the band together for our 50th class reunion and play this song again. what great memories from the class of '69.
My old high School used the drum beat part as the half time show to March in field, Fay Lee the best marching drum major that will ever lived, the band got invited to Washington DC to preform along with the Golden Spurs from JW Nixon High School Laredo Texas, home of the mighty Mustangs! Oh and the horse was our school song which was an accidental b side song played in Florida and became more famous than the a side of the record
The place where you end up down in a basement/cavern sort of place and there's some ghouls and the guy who was writing the notes on the computers. Bobblehead on the way down, too.
I first heard this due to one of the counselors at a ………Christian Summer Camp in the Berkshire Hills of Mass. he bought the album and played it for us. And I loved it!! I think I was 10 or 12 then. Still listening.
I remember being like 10 years old jamming this on vinyl.. I had the album but this was the only song I really liked on it so I listened to it over and over 😂
Okay, here's the Truth about that. Don't hear that, much these days. I was lucky enough to be in a progressive garage band that could do Latin Oldies and Top 40,z hard rock at the same Wedding or Dance Party Gig fifty years ago.16 years of age then, how cool is that? One of my favorite memories from that time we were playing the Wedding March for the newlyweds first dance and went right into Inna-gadda-davida. Awesome!!!
Had the Rare Pleasure of meeting Doug Ingle in Orlando Fla. In 1983(ish) Iron Butterfly played our Club! It was called "Tom's Point After Lounge" ! He came in through the Kitchen, I recognized him "Immediately" and said Doug Ingle how ya Doin! I was making Nacho dip ! He came right up to me, and started eating those little green Jalapeño peppers like they were M&M's, and just kept on going Mmmmmm ! We laughed ! It was mid afternoon, I sat and talked to the Entire band and Crew ! They "Couldn't of been Nicer, Cool bunch of guy's! !!! I'm sure Most people know that the title was Supposed to be "In a Garden of Eden" But Doug's slant on the title sounded like In a Gadda da Vida, so it Stuck, lol !
best jam ever!!! I've done a fair amount of "stuff" to this song. back when music was good. Not sure what you call music today. and wtf is a Justin beiber??
Every generation thinks that their music is somehow more sophisticated and original than that of the generations that follow. The reality is that music is always good for someone and music is always “not what it used to be” for someone else.
@@StacheBigote Quite on point👌🏼 ...for those w/sincere music culture, appreciation, & /or education, as the decades pass along, one's perspective fine tunes to see many artistic comparisons: each generation basically has its own versions of other talent in acting & music. Some of course stand out more than others such as: Chuck Berry & Little Richard lead to: Beatles, Beach Boys, Zombies, Yardbirds, Dick Dale, Donovan, Status Quo, Strawberry Alarm Clock, Fanny, Doors, Jefferson Airplane, ...90's Stone Temple Pilots (grundge Beatles), 00's Tame Impala -Rolling Stones... 90's: The Hives -Zeppelin... 00's: Temples -PinkFloyd... 90's: Massive Attack 00's: Robert Plant & Strange Sensation -Eagles... Various levels country rock via Kansas, Styx, Haggard, Shania, Kacey Musgraves, etc. -Heavy Metal: Black Sabbath... Deep Purple, Dio, AC/DC, Aerosmith, Ratt, Scorpions, Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, Motorhead, Iggy Pop, QuietRiot, DefLeppard, Disturbed, Machine Head, Metallica, AliceInChains, SystemofADown, Baby Metal, BandMaid, etc... & the legend Ozzy continues forever😈 -King Crimson, Yes, Rush, U2... ProgRock 60s-90s levels -Jimmy Hendrix... SRV, Prince, Lenny Kravitz, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Johnny Lang, Gary Clarke Jr. -NIN, Rage Against The Machine, Soundgarden, Audioslave Soul /R&B... -Temptations, Ella Fitzgerald, Aretha Franklin, Four Tops, Delfonics, Kool & The Gang, Isley Bros, Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, Seals & Kroft, Lovin Spoonful, ChakaKhan, Hall & Oates, Sade, Harry Conick Jr, John Legend, Buble, Jhene Aiko, Summer Walker, Ella Mai, Kehlani Etc Etc Etc.. 🤓This hadn't meant to be such a long dissertation... 🌈& yet, looking back, we have this uniquely magnificent classic gem via glorious 60s slurred inebriation😎✌️🎇
Why do I have a feeling that I may be the youngest one among the commenters? Then again, through shows like the Simpsons growing, and my mom blasting old school Santana I grew a loving for this music at a very young age.
Ask any old school rockers ( myself, I'm 56 ) " What is the earliest drum solo that you remember that you really liked " and the largest percent of people polled would probably reply " The drum solo from Wipe Out by The Safari's ( 1963 ) while 2nd place would most assuredly go to the drum solo from In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida ( 1968 ). Myself, I'd be forced to go with Iron Butterfly.
I requested this at Sirius (or its precursor) and the announcer said "If we played that every time it was requested, that's all we would be playing - and refused to play it. That's when I gave Sirius away.
brand new music to me in 6th grade when we listened over and over again.....with you or over and over and over again...…...my friend or over and over...…..could it really, really be?
I'm 29 years old, a professional classical musician and can testify that this music is so much better than modern crap on so many levels....!
I'm 67 years old, even my Dad (he would have been 100 this year) who played in a "Big Band" in the late 1940s thought this was a pretty good tune.
I AM 66 YEARS OLD (Suzie Q the Cat ... 5 Years!!!)
We both agree that we were lucky enough to have
been a Witness . . . to the Best Music Ever!!!!!
If you're referencing Nas...well he loved this song so much he had to use it twice in his rap!
I am 69. was there ...loved this...still do
me 69 those were the day's!! rock,beer,drive inns,more rock! no RAP!! we respected our girls!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! OH YA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Steve Crain . . . now i'm 67 (Suzie Q the Cat ... 6 Years!!!)
I SO AGREE . . . Those Were The Days My Friend ... We Thought
They'd Never End . . . OMG . . . I MAY HAVE A BEGINNING OF
A NEW SONG!!! ;-) Just Give Me Two Weeks Of That Again!!!
BE HEALTHY . . . BE HAPPY!!!
YES,i'm 54 years old but i consider myself one of that witness about much more good music than now and I love this long suite even now!!!Make please a greeting from me to the cat SUZIE Q (I love cats!)bye SUZIE!!!
This is the first album I ever bought! Awesome then & still as awesome 50 years later!
I'm 67 years old (young at heart) and I remember listening to this song/album in December 1968 when I was stationed at the Naval Hospital in Boston. Many cold winter nights in the barracks listening to this classic. Oh yeah!
Im 24 irl(In Real Life) and can sit here sober as a good judge and still enjoy the whole 20 mins of this!
Way to go Joe!!!
Carl Loud I'm 14 and my dad introduced me to classics like this and this is real music I wish i lived that the 60's when music was much better than today's.
SellingKhatrusByThePound same dude nobody these days at my school like this music but I love all classics and I'm 13 and everyone these days like rap, pop not even real music to me
Carl Loud thank you for your service!
I remember my Pop brought this album home and played it, and my Mom said it sounded like hippy funeral music. Lol I loved it.
🌈🤓✌️Classic✌️🤓😎
"Hippy Funeral Music". Thanks for putting that idea in my head.
I'm sure it will only live there rent free till I'm dead. 🤣
That is truly marvelous. Hippie Funeral Music. I love it. Like, "Groovy dirge, man. I know he woulda loved it. Dude was one far out cat."
True music, written by true artists -- they could write & perform better drunk in a half hour than today's groups can do over weeks, sober!
This sounds like rock and/or roll.
James Richards Wait a minute...
James Richards *beach ball flies threw the air*
crazyhatgamer *through
+James Richards But it doesn't smell like Teen Spirit.
+James Richards Remember when we used to make out to this hymn?
Greatest song/album ever, this was my first album I bought from my cousin for $1 in 1969. Wore it and my parents out, I just couldn't listen to it unless the volume was cranked to 11!
Music the way it's supposed to be. Unedited, uncompromised, and totally awesome.
I first became aware of this when the two hippie drummers in our junior school band learned the drum solo together as a call and response thing on their kits. I had to hear the whole song after that, and fell in love. I bought the live album and never looked back.
Miles O'Neal
I had this tune down when I was a percussionist in the late 1960s to 2000, when I was paralized for 4 months and now have severe peripheral neuropathy in both arms and hands along with migraines that made me have to put the sticks down for life, sucks!
@@woodymoose5174 Yes it does, especially from peripheral neuropathy.
I was 13 when I got this album-and that's when my dad put me in the basement bedroom-didn't help him though-still went through all three floors-now I'm 55 and it's still a killer!
I hear ya, I'm 60 now but still rock to "real" music, not this crap they call music lol
haha, some good old memories.
hahahahaaaaa. im proud as hell hearing that..
nothing but the best
He didn't slur the whole time
I'm also 55, but didn't discover this song/album until my later teens, living in my own place, shopping ast second hand store for $1 LPs to play on my giant-ass HIFI, that dominated(I had my priorities straight!) my itsy bitsy living room! Along with stacks of records (100s! Still have most (now my vinyl LP collection is nearing 2K!); this was a big influence on my music tastes for the years ever since!
Listening to Iron Butterfly... I will be 59 years old January 5th and oh the memories Iron Butterfly brings back ... Life is good!
Happy birthday!
Hey thanks Jordan!
+Debbie Mur Murphy Turned 59 myself on April 29 and I love this song and band more than ever....Was one of the 1st albums I listened to at age 13/14 ( eons ago)
Great to meet here folks who are just as enthusiastically. IB, they were the reason that I played as a teenager drumming and tried to get close. I did not, think so. But it was worth trying. And as a girl you were not taken seriously on drums.
Debbie Mur Murphy - turned 59 this myself. This brings back lots of great memories of my mis-spent youth in days of better living through chemistry. What a cult song!
Holy crap! Must be 40 years since I listened to the full version. Set off flashbacks! You deserve a huge thank you!
My lovely sister used to play this album for hours Along with hippy flowers stickers every where. Great memories.
Vincent Blackburn How's your sister these days, Vinnie ? Still in good health? I don't mean to sound rude, I'm kinda high right now. But when you call your sister lovely, do you mean that in an incestuous way?
@@UltimateThanos Darling u say u don't mean to sound rude and ur high on WHAT? But asking some dude if he remembers fucking his sister IS DOWN RIGHT BEYOND RUDE AND FUCKED UP. What's worse INCEST OR BEASTIITY OR BEING A NECROPHILIAC (TED BUNDY)( ED GEIN) This song was played at the end of the movie MANHUNTER WICH WAS REMADE AS RED DRAGON WICH IS A PREQUEL TO SILENCE OF THE LAMBS. BUFFALO BILL AND GOODBYE HORSES AND HANNIBAL LECTER ASKING THE SENATOR "DID U NURSE KATHERINE YOURSELF? DID U BREASTFEED HER? IF YOU AMPUTATE A MAN'S LEG HE CAN STILL FEEL IT PRICKLING, (PHANTOM PAIN) TELL ME MOM WHEN YOU'RE LITTLE GIRL IS ON THE SLAB WERE WILL IT PRICKLE U?" TAKE THIS THING BACK TO BALTIMORE. 5'10 ABOUT 180 POUNDS AND STRONGLY BUILD BLONDE HAIR AND EYES PALE BLUE. HE SAID HE LIVED IN PHILADELPHIA BUT MAY HAVE LIED. JODIE FOSTER COMES TO THE RESCUE AT Bellvadear in OHIO were she enters the weirdo buffalo BILL LAIR WITH THE CORPSE CEMETED IN THE BATHTUB AS THE LAST THING SHE SEES BEFORE EVERYTHING TURNS PITCH BLACK. JODIE HAD THE DROP ON THE CREEP WHEN HE AIMS HIS .357 MAGNUM AT THE BACK OF HER HEAD AND THAT SOUND OF THE HAMMER BEING PULLED BACK AND JODIE FOSTER TURNS AROUND SLICK FAST AND BLASTED THE SERIAL KILLER 5 OR 6 TIMES WITH HER WIMPY 38 SERVICE TRAINING PISTOL AND SHE DROPS THE CREEP AND SAVES THE BIG OLE FAT GIRL AND GRADUATED FROM TRAINING DAY AT THE FBI ACADEMY. JODIE FOSTER WAS SEXY IN THAT MOVIE WICH GAVE HER BEST ACTRESS AND THE ONLY HORROR FILM TO WIN THE BEST PICTURE OSCAR AWARD. THE EXORCIST GOT NOMINATED IN 1973 AND SHOULD HAVE WON BEST PICTURE. IMO THE EXORCIST IS HANDS DOWN THE SCARIEST HORROR FLICK THAT'S BASED ON A TRUE STORY IN 1950 AND A 12 YR OLD BOY IN MISSOURI?.. THE BOY ACTUALLY SURVIVED AND LIVED. THE EXORCISM OF EMILY ROSE WAS ANOTHER CASE BASED ON A TRUE STORY BUT THETEENAGE GIRL DIES AT THE END. ANNELISE WAS HER 1ST NAME AND IT HAPPENED IN THE 70S.
I was 12.Listening to this under my covers with my transistor radio.Transfixed. Hooked for life :)
+joyce kunzelman I was 10 and my dad would crank it up on his old Capehart Hi-Fi ( with the double8-track built in) and had a speaker in all four corners of the living room... I swear you could hear the drummer walking around the room during the drum solo! Simply put ... AWESOME!
I found my 1968 transistor radio in my mom's hoarder time museum. Am afraid if I power it up, the right stations won't be there anymore, so I have no idea if it works.
seen these guys play this twice, live. Once in the Capital Theater in Port Chester, N.Y. in the late 60's with about 12 people in the audience. No one ever heard of them back then but I did. Can't remember the other place -- Ha....
play this at my funeral, towards the end, so people who never heard of it will keep checking their phone for the time wondering why its still going on fifteen minutes later
😂😂😂😂
I was only 13 when i bought this album. it had some awesome songs on it.we had an organ back then ,and I played all the organ parts right with the music.wish i could bring those years back.
Love the fuss tone and the Farfisa organ at the beginning. I played this song in my first band back when I was 15. It was very cool. So 68ish!
this was my dad's favorite song he passed I cry every time it plays
Sorry Man! There's tunes that bring me to tears for my son I lost in a car wreck almost 9 years ago. "Forever 19" but would be 28 now!
WOW LOVE THIS. BROUGHT BACK MANY MEMORIES. I WAS THE ONLY ONE IN THE GROUP WHO COULD DANCE TO THIS AND ALSO LAST THE WHOLE SONG. LOVE THOSE OLD DAYS. THANKS FOR THE SHARE AND MEMORIES.
The first heavy metal song I ever heard. I think I was about 10 years old, and I was sold.
It's crazy to think people once considered this " heavy metal "
Phillip Ferrell There was no such thing as heavy metal until February 13, 1970.
@@RelativePitch This has some roots of heavy metal.
@@RelativePitch Cromagnon - Caledonia was 1969.
The first time i heard this song (im younger) it was on XM radio and they played this version and i was kind of sick and we were on a road trip and it hit a high note for a longer time and it was high enough of a note to bring tears to my eyes. interesting reaction to hearing a song for the first time if i do say so myself
Music is a direct line to the universe.
One of the greatest rock and roll jams EVER!
The original title was "in the garden of Eden" he was drunk on red wine and it slurred out as ' inda goda Davita"
He was actually tripping his fucking nuts off, not drunk
But we'll call it "red wine" for the snowflakes 🙃
This is exactly the trivia I was looking for haha thanks :)
I never heard the red wine thing; though it could well have been participating in - what I interpreted as - the massive chemical reactions through the wonder of the blood-brain barrier. In other words, he was deeply effed when he recorded this 😅
@@RachelCampbell-g5c he was riding on the tubular swells of the astroplane as the winds blew through his mind. 🤯
been looking for this since i was 9 because good memories of dad blasting this in the house.... im 25 and just found it
I LOVEEEE THE DRUMS !
I took a bit too much cough syrup once and this song was playing in my head.
Will Graham running through the glass window... Manhunter is a damn good film.
The best scene ever!
BEST use of this great song ever.
never will anyone ever beat this drum solo
I quit drugs and booze over 32 years ago, but I still feel high listening to this. Rock on!
That pipe organ section in the middle (starting around 9:00) is hauntingly beautiful. Reminds me of some of the darker stuff by J.S. Bach.
Like what? Recommend something please
Brings back memories when I was in my early teens. As a musician back then, we rock & roll like all those before us.
I'm still amazed by the guitar work on this classic tune and realizing that Eric Brann was only 17 years old when this recording was made.
I was lucky enough to grow up in a house that my folks mainly my dad has wooden fruit crates of LPs like iron butter fly to
ac/dc . Even if I didn't I would still listen to this stuff! Never gets old! Such talent . I hate all the cookie cutter music today
Todo un clásico. Imprescindible haberlo escuchado por lo menos una vez en la vida.
Scary. Grooving on this classic in 2018 would have been like diggin’ on music from 1918 back during the Summer of Love. Peace.
Don Guizzetti ....
Not the same analogy with all due respect.
Brings me back to the happiness of the the 60s and 70s
it's been the longest song of my time and I love it as it is so good and it stays as it is
I fell in luv with this song when I was 12, now I'm still 12
buttkrieg same, im 13 now
CJ Keener same bout to be 14
🤓😈🤘🏽😈🤓
Ah the memories. I had a strobe light, a black light, and a rotating multi-colored disco ball keeping me entertained for hours. Half the time I'd forget to plug them in.
My dad showed me this song when I was littleee. I still get pumped when I hear it.
A love song from Adam to Eve! Written as "in the garden of Eden" but he was so drunk after drinking a full gallon of Red Mountain wine, he slurred so badly, his teammate could only derive these words. A lot of this fuller version was later fleshed out in live jam sessions, alone(garage band style), in the studio, or performing live in a club. A true rock icon of a bygone era! Was the longest by far, until Rush's "2112"!
I am sitting here playing all my Momma Dawgz jamz, praying that she will come back from her stroke. I love u R.A.S.W ur my fawking hero and we all hoping u pull thru. 🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽❤🖤❤🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽
the first time I heard this song was at my 6th grade class picknic in 1970 and Ive been
hooked ever since
My college age brothers came home from college with long hair and this album on cartridge disc. I was 12 and fell in love with that song and all the music they listened to. Still love it all.
I fell in love with this song when I was like 17. I am 21 now and I feel this love is still burniiiiiing ;D
Good job, you listened to a song four years ago. Congratulations asswagon
Instead of harrassing someone for listening to the same music a few years later, we should be celebrating that they're not listening to the regurgitated, studio-created, originality-lacking music of today.
There's enough space in the world to let everyone have their own happiness.
+Jablicek go Fuck yourself
Yea verily, you give meaning to the word 'tolerance'.
I agree what he said was out of line, but I have to give at least a few small points for "asswagon"
Wait a minute, this sounds like rock and/or roll!
Lol, I know what youre talking about :) best Simpsons scene ever...
Hahahah watching that ep right now.
+davincent98 Best Simpsons moment ever :-D
Hey Marge, remember when we used to make out to this hymn??
😆🤣
Have you ever noticed oh little town of Bethlehem' in the song at approximately
11:40 to 12:15 you can hear
Oh little town of Bethlehem' played on the organ you will get a rush when you realize that it really in touch a amazing rock song !!!
Made fun of for decades, it's actually a quite involved love song, a suite for a sweet...
I was in boot camp in 1970, and the boot camp drum and bugle corps used to march to the drum solo.
We got a copy of both the short single and the album (this tract -- the entire B side of the album) in the late summer of 1968 at the radio station I worked for (KDNT-AM) in Texas. Before I had the chance of audition this I was invited by a friend to a Jefferson Airplane concert in Dallas where Iron Butterfly was the opening act. Knowing it was going to be long, when the song started I poked the guy next to me (another friend) and said "time this!" (he had a watch but I didn't). It was 27 minutes long!! Airplane was good, but Iron Butterfly stole the show.
One of my faves, as a baby dad played this for me, and I think of the phonograph stacking up with the beatles, lily tomlin, credence, simon and garfunkel, bill cosby, etc. Etc.
You are lucky to have been so well-raised!
Same.. parent, aunts, uncles..
This is music folks..you can't call today's artists musicians. I was born in 1975 so I didn't get to see this stuff live but my soul was there at a young age and I know music.....good music. :)
In The Garden of Eden, by I. Ron Butterfly.
Got this and drove my parents nuts with it. Use crank it as loud as my stereo could go. 😂
This was one of the first albums I ever bought. Still love it.
I'm 60 years old as of March 3rd and the memories of this song still makes me wish I had a three finger bag of weed for 10$ and cigarettes we're 25¢
Yes! The greatest era of America!
An iron butterfly is a type of options trade & strategy at the CBOE. It's a level III trade, it's quite complicated.
Hhhhh
I think about Home Improvement and Tim and Jill dancing outside.
RIP Lee Dorman & Erik Brann
Who would believe that 48 yrs after this record was recorded that,one you can find an original recording anywhere. Well,look no more, because,not only do I have a copy of this record,but,its not open and still wrapped in its original plastic. Any interested in purchasing it please send me a message and we can talk. I actually have two copies,one slightly played.
ok
ill buy it
Phil Spigner what kind of price you have in mind
This might be called my hubby's and my song!!! Brings back so many memories!!!
Pink Flats, Orange Barrels and last but not least Purple Mics. Darn, that was a fine time. Drafted in '68 and served 2 terms.
Thank you.
Those of us who bought this also bought Steppenwolf, Led Zep, The Doors, Jefferson Airplane, King Crimson, and so many more. But the radio stations didn't play this stuff in the early days. They played Osmonds and Jackson 5, lol.
It was too long for regular airplay.
People who rocked to this didn't by singles. We bought albums. 👍
Even has the background hiss at the start that I remember so well. ;-)
Complete left-right separation of instruments. This version preceded the pan pot by only a few months.
Dave Mitchell what is the "pan pot" ? yes i'm ignorant...asking genuinely ;-)
Jay Warren It is a potentiometer ("pot") on each input an audio console that determines how much audio from that input is shifted to the right channel or left channel in the mix. The radio in your car probably has one that shifts the sound from the left to right speakers. When the channel separation of each instrument or vocal is mixed appropriately, it has a more pleasing sound that all of one instrument being completely in one channel. Apple studios in London had the first console with this feature and "Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" was the first project to sue the technique.
Dave Mitchell They also used an early version of a Phaser that reverses the polarity of a balanced signal that makes it sound as though the audio is slowly turning over. It is hard to describe but you can easily recognize the effect
The Beatles sued the technique? Who won the lawsuit?
+Bad Speling Industries My keyboard certain didn't!
this song always takes me back to my sanity
in the spring of 1969 our senior class at mcdonogh school put on a senior follies to raise money for our senior prom. I was the singer in a throw together group who played this song. the senior class has asked me to put the band together for our 50th class reunion and play this song again. what great memories from the class of '69.
My old high School used the drum beat part as the half time show to March in field, Fay Lee the best marching drum major that will ever lived, the band got invited to Washington DC to preform along with the Golden Spurs from JW Nixon High School Laredo Texas, home of the mighty Mustangs! Oh and the horse was our school song which was an accidental b side song played in Florida and became more famous than the a side of the record
drums, percussion, drums and more percussion. WOOT!
"This sounds like rock and OR roll"
Reminds me of creeping around in the Dunwich Building in Fallout 3.
The creepy paranormal one? Because that was crazy as shit!
The place where you end up down in a basement/cavern sort of place and there's some ghouls and the guy who was writing the notes on the computers. Bobblehead on the way down, too.
Once listened to this backwards while on shrooms blew my goddamn mind
If I didn't have to worry about waking my partner, I would have LOLd loudly. Thank you for the tickly torture in my belly as I *do not* actually LOL
Hey, Spence, let's trip out!
Oh Cool! (touches pc monitor, and suddenly im inside it)
I was a young drummer and it was my favourite training music.
Just a little time ago. ^^
I first heard this due to one of the counselors at a ………Christian Summer Camp in the Berkshire Hills of Mass. he bought the album and played it for us. And I loved it!! I think I was 10 or 12 then. Still listening.
sounds like a pissed off elephant which used to scare the shit outta me when I was 2 years old🐘
got to be the best drum solo ever done.
Legend of the one eyed sailor drum solo is close
Well it's not close to the best drum solo ever, but it's perfect for the song!
When your dad walks around with a vacuous expression all day that doesn't change and you know he's been fuckin' blazin'.
So awesome. I used to listen to this way back in my apartment days. Maybe a 🍄 or two as well.
LIstened to this with headphones, and stoned of course and it sounded like those drums were dancing all around your head! Ahhhh the good old days!
Thank you!! In memory of our cousin Don Stroud 🙏💗
I remember being like 10 years old jamming this on vinyl.. I had the album but this was the only song I really liked on it so I listened to it over and over 😂
Set the mold for the Heavy Metal to come. Ya know Ozzie, and others, had to have taken notice!
PacificCircle1 There is nothing remotely heavy metal about this. It’s a psychedelic space jam.
Solid influence from gems like this, Yardbirds, Yes, Doors, Hendrix, Santana, & Zeppelin🤘🏽🎇
Okay, here's the Truth about that. Don't hear that, much these days. I was lucky enough to be in a progressive garage band that could do Latin Oldies and Top 40,z hard rock at the same Wedding or Dance Party Gig fifty years ago.16 years of age then, how cool is that? One of my favorite memories from that time we were playing the Wedding March for the newlyweds first dance and went right into Inna-gadda-davida. Awesome!!!
Had the Rare Pleasure of meeting Doug Ingle in Orlando Fla. In 1983(ish) Iron Butterfly played our Club! It was called "Tom's Point After Lounge" ! He came in through the Kitchen, I recognized him "Immediately" and said Doug Ingle how ya Doin! I was making Nacho dip ! He came right up to me, and started eating those little green Jalapeño peppers like they were M&M's, and just kept on going Mmmmmm ! We laughed ! It was mid afternoon, I sat and talked to the Entire band and Crew ! They "Couldn't of been Nicer, Cool bunch of guy's! !!! I'm sure Most people know that the title was Supposed to be "In a Garden of Eden" But Doug's slant on the title sounded like In a Gadda da Vida, so it Stuck, lol !
thanks to my big sister i grew up with this song best drum solo ever listen to it all the time
That drum solo could be heard being taped out on many a school desk.
@@paulsto6516 i know every drummer wants to play as well LOL
best jam ever!!! I've done a fair amount of "stuff" to this song. back when music was good. Not sure what you call music today. and wtf is a Justin beiber??
NOBODY will ever know what Justin is. 😂😂😂
Every generation thinks that their music is somehow more sophisticated and original than that of the generations that follow. The reality is that music is always good for someone and music is always “not what it used to be” for someone else.
@@StacheBigote Quite on point👌🏼
...for those w/sincere music culture, appreciation, & /or education, as the decades pass along, one's perspective fine tunes to see many artistic comparisons: each generation basically has its own versions of other talent in acting & music. Some of course stand out more than others such as:
Chuck Berry & Little Richard lead to: Beatles, Beach Boys, Zombies, Yardbirds, Dick Dale, Donovan, Status Quo, Strawberry Alarm Clock, Fanny, Doors, Jefferson Airplane,
...90's Stone Temple Pilots (grundge Beatles), 00's Tame Impala
-Rolling Stones... 90's: The Hives
-Zeppelin... 00's: Temples
-PinkFloyd... 90's: Massive Attack
00's: Robert Plant & Strange Sensation
-Eagles... Various levels country rock via Kansas, Styx, Haggard, Shania, Kacey Musgraves, etc.
-Heavy Metal:
Black Sabbath... Deep Purple, Dio, AC/DC, Aerosmith, Ratt, Scorpions, Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, Motorhead, Iggy Pop, QuietRiot, DefLeppard, Disturbed, Machine Head, Metallica, AliceInChains, SystemofADown, Baby Metal, BandMaid, etc...
& the legend Ozzy continues forever😈
-King Crimson, Yes, Rush, U2... ProgRock 60s-90s levels
-Jimmy Hendrix... SRV, Prince, Lenny Kravitz, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Johnny Lang, Gary Clarke Jr.
-NIN, Rage Against The Machine,
Soundgarden, Audioslave
Soul /R&B... -Temptations, Ella Fitzgerald, Aretha Franklin, Four Tops, Delfonics, Kool & The Gang, Isley Bros, Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, Seals & Kroft, Lovin Spoonful, ChakaKhan, Hall & Oates, Sade, Harry Conick Jr, John Legend, Buble, Jhene Aiko, Summer Walker, Ella Mai, Kehlani
Etc Etc Etc.. 🤓This hadn't meant to be such a long dissertation...
🌈& yet, looking back, we have this uniquely magnificent classic gem via glorious 60s slurred inebriation😎✌️🎇
Simpsons, brought me here
Bart´s prank at church?
"In the Garden Of Eden, By I. Ron Butterfly"
This song is both awesome music and one of the funniest things ever
Why do I have a feeling that I may be the youngest one among the commenters?
Then again, through shows like the Simpsons growing, and my mom blasting old school Santana I grew a loving for this music at a very young age.
Same! And we who are Gen X bear the critical responsibility of passing the good music to the gen z and beyond! Proud to say my sons love this stuff!
In my opinion the GREATESt LP of all time!
Love the drum solo.
that drum solo is the shit
Ask any old school rockers ( myself, I'm 56 ) " What is the earliest drum solo that you remember that you really liked " and the largest percent of people polled would probably reply " The drum solo from Wipe Out by The Safari's ( 1963 ) while 2nd place would most assuredly go to the drum solo from In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida ( 1968 ). Myself, I'd be forced to go with Iron Butterfly.
Blue Cheer, Summertime Blues, all time best drum solo.
Toad
@@stephenwebb8570 Cream of the crop!
Time Life infomercials from the 90's brought me here 😃
William Hill ME TOO!
love that music it brings back a lot of memories
Epic drum solo...Thanks Ron Bushy
I requested this at Sirius (or its precursor) and the announcer said "If we played that every time it was requested, that's all we would be playing - and refused to play it. That's when I gave Sirius away.
brand new music to me in 6th grade when we listened over and over again.....with you or over and over and over again...…...my friend or over and over...…..could it really, really be?
This Song was the most common song we listened to in Viet Nam in 1969 - gives me flash backs !
memories !
God love you...and thank you for serving.
10:53 the guitarist got bored. :D