Ode To Billy Joe - Bobbie Gentry | Andy & Alex FIRST TIME REACTION!

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  • Опубликовано: 26 июл 2024
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Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @aileenturrietta7553
    @aileenturrietta7553 Год назад +504

    After all these years, the lyrics roll off the tongue like it was yesterday.

    • @BaseballMom523
      @BaseballMom523 Год назад +7

      This!

    • @anmana7
      @anmana7 Год назад +18

      I always listen to this on the third of June.

    • @ginao8935
      @ginao8935 Год назад +5

      Yes!!! Lol

    • @impudentdomain
      @impudentdomain Год назад +13

      same here, but now I can appreciate the song more than I did as a kid, also hearing her voice on something a lot better than an old AM transistor radio.

    • @broncodeviltexas
      @broncodeviltexas Год назад +11

      ​@@anmana7 yes! Next one is Papa was a Rolling Stone - Sep 3😆

  • @handfuloftrains4781
    @handfuloftrains4781 11 месяцев назад +48

    "Child, what's happened to your appetite?" is a chilling line. The family is oblivious to what the girl is feeling.

    • @pegasus5287
      @pegasus5287 3 месяца назад +1

      Hard times can do that.

    • @tcme11
      @tcme11 Месяц назад

      ​@@pegasus5287True, but tell that to Dolly Parton, Loretta Lynn, and a thousand other artists who grew up financially poor.

  • @steveturner3999
    @steveturner3999 Год назад +300

    This was a huge hit when it was released. It was kinda controversial because it inferred certain things and left it up to the listener to draw their own conclusions. Bobbie Gentry had a sultry voice. She was a looker as well.

  • @Jeff_Lichtman
    @Jeff_Lichtman Год назад +408

    People have speculated about what they threw off the bridge ever since this song was released. But it doesn't really matter. Bobbie Gentry said the song is "a study in unconscious cruelty." The family engages in idle talk about Billy Joe, yet doesn't notice how upset the narrator is over his death, or catch on to the fact that she was involved with him somehow. IMO, it's better for it to be a mystery.

    • @joonzville
      @joonzville Год назад +18

      100% agree. I’ve thought this since the song came out. So many around me were obsessing about what they threw off the bridge and not empathizing with the tragedy. Kinda remade the whole point of the song, imo.

    • @charlesharris2749
      @charlesharris2749 Год назад +14

      I thought it interesting that the guys caught what I knew Gentry said about the song, rather than what most people talked about; what they threw off the bridge.

    • @gsparkman
      @gsparkman Год назад +18

      A riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma.

    • @scottmarleneking6298
      @scottmarleneking6298 Год назад +4

      Well said!

    • @SpuzzyLargo
      @SpuzzyLargo Год назад +10

      As I just posted, one theory of what was thrown off the bridge is that it was a wedding ring. She had rejected Billie's marriage proposal.

  • @denisemay6807
    @denisemay6807 Год назад +212

    The thing about this song to me is the story is told so well that you can picture the scenery going on through the entire song in your head.

    • @slcs369
      @slcs369 Год назад +14

      I felt like I was sitting at the supper table.

    • @glawnow1959
      @glawnow1959 Год назад +14

      Rick Hall, the music producer from FAME Studios, said he almost drove his car off the road the first time he heard this song at night on the AM radio, because it sounded so much like so many people he knew.

    • @brt5273
      @brt5273 Год назад +7

      Agreed and in the final verse how within a year's time absolutely everything can change, just like in real life.

    • @denisemay6807
      @denisemay6807 Год назад +2

      @@slcs369 : exactly!

    • @patrickcampion7966
      @patrickcampion7966 Год назад +3

      To this day it makes me think back to my not fully-matured teenage brain being not quite able to process the sometimes disconcerting things that life could throw out there. The instrumentation and arrangement especially does a an excellent job of sustaining that sense of unsettling uncertainty

  • @sherigrow6480
    @sherigrow6480 Год назад +175

    I heard someone refer to this as southern Gothic, which seems perfect. She wrote and produced her own music.

    • @jdw5678
      @jdw5678 Год назад +15

      Exactly what I've thought -- Faulkner or O'Connor set to stark pop/folk music. Southern gothic and mystery, and the family "dynamic" is chilling. It was a huge hit.

  • @pennyanderson3475
    @pennyanderson3475 Год назад +291

    What a picture this song paints. The conversational quality as she talks about suicide and the bleakness of life and the people coping by not coping is chilling and the story certainly leaves you wanting to know more.

    • @jezebelle57
      @jezebelle57 Год назад +12

      I remember when this song came out and it caused, rightfully, a sensation. EVERYONE was talking about what they threw off that bridge. Most people thought it was an aborted fetus. In the song, what’s glossed over is the fact that the narrator and Billy Joe obviously had a secret relationship. The fact that she loses her appetite during the dinner while her mother is talking matchmaking her and that nice young preacher, is chilling. She probably knows why he jumped off the bridge, but can’t say anything.
      By the way, please play her follow up hit “Fancy”. Do not, for the love of god, play or even listen to Reba McIntyre’s cover, which was horrible and a travesty. “Fancy” was based on a true story about a Southern politician and the woman who was first his mistress, then his wife. Again, it was a sensation and for the next year, people were speculating just which Southern politician it was. That woman could write some songs!

    • @rudedogmat
      @rudedogmat Год назад +2

      I believe she and Billy threw a fetus off the bridge and he killed himself by jumping off the bridge. That's why she goes up there and throws flowers off the bridge. Like flowers on a grave.

    • @brt5273
      @brt5273 Год назад +8

      So realistic too. The mealtime conversation and familial epilogue that any, and especially Southern, family can identify with.

    • @thancrow
      @thancrow Год назад +3

      @@rudedogmat She threw the flowers in mourning for Billie Joe. Bobby has said, for all these years, that what was thrown off the bridge was a red herring, and it doesn't matter.

  • @scottmarleneking6298
    @scottmarleneking6298 Год назад +128

    I feel like Harry Chapin's "Taxi" might be the kind of ode you're looking for.

    • @scottmarleneking6298
      @scottmarleneking6298 Год назад +9

      An ode to what might have been.

    • @TomP-pf7kn
      @TomP-pf7kn Год назад +9

      Yes, go back to the master of story telling, Harry Chapin. In addition to “Taxi”, listen to “A Better Place To Be” (live version), and “Corey’s Coming”, two of his best

    • @joonzville
      @joonzville Год назад +6

      Oh, yeah. That’s an excellent suggestion!

    • @jc296x
      @jc296x Год назад +4

      All three of those are awesome... And Sniper is just emotionally chilling. They'll love that one.

    • @idalily3810
      @idalily3810 Год назад +2

      YES. They need to do that one. Although they seemed underwhelmed by Cat's In The Cradle.

  • @thundrrd5
    @thundrrd5 Год назад +53

    In an interview Bobbie Gentry told Fred Bronson. “The song is sort of a study in unconscious cruelty.”

    • @kathleenmccrory9883
      @kathleenmccrory9883 3 месяца назад

      Yes. It's about how her family talks about it casually, not noticing how it affects the singer..

  • @scottmarleneking6298
    @scottmarleneking6298 Год назад +133

    The perfect combination of what was said and what was unsaid.

  • @Verlopil
    @Verlopil Год назад +84

    You can hear her emotional numbness in the way she relays the dinner conversation. A masterpiece of storytelling.

  • @cynthiawhite9830
    @cynthiawhite9830 Год назад +60

    It was a huge hit, sold 1 million copies in 6 weeks. So haunting.

  • @rootbox
    @rootbox Год назад +111

    After a brief but successful career, Bobby Gentry retired and has been elusive and mysterious as ever.
    She was one of the first female musicians to compose , produce and publish her own tunes - and did a mighty fine job of doing so.

    • @jdw5678
      @jdw5678 Год назад +9

      She did some excellent duets with Glen Campbell before vanishing.

    • @davidschecter5247
      @davidschecter5247 Год назад +4

      Petula Clark was also a very productive writer, but she had to write under an assumed (male) name to be taken seriously.

    • @marktait2371
      @marktait2371 Год назад +3

      ​@@jdw5678yeh i have one of those records i think.they did stephen stills love the one your with have o dig out

  • @jhamptonjr
    @jhamptonjr Год назад +25

    Her voice is still hauntingly beautiful.

  • @CP5699
    @CP5699 Год назад +120

    Bobbie knew how to tell a story in just a couple of minutes.

  • @peterstilla8733
    @peterstilla8733 Год назад +44

    It's an S, only because over the years it's become an enduring mystery and authentic Americana. Just what was she and Billy Jo throwing off the bridge? The singer knows more about why he jumped than she ever let's on, and in this way the song remains unequaled.

    • @jonisteinbach7240
      @jonisteinbach7240 3 месяца назад

      It was a baby. She miscarried his baby or something.

  • @jerrydelacruz5119
    @jerrydelacruz5119 Год назад +35

    This is an S song, it will be around for a long time, after many A+ are forgotten.

    • @scambammer6102
      @scambammer6102 Год назад +1

      yeah, I think it is not their preferred genre

  • @NateWilliams190
    @NateWilliams190 Год назад +86

    This song always brings to mind another mega hit of 1968 - Jennie C Riley's 'Harper Valley PTA'.

    • @jodiemaxwell375
      @jodiemaxwell375 Год назад +6

      I was just thinking the same thing!! Also, Cat's in the Cradle by Cat Stevens.

    • @jeffsmith6295
      @jeffsmith6295 Год назад +17

      @@jodiemaxwell375 Cat's in the Cradle is by Harry Chapin.

    • @allanjuhl9574
      @allanjuhl9574 Год назад +4

      A&A suggested another ode. And Harper Valley PTA came to mind, but I decided it is a really bad ass song, but probably not an ode. But I’d love to hear them hear it.

    • @Earthtime3978
      @Earthtime3978 Год назад +4

      Of which they also made a tv move staring Barbara Eden.

    • @lloydbraun6026
      @lloydbraun6026 Год назад +2

      @@jodiemaxwell375I think you meant Father & Son

  • @Ontir
    @Ontir Год назад +64

    The live version of this is even better. A movie was made, based on the song. It's still a shocker.

    • @impudentdomain
      @impudentdomain Год назад +2

      Yes but the movie was crap

    • @reneezie
      @reneezie Год назад +6

      Love the movie still to this day!

    • @lesterstone8595
      @lesterstone8595 Год назад +1

      @@impudentdomain true

    • @kev7161
      @kev7161 Год назад +1

      Did the movie version actually say (or heavily imply) what was thrown off the bridge?

    • @reneezie
      @reneezie Год назад +2

      @@kev7161 yes, it was a baby doll in the movie.

  • @gregf9160
    @gregf9160 Год назад +24

    It's pure Southern Gothic, and has always spooked me ...

    • @miamidolphinsfan
      @miamidolphinsfan Месяц назад

      that's a great description of this masterpiece

  • @rockyroad7345
    @rockyroad7345 Год назад +6

    Her story is so vivid, everyone who listens to this song is right there sitting at the dinner table with the family.

  • @robertburke5354
    @robertburke5354 Год назад +16

    S-tier for me. Story-telling at it's best. A haunting song, that once heard, is never forgotten.

  • @NYBredBamaFed
    @NYBredBamaFed Год назад +78

    The true “message” behind this song is the family’s nonchalant attitude over Billy Joe’s death and the fact the family can’t seem to understand why their daughter, who was dating Billy Joe, had no appetite. The sad truth is that there are actual people who react in this same way, which is one of the reasons the lyrics feel like an actual conversation is taking place. It might have been one of the reasons the song was such a big hit.

    • @scambammer6102
      @scambammer6102 Год назад +3

      the true "message" of the song is what they threw off the bridge, and never explain in the song.

    • @NYBredBamaFed
      @NYBredBamaFed Год назад +5

      @@scambammer6102 That’s not what Bobbie Gentry said, who wrote the song. She even talks about what her true message of the song is in her live performance of it. It’s on RUclips.

    • @scambammer6102
      @scambammer6102 Год назад +5

      @@NYBredBamaFed Artists aren't always candid about their work, especially when it could result in adverse publicity, or when they are soft-peddling movie rights. I'm sure you will be outraged by this bit of insight.

    • @LadyIarConnacht
      @LadyIarConnacht Год назад

      I have a more cynical view of songs like this now that I'm old. It's clear it wasn't actually written by somebody experienced with farm life, but somebody who wanted to cast a negative shadow across farm life - a message that Hollywood and the music industry have been driving for decades.

    • @brt5273
      @brt5273 Год назад +6

      @@LadyIarConnacht I don't know what planet your farmlife is from but for me it's spot on. The song especially evokes a memory for me of my great uncle being mangled while drilling a well and how it was a part of the midday meal conversation that evetyone had come in from work for and that we all had to go back to work from. I also had a cousin somehow fall off a tractor and get caught in his plow and how the adult men had to go out in the field to collect all the pieces. Additionally, my great grandmother left her family to run off with a man. Drove my great grandfather crazy. He ended up losing the farm and living out of a truck with my grandmother and her two sibs, travelling between seasonal work and going cold and hungry when there wasn't any work. Farm life can be really good...I would not trade my childhood years on the farm... but it has it's share of tragedy, heartache and scandal.

  • @RandyTWA
    @RandyTWA Год назад +26

    Timeless masterpiece

  • @nyrocks5580
    @nyrocks5580 Год назад +78

    She wrote the song - which was #1 in 1967 -- and won Best New Artist, Best Female Pop Vocal Performance and a couple of others at the 1968 Grammy Awards. It was also made into a movie in 1976. This is a good example of how it would enhance your reaction if you took a moment to Google the song and artist after giving your initial thoughts. She had an interesting career and life.

    • @vidpie
      @vidpie Год назад +13

      She had a variety TV show in the UK too.
      "In 1968, after appearing on In Concert, Gentry became the first female songwriter to front a TV series on the BBC network. Impressed with Gentry's performances on- and off-screen, the head of the BBC invited her, in 1968, to host a variety show on BBC 2, making her the first female songwriter to host a series on the network. The Bobbie Gentry series was a 6-week special, broadcast weekly from July 13 to August 17, 1968. It featured musicians from the Mississippi countryside, as well as guests such as Glen Campbell, James Taylor, Randy Newman, Elton John, Alan Price, Billy Preston, and Pan's People. The Bobbie Gentry series was produced and directed by Stanley Dorfman, who was engage to be married to Gentry in 1970,[20] and credited Gentry as his co-director. Dorfman told author Tara Murtha, "After a few episodes, she was pretty much co-directing the show because she had such great ideas. [But] the BBC wouldn't have it, wouldn't have an artist credited as a director or producer, so the credit went to me as producer and director. But she definitely contributed as much as I did creatively to the show. She was just full of ideas.""

    • @noteverton
      @noteverton Год назад +5

      You're right, if only reactors would do some research first. A and A are good, don't get me wrong, but, a quick google first.....

    • @SpuzzyLargo
      @SpuzzyLargo Год назад +3

      So was also a smart business person. She negotiated a nice percentage of the movie's proceeds and has lived comfortably to this day. And she wasn't bad to look at. 😊

    • @RoseyPosey545
      @RoseyPosey545 Год назад +4

      @@SpuzzyLargo Beautiful woman!

    • @douglasdause502
      @douglasdause502 Год назад +7

      I could not disagree with you more. Back in the day there was no way to research a song before we heard it. It was just BANG! all of a sudden coming through the radio. That allowed us to hear it and make our own judgements. What we get is an honest first reaction. Do you not think that if they did go to Google and learn that it was such a huge hit and critically acclaimed award winner that would affect their listening experience and rating? Andy and Alex, just keep doing what you're doing. Trust the community. We won't steer you wrong.

  • @coffee-xg6my
    @coffee-xg6my Год назад +14

    Bobbie recorded this as a guitar demo. (She's playing the guitar). The record company just added strings and the upright bass to her demo and released it in this simple form,...the song is that strong! Also, the song originally was actually much longer (She wrote something like 11 verses or so). So, they cut it down for radio. The other verses are locked in a vault in the Mississippi State Archives and have never been released to the public. Also, your analysis of the family's dinner table reaction to the death (Pass the biscuits please") is spot on. Bobbie described the song as a study in "unconscious cruelty". Bobbie was a philosophy major in College. A movie was made based on the song in 1975. It was produced by Max Baer, Jr (Jethro from the Beverly Hillbillies show). Oh, and lastly, the Tallahatchie Bridge was a real thing. But it was set on fire by vandals and had to be torn down.

  • @Maydoggie
    @Maydoggie Год назад +40

    I like that this song would work with the guitar only, but the strings really enhance the mood.

    • @almondroca
      @almondroca Год назад +3

      One of the three Grammys won for this song was by Jimmie Haskell for his arrangement.

  • @greenbeatsred
    @greenbeatsred Год назад +26

    "Polk Salad Annie" by Tony Joe White from 1969 comes to mind. The original "Proud Mary" by CCR. This song by Bobbie Gentry was huge back in the day hitting #1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

    • @tonihammes33
      @tonihammes33 Год назад +4

      I love Polk Salad Annie! Was going to suggest it too.

    • @genabourassa7962
      @genabourassa7962 Год назад +2

      Jimi Jamison and Sound Fusion 1993 sing Polk Salad Annie and it's great, try it sometime

  • @babylonsister118
    @babylonsister118 Год назад +8

    She was one of the first women in music to produce her own music!

    • @mperezmcfinn2511
      @mperezmcfinn2511 Год назад +3

      I think it might be the first number one single written, produced and performed by a woman (though she had to win a lawsuit in order to finally be given producer credit). At a time when most the big name country artists relied on hit songwriters and hit producers this twenty four year old unknown came straight out the box writing, singing and producing her debut album. And it was an enormous hit.

  • @susanfontaine5214
    @susanfontaine5214 Год назад +63

    Big big hit back in the day. She had an amazing voice!😊

  • @g.e.5723
    @g.e.5723 11 месяцев назад +2

    I'm sitting at the table. I see the tattered screen door, it's hot and dusty, the biscuits smell good. I watch Momma and Daddy talking as I eat.
    Feels like I'm right there.

  • @thomasmcintosh390
    @thomasmcintosh390 Год назад +15

    Phenomenal song, cultural signpost. Anyone who has heard it will remember it for the rest of their lives.

  • @derbrewster
    @derbrewster Год назад +6

    You didn't hear another song on the radio in August of 1967. Haunting Southern Gothic. The swirling strings. Family dysfunction at its best. Those of us of a certain age know every word and will sit in the car and listen to it until it's complete. I can forget a dear friend's birthday, but the 3rd of June will always hold a place on my heart.

  • @srstacy
    @srstacy Год назад +28

    You need to watch the live version of this. She has a haunting, wistful look in her eyes during the line of her and Billy Joe throwing something off the bridge.

    • @Qarlo99
      @Qarlo99 Год назад +1

      Absolutely!

    • @fewwiggle
      @fewwiggle Год назад +3

      Yep, one of the rare songs where the live version is superior to the studio version.

    • @frankiebowie6174
      @frankiebowie6174 Год назад +4

      The BBC version!

    • @bradsense7431
      @bradsense7431 Год назад +3

      Yes this is one of the rare times I recommend live version first. The part in the live performance that gets me is the when Mama is telling about the preacher and there is that pause (done perfectly live) before she says- “oh,by the way” You can anticipate the dread the narrator feels wondering what else Mama knows or is going to say. Done brilliantly.

  • @yourthaiguy
    @yourthaiguy Год назад +6

    The most SOUTHERN SONG ever written...

    • @ChuckHackney
      @ChuckHackney Месяц назад

      Certainly one of the most, what I would call "southern gothic", almost Faulknerian.

  • @welles2002
    @welles2002 11 месяцев назад +1

    Some songs you hear, no matter how many years go by instantly transport you back

  • @Anautistictherapist
    @Anautistictherapist Год назад +56

    Don’t let her accent fool you. This woman was (is?) BRILLIANT. She attended a music conservatory, put herself through college, and had her own variety show on major television. By the way, the line about “the girl and Billy Joe throwing something off the Tallahatchee bridge is believed to be a miscarried baby.

    • @davidgore3261
      @davidgore3261 Год назад +5

      I was about to make this comment, I had always assumed it was a baby that was referred to

    • @RobtBlond
      @RobtBlond Год назад +2

      I've heard that, but I don't believe it. She's still living with her family, I think they would have known if she got pregnant, especially if the baby was developed enough to be meaningfully thrown from the bridge. And why not bury it, anyway? My head cannon has always been that she and Billy Joe planned to hold up a convenience store out of town and use the money to run away. Billy Joe shoots someone in the attempt, and they throw the gun into the river, but Billy Joe feels too much guilt and jumps. Or maybe Billy Joe didn't bring her along for the robbery, but confesses to her afterwards, leading to the same results.

    • @oboogie2
      @oboogie2 Год назад +3

      I believe she is still alive and living in Glendale, CA. Beautiful and brilliant lady, and one of the best American songwriters.

    • @RedDawnRocker
      @RedDawnRocker Год назад +2

      Yup, that was one of the two top guesses along with an engagement ring. Either would definitely fit the story of the song.

    • @cindyknudson2715
      @cindyknudson2715 Год назад +2

      Or that they may have had a budding relationship.
      I can imagine his offering her an ID bracelet or locket as a token and her not taking it, because.... everything. And him chucking it off the bridge into the water right then and there in frustration and hurt.

  • @anmana7
    @anmana7 Год назад +19

    1967 was the year I first started listening to the radio consistently and this was a big hit in the early summer. I would have rated it an S.

  • @MadMax-pu1kj
    @MadMax-pu1kj Год назад +72

    Ms. Gentry said that the point of the song was not the mystery of the death (which a TV movie gave away) but was exactly what Alex was saying. The point of the song is the indifference to war, poverty, and suffering over the average dinner table. We are all so wrapped up in 'me and mine' that we cannot have sympathy or empathy toward what is happening around us.

    • @Verlopil
      @Verlopil Год назад +3

      I kind of hope that's not true, because death, which is unavoidable, has been a matter of fact to most people in the history of the world, and has been discussed just this way over dinner tables for millennia. It's a poor analogy for indifference to those other things which are caused by us.

    • @otisdylan9532
      @otisdylan9532 Год назад +4

      Yes, and also the trauma that the girl is going through with her listening to her family talking casually about his death, not realizing that she was his girlfriend.

    • @cindyknudson2715
      @cindyknudson2715 Год назад +3

      @otisdylan9532 Or that they may have had a budding relationship.
      I can imagine his offering her an ID bracelet or locket as a token and her not taking it, because.... everything. And him chucking it off the bridge into the water right then and there in frustration and hurt.

    • @maruad7577
      @maruad7577 Год назад

      This. So much this.

    • @paulhagger3895
      @paulhagger3895 Год назад +1

      The TV movie did not give away anything. It just gave someone else's interpretation.

  • @jeffking4176
    @jeffking4176 Год назад +14

    An interesting movie based on this song, brilliantly acted by Robbie Benson and Glynnis O’Cconner.
    The movie was “more-or-less loosely based “ on the song.
    The song is haunting and leaves more questions than answers.
    Fantastic song.
    Great reaction.
    📻🙂

    • @CycolacFan
      @CycolacFan Год назад

      Remember watching it years ago and if I recall correctly they didn’t explain anything more than was written in the song…?

  • @joehebert789
    @joehebert789 Год назад +8

    Bobbie said in an interview that she didn't have anything specific in mind that was thrown off the bridge. She wanted to let listeners fill in the blank for themselves. Everyone claiming they know what it was is mistaken.

  • @cristobalvalladares973
    @cristobalvalladares973 Год назад +20

    Still haunting after all these years. Almost ghost like in affect. I just got into works of Flannery O'Connor. Heavy emotions understated.

  • @lloovvaallee
    @lloovvaallee Год назад +7

    This song oozes southern gothic like nothing else ...

  • @TristanandIsolt
    @TristanandIsolt День назад

    This song was made into a movie that kind of answers some of the questions. Bobbi Gentry had a cameo in the movie IIRC.

  • @jamesbassett1484
    @jamesbassett1484 Год назад +6

    Years later, bobby Gentry described the song as "... a study in unconscious cruelty."

  • @Grumpy_Rabbit
    @Grumpy_Rabbit Год назад +5

    One of the best story songs of all time. The lyrics are intended to showcase unintentional cruelty by those who are simply unaware of what's going on that's hidden from them.

  • @kevinheffron5437
    @kevinheffron5437 Год назад +48

    It’s not an Ode but the title song from “The Legend of Billy Jack” One Tin Soldier by Coven is a great song to hit!

  • @woodyouderkirk694
    @woodyouderkirk694 Год назад +5

    I like how you two guys don't interrupt a great song

  • @markdraine3571
    @markdraine3571 Год назад +5

    Saw Bobbi in Vegas at Caesar's Palace , performing this in 1968. Also ,as opening acts were Jose Feliciano and. Richard Pryor.

  • @ginbro008
    @ginbro008 Год назад +5

    Bobbie Gentry , such an intelligent and talented song writer.

  • @Flowerchick1967-tq1vn
    @Flowerchick1967-tq1vn Год назад +10

    Ooohhh this song brings back such fond memories. Thank you both for putting a smile on my face! ✌🏻

  • @chrino21
    @chrino21 Год назад +3

    I was 6 when this song came out, and it was EVERYWHERE. Radio, TV shows, variety shows… seemed like it stopped the world every time it came on.

  • @lisamorrison2149
    @lisamorrison2149 Год назад +10

    Bobbie sure has the vocals and the heart to tell the tale of a rural small town and the way the townsfolk relate news to one another. She emotes the family's misfortune, shame and dismay, while seamlessly conveying the passage of time. I don't think I know any odes other than this.🤷‍♂️

  • @j.h.3777
    @j.h.3777 Год назад +10

    An ode to Billy Joel is "Piano Man"!

  • @ChuckHackney
    @ChuckHackney Месяц назад

    This song is beyond great, a story set to music. Iconic hit from the 60s.

  • @kimberlydavis4772
    @kimberlydavis4772 11 месяцев назад +2

    It’s dark and lovely all at the same time.

  • @Manageode
    @Manageode Год назад +4

    You can hear the screen door slam behind the kids when they come in.

  • @DannyD714
    @DannyD714 Год назад +18

    don't know if you'd call it an ode, but in the same vein as the song is "the night the lights went out in georgia" by vicki lawrence (NOT the reba mcentire remake). it's a story song about weird goings on in the backwoods. more upbeat,but just as eerie.

    • @kev7161
      @kev7161 Год назад +7

      How about Angie Baby by Helen Reddy?

    • @DannyD714
      @DannyD714 Год назад +1

      @@kev7161 that one too! macabre tales dressed in sweet melodies.

    • @kbusby4824
      @kbusby4824 Год назад +1

      ​@@DannyD714Would also recommend Dark Lady by Cher.

    • @christopherleonard247
      @christopherleonard247 Год назад +1

      Angie Baby too

  • @donnievick3076
    @donnievick3076 11 месяцев назад +2

    She left the music business and became quite the entrepreneur. One time part owner of the Phoenix Subs basketball team too.

  • @RockyMtnRebecca
    @RockyMtnRebecca Год назад +3

    I remember (barely) seeing her perform this on some TV show. I was only probably about 7? I wanted to be Bobbie Gentry SO BAD!!! Her voice, her looks - her everything was mesmerizing to me. ♥♥♥

  • @christopherpohl8743
    @christopherpohl8743 Год назад +3

    There was a National conversation for about six months as to what the girl and Billy Joe threw off the bridge right before he jumped. Many thought a baby.

  • @stevedahlberg8680
    @stevedahlberg8680 Год назад +4

    Bobbie was the real deal from that part of the country but she was also incredibly talented; you've got to see her doing this live on that television performance where she's playing the bass line and the guitar together, fingerpicking on her acoustic, and it's just incredible beyond belief. But not only all of that, she was a sociology major and she described this song at one point as being "a study of the cruelty of casual indifference".

  • @johndalley1288
    @johndalley1288 Год назад +12

    Cannot believe you have not reacted to this yet. It is such a classic. It just makes you stop and think about. Her voice is such a killer.

  • @michaelkpate
    @michaelkpate Год назад +3

    I love the fact that the questions are never answered during the song and everyone can draw their own conclusions.

  • @wicky4473
    @wicky4473 Год назад +4

    How very strange, my friends and I were just talking about this song!! The strings in this song did ‘strange things’ to me…haunting.

  • @scottblakey1603
    @scottblakey1603 Год назад +8

    She had another hit, Fancy.

    • @kev7161
      @kev7161 Год назад

      The same as Reba's (cover?)?

    • @kbusby4824
      @kbusby4824 Год назад

      ​@@kev7161Yes, she made a mint off the royalties of that cover (3 million reportedly).

  • @julietenning7981
    @julietenning7981 Год назад +1

    I was 9 when this came out. It marked me for life.

  • @vidpie
    @vidpie Год назад +2

    Marked the beginning of the rise of the singer-songwriter era.

  • @cspringer333
    @cspringer333 Год назад +28

    you need to watch the live version everyone is reacting to. If for no other reason but to see how beautiful Bobbie is.

    • @Earthtime3978
      @Earthtime3978 Год назад

      The live version isn’t nearly as good as the studio cut

  • @babylonsister118
    @babylonsister118 Год назад +3

    Ode to My Family, the Cranberries. Delores O' Riorden is just magical.

  • @melissaisloud7404
    @melissaisloud7404 Год назад +1

    Bobby Gentry was an innovator in female musicians creating and owning their own music.

  • @user-kw6bq4fo1r
    @user-kw6bq4fo1r Месяц назад

    NEVER in a million years would I have thought you guys would have much to say about this song. You keep surprising me.

  • @AuburnAlum1977
    @AuburnAlum1977 Год назад +4

    One of the finest story-songs ever. S-tier for me!

  • @joemckinley754
    @joemckinley754 Год назад +3

    She said in multiple interviews that the song was less about what was thrown off the bridge and more about everyone's indifference about him taking his own life.

  • @lauraopper2571
    @lauraopper2571 11 месяцев назад

    Her lyrics are so good...I can see and hear this conversation in my mind just as clearly as if I was sitting at the table with them...

  • @sourisvoleur4854
    @sourisvoleur4854 Год назад

    The conversation is so natural, nothing false or arty at all. Fabulous songwriting.

  • @kenrunciman8706
    @kenrunciman8706 Год назад +3

    Her performance on the recording Live at the BBC takes this song to an altogether higher level.

  • @doobiedave9686
    @doobiedave9686 Год назад +5

    Such a great story telling song and the instrumentation has a haunting quality to it that fits perfectly. ✌️

  • @michaelnorris7353
    @michaelnorris7353 Год назад +2

    This what songwriting is all about.

  • @gbdewbery
    @gbdewbery Год назад

    The look on your faces when you first heard about the bridge was remarkable. Some radio stations would not play this song as it was so controversial at the time. Now it is something like a masterclass in storytelling.

  • @paulspillman9413
    @paulspillman9413 Год назад +3

    Thanks, guys, for finally getting around to this song. I was 11 growing up in the rural south when this song was popular. Perfectly captured the time and place.

  • @cerisewilson4428
    @cerisewilson4428 Год назад +3

    Great song from my childhood, I forgot how good it is.

  • @blastingweevil2968
    @blastingweevil2968 Год назад +1

    a true timeless thought provoking classic song a social experiment of sorts of how used to death we are that a lot of the time we are just numb to it and just go on about our usual routines without stopping to think about it.

  • @CaroleMcDonnell
    @CaroleMcDonnell 5 месяцев назад

    i love the way we get a glimpse of everyone's personalities...even the preacher.

  • @kenhewitt7357
    @kenhewitt7357 Год назад +28

    The live version with her talking before it is well worth checking out.

  • @wesleiribeiro7816
    @wesleiribeiro7816 Год назад +5

    Awesome 💯💯💯💯🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @jeffmorse645
    @jeffmorse645 Год назад

    Great example of storytelling. Every time I hear this song I can just see that farm in Mississippi during that time period, the kitchen and the family around the table. It's so authentically "Southern Gothic".

  • @cajunsushi
    @cajunsushi Год назад +1

    I was 13 when this song hit the airwaves and always thought she and Billy threw perhaps a stillborn baby into the River and he couldn’t handle the guilt.

  • @mowerdan8133
    @mowerdan8133 Год назад +4

    This song still sounds great today. I remember it being on the AM radio stations when it was popular.

  • @waltdv
    @waltdv Год назад +6

    One of the very best story-telling songs. As good as, or better than, American Pie; Piano Man; Cats in the Cradle; or Stan.

  • @mikefixx7177
    @mikefixx7177 Год назад +1

    Its nice to see you guys listening to this classic song, they made a movie on it, good luck trying to find it.

  • @shemanic1
    @shemanic1 Год назад +1

    I was 16 in 1967 & this story telling song hit a young poet like a bomb. I still remember every word & inference Bobbie Gentry puts on it.

  • @jannac3474
    @jannac3474 Год назад +3

    You must eventually do the live version. It’s powerful. Her eyes. Her delivery. Always so haunting.

  • @debsandz
    @debsandz Год назад +3

    "Patches" by Clarence Carter 1970 and "Hazzard by Richard Marx 1991 are 2 good songs that tell a story that you should check out!

  • @panamericachicago
    @panamericachicago Год назад

    One of my All Time Favorites - Gorgeous and amazing...

  • @javamama4270
    @javamama4270 Год назад

    Authentic is the right word. Southern girl here and all the details, from the specifics of the lunch menu to the social life built around church activities, creates a totally real setting for the drama that unfolds. Hits just as hard today as when I first heard it in elementary school.

  • @steveshovlar994
    @steveshovlar994 Год назад +3

    Always heard it as she and Billy Joe were in a relationship, she got pregnant, lost the baby, threw it off the bridge, and Billy Joe couldn’t handle the guilt. Great song.

    • @cindyknudson2715
      @cindyknudson2715 Год назад

      OR that they may have had a budding relationship. The song doesn't say.
      I can imagine his offering her an ID bracelet or locket as a token and her not taking it, because.... everything. And him chucking it off the bridge into the water right then and there in frustration and hurt.

    • @debimartin4237
      @debimartin4237 Год назад

      That's what I had always heard too. He couldn't handle that they lost the baby. Pass the peas. Just one of the most brilliant songs of that generation.

    • @Earthtime3978
      @Earthtime3978 Год назад

      The movie had a different take- that Billy Joe was gay

  • @sharmullins3894
    @sharmullins3894 Год назад +3

    It's all about apathy. And Bobbie Gentry wrote and directed all of her own music. She was way ahead of her time.

  • @nanvolentine9110
    @nanvolentine9110 Год назад +1

    The 60s were the absolute best, what a time to grow up.

  • @cherrypickerguitars
    @cherrypickerguitars Год назад +2

    Bobby Gentry was the first “boss babe” in the music biz! Huge respect for her as a guitarist, songwriter and producer!
    I had a huge crush on her when i was 10-12 yrs old! (I’m 66)
    Peace