What HAPPENED To Music? This 60s Top 10 Chart Has Some Of The BEST Songs Ever! | Professor of Rock

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  • Опубликовано: 29 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @ProfessorofRock
    @ProfessorofRock  3 года назад +158

    Poll: 1966 is considered as on the best years ever in music. What is your pick for the greatest year in music and what artists and songs back up your pick?

    • @bigneon_glitter
      @bigneon_glitter 3 года назад +20

      1977. Bowie's Berlin albums, _Saturday Night Fever,_ Sex Pistols, Giorgio Moroder, Chic, Television, Talking Heads - the turning point, a flood of new genres.

    • @dday07
      @dday07 3 года назад +21

      71' without a doubt for at least top 40 music..Too many songs to mention

    • @dday07
      @dday07 3 года назад +9

      Ok ''American Pie''

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  3 года назад +4

      @@bigneon_glitter Very good choice.

    • @stephenhanft1226
      @stephenhanft1226 3 года назад +19

      So many great years. I'm going to go with 1964. You had The Beatles (along with the other British Invasion groups), The Supremes (along with the other Motown artists), and you had 2 major American groups that survived the British Invasion and competed with The Beatles (The Beach Boys were the West Coast Sound and The Four Seasons were the East Coast Sound). It was a ground-breaking, game-changing year for popular music.

  • @ohcanada8084
    @ohcanada8084 2 года назад +29

    The ‘60’s was the decade of wonderful changing music. So much beautiful talent, can never be replicated.

  • @DutchCreekRanch1
    @DutchCreekRanch1 3 года назад +132

    Brian Wilson’s talent is just amazing.

    • @captaincarl8230
      @captaincarl8230 2 года назад +1

      It may seem kind of crazy but I heard that "Good Vibrations" was the Beach Boys first million selling song. I've got a few of their albums in my collection but not this album, I think.

    • @noreligion2
      @noreligion2 2 года назад +3

      And Brian had to do it all by himself!! He didn’t have a Paul or John to help him write, and he didn’t have George Martin!

    • @Friendofstfrank
      @Friendofstfrank 2 года назад

      Yeah, he discovered the Manson Family. Should not have stolen David Maddox's (Charlie Manson) song and claimed it for the Beach Boys tho, started some bad juju

    • @dj71162
      @dj71162 Год назад +2

      @@Friendofstfrank It was Dennis who took the song and changed the lyrics. It wasn't Brian's idea.

  • @conniebauer4128
    @conniebauer4128 3 года назад +333

    Johnny Rivers has been underrated throughout his entire career. He belongs in the Hall of Fame as much as anyone else.

    • @laudanum669
      @laudanum669 3 года назад +8

      My late father was a big Johnny Rivers fan. I grew up listening to these songs thanks to my parents who always had music playing in our home.

    • @j.kevvideoproductions.6463
      @j.kevvideoproductions.6463 3 года назад +10

      They need to induct him ASAP, I've heard he has some sort of pneumonia and flu!

    • @wcdonah
      @wcdonah 3 года назад +18

      Saw Johnny Rivers perform several times in the last 20 years. What an outstanding performer - singer, guitarist, song writer. He certainly belongs in the Hall Of Fame.

    • @MsAppassionata
      @MsAppassionata 3 года назад +16

      Love Johnny. My favorites of his are his version of “Memphis” and the theme song he did for the show “Secret Agent Man”.

    • @johnnyplunkett8532
      @johnnyplunkett8532 3 года назад +2

      Absolutely! It's such s marketing scam. They should have inducted the 50s as a group when they opened like the Hollywood Walk of fame did.

  • @shadowlandstudios86
    @shadowlandstudios86 3 года назад +121

    The Monkees were the soundtrack of my youth. Rest in peace, Mike, Davy, and Peter.

    • @GhostRider-sc9vu
      @GhostRider-sc9vu 2 года назад +7

      In 1966 I did not have to take the "Last Train to Clarksville" I lived there. Although I did not know it at the time the only Clarksville that makes sense with the theme and lyrics of this song is Clarksville TN with the Army's Ft Campbell being just outside the city limits.

    • @petechau9616
      @petechau9616 2 года назад +4

      Yes the Monks were one of my favs in my youth but lets not forget who wrote those great songs-Hart/Boyce, Neil Diamond and the songwriting team Goffin/King.

    • @michaelp5283
      @michaelp5283 2 года назад +4

      Yep me too! My very first album my mom gave me on my 8th birthday was the Monkees first album! It's like a time machine for me to this day!

    • @malcolmbrewer
      @malcolmbrewer 2 года назад

      @@GhostRider-sc9vu didnt know that thec3 had passed..
      Saddened me

    • @kenjohnson2650
      @kenjohnson2650 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@petechau9616 much like Motown had Holland Dozier and Holland.

  • @bigneon_glitter
    @bigneon_glitter 3 года назад +322

    It never ceases to amaze that Rock evolved from "Johnny B Goode" to "Tomorrow Never Knows" in just _ten_ years. And all without the convenience of the internet.

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  3 года назад +36

      No kidding. it's pretty incredible.

    • @jstnxprsn
      @jstnxprsn 3 года назад +25

      Rock n Roll developed directly from Delta Blues, including Johnnie B Goode which is jst a standard 12 bar blues pattern sped up. When US reporters would ask the early rockers where they learned to play like that, they would often respond, from YOUR country, from the Delta area players, all of whom were black. It really highlights how racism put blinders on US society.

    • @frankmarsh1159
      @frankmarsh1159 3 года назад +15

      It would'nt have happened if the Internet existed...

    • @heyjarrod
      @heyjarrod 3 года назад +14

      @@jstnxprsn Racism? You just got done saying all the great blues players were initially black. No one denies that, not sure what you are referring to when you mention racism?
      It goes back much further than the 20th century. It stemmed from very old songs people would sing while working. So, such a terrible history, in a crazy twist of fate, brought us this great music. 🤘🏻🎸🇺🇸

    • @heyjarrod
      @heyjarrod 3 года назад +6

      Rock seemed like a pretty natural progression over the decades. We are fortunate to have it, but not at all amazing really. I mean it’s tremendous, I love it. But it is all very simple.
      Now, classical music, talk about coming out of nowhere! Now that is amazing. 🤘🏻🎸🇺🇸

  • @tjseagrove
    @tjseagrove 2 года назад +63

    I remember watching The Monkees every week when it was originally aired on TV…funny the memories that are stuck in your brain from over 50 years ago.

    • @cynthiagonzalez658
      @cynthiagonzalez658 2 года назад +2

      Ditto

    • @YorickWell
      @YorickWell 2 года назад +1

      I love The Monkees! I love their music. They don't deserve the flack they caught from jealous music snobs.

    • @grantkruse1812
      @grantkruse1812 2 года назад

      There was so much hype all summer so we could hardly wait for the Monkees and their new TV series that came with the first week of "back to school"...I was not greatly impressed, but still looked forward to the second show a week later....Also a disappointment...Week three didn't get past the first 5 or 10 mins....After the Beach Boys and the Beatles, the Monkees was something for my 6 and 8 yr old brothers, not for any groovy teenagers...Just a load of crap...I liked a lot of their songs, but could not stand the Circus boy and cute little Brit and the whole premise of "the Monkees TV Show"... At least Mike Nesmith had SOMETHING to offer to music fans.

    • @tjseagrove
      @tjseagrove 2 года назад

      @@grantkruse1812 But I was 4 years old HAHA

  • @Andrey110379
    @Andrey110379 3 года назад +90

    There were tons of really good songs in 1966, like Sunny Afternoon by the Kinks or Walk Away Renee by the Left Banke or The Sound of Silence by Simon n Garfunkel. Great year.

    • @alansmith7626
      @alansmith7626 2 года назад +4

      walk away renee still gets to me!

    • @evad7933
      @evad7933 2 года назад +1

      Yes, the prof has certainly turned up a pile of crap here.

    • @tats5880
      @tats5880 2 года назад +4

      Let's not forget itchycoo Park, or reflection of my life but I think the latter was more 69 but still a great song

    • @docprocmd
      @docprocmd 2 года назад +1

      Add "Good Thing" - Paul Revere and the Raiders - to the '66 list for me, eh?

    • @robertgoldbach1888
      @robertgoldbach1888 2 года назад +2

      The Yardbirds owned '66: Shapes of Things, I'm A Man/Over Under Sideways Down, and Happenings Ten Years Time Ago. All in '66.

  • @lunamoth1459
    @lunamoth1459 3 года назад +73

    I was born in the early 00's but the 60's has gotta be my favorite era of music. Love the Kinks/Byrds/Monkees/Hollies/Zombies/Stones/Beatles, and my personal favorite group The Beach Boys. 1965 up until the early 70's was definitely their peak... But 1966, man... What a great year.

    • @bluewaters3100
      @bluewaters3100 3 года назад +5

      How bout The Who?

    • @lunamoth1459
      @lunamoth1459 2 года назад +3

      Yeah! Yet another band that proves 60s music is the greatest.

    • @karenryder6317
      @karenryder6317 2 года назад +1

      Nobody for the Turtles and "Happy Together"? Johnnie Nash and "I can see clearly now"? Dusty Springfield and "Wishin' and Hopin'"? Dione Warwick and "Anyone who had a heart"?

    • @wendyryder2708
      @wendyryder2708 2 года назад +2

      Hi Luna! Good to see a young person appreciating good music! Keep listening!

    • @ronniewall1481
      @ronniewall1481 2 года назад

      LOOK ON MY PLAYLIST FROM 1967.
      ruclips.net/video/b56e9Ot20_8/видео.html

  • @otgenesis7410
    @otgenesis7410 3 года назад +167

    I know the 80s is my jam, but the 60s was the stuff of legends. Glad you're still reminding us of how great they were.

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  3 года назад +9

      Thanks for watching!

    • @pcno2832
      @pcno2832 3 года назад +9

      I think of the 1960s as the decade when they had learned how to use many of the innovations we take for granted today, synthesizers, effects like reverb, vibrato and phasing/flanging, fuzz distortion, even compression, without abusing them the way they later did. Being born in 1961, I remember going through the 1970s thinking that music had started to go downhill, and realizing at about 1983 that most top-40 mainstream recordings had started to sound as if they were playing through a telephone connection. It's not that everything from later years was bad, it's that the production techniques that made the 1960s so innovative enabled the sterile, canned, fakeness that crept into pop music a little more each year. I have a sinking suspicion that there will never be another musical decade as good as the 1960s.

    • @gavinreid2741
      @gavinreid2741 3 года назад +1

      Yes, The Jam were really popular in the 80s

    • @IanPunter
      @IanPunter 2 года назад +2

      And dont forget the 70s were right next to the 60s in greatness.

    • @Lfg117
      @Lfg117 2 года назад

      Late 50s, too: Lots of transcendent songs.

  • @dahur
    @dahur 3 года назад +27

    I remember 1966 like it was yesterday. It's my favorite year for music, and it seemed like it was non-stop great music. I was around in the 50's, so I got to experience all the 60's years, including watching The Beatles on Ed Sullivan in 1964. 1966 is very vivid in my mind, us kids all had our own little transistor radios for our AM stations. I was sitting on my front porch in July 1966 when the news came over of Bobby Fuller dying. Who doesn't like "I Fought The Law" from 1966..? Geez, a wealth of great songs that year.

  • @ob1quixote
    @ob1quixote 3 года назад +76

    Bought that Vanilla Fudge record solely and only for “You Keep Me Hangin' On.” My friends don't understand what I see in it, but that organ part was true greatness.

    • @leslieperkins2722
      @leslieperkins2722 3 года назад +6

      Maybe you need new friends. Like me.

    • @pookiepookie8669
      @pookiepookie8669 3 года назад +8

      Oh you could feel the guy's pain when he sang that!

    • @davidedmundson8402
      @davidedmundson8402 3 года назад +12

      They turned a good song into a flat-out great one.

    • @leeroth5604
      @leeroth5604 3 года назад +6

      Yeah, be sure to check out the RUclips video of Vanilla Fudge doing "You Keep Me Hanging On" on the Ed Sullivan Show... absolutely incredible LIVE performance!

    • @joeybonin7691
      @joeybonin7691 3 года назад +4

      I saw them live, and they spun my head around. They were the warmup band, and were better than the main attraction.

  • @thomassmith9204
    @thomassmith9204 3 года назад +22

    I was friends with Tommy boyce during his last days in Nashville. What a great songwriter as well as a very friendly and open human being.

  • @rodlytton765
    @rodlytton765 3 года назад +72

    Good vibrations is a masterpiece. When they sing gotta keep those good vibrations happening and they harmonise it seems like the clouds are opening and you can feel utopia.

    • @oldermusiclover
      @oldermusiclover Год назад +1

      and the musicians were the fab Wrecking Crew

    • @rodlytton765
      @rodlytton765 Год назад

      @@oldermusiclover yeah they were amazing I read a great book about them. The bass player Carol Kay invented the intro to Wichita lineman and many other incredible things.

    • @oldermusiclover
      @oldermusiclover Год назад

      @@rodlytton765 they were indeed the late Hal Blaine is still one of my fav drummers

    • @tedbecker4051
      @tedbecker4051 Год назад

      The opening vocals still send chivers up my spine. Definitely a masterpiece.

  • @joejackson6205
    @joejackson6205 3 года назад +21

    Great top ten. Think the Monkees are the most underappreciated vocal groups of the 60s and 70s. Hope you can get an interview with Mickey and Mike before they too pass into eternity. If you do ask them their feelings about how radio stations wouldn't play their music after the tv show went off, especially the albums they released in the 80s and late 90s 2000.

  • @deathtowrestling2518
    @deathtowrestling2518 3 года назад +184

    I know the Monkees were huge but even then I feel like they don't get enough respect. They were seriously talented guys who happened to be funny TV characters as well.

    • @mikeronniward1261
      @mikeronniward1261 3 года назад +11

      So agree! So much talent in one band for sure

    • @jaakpotts
      @jaakpotts 3 года назад +13

      Totally agree! Somehow, my kids heard the Monkees and loved them. It was great the we had 3 generations of Monkee lovers 😜

    • @MrOatmeal5150
      @MrOatmeal5150 3 года назад +18

      Agreed! The fact they're not in the R&R HOF is a total crock!

    • @frankmarsh1159
      @frankmarsh1159 3 года назад +7

      Well they didn't write their own songs or play on their own records. But yeah I guess you might say they were talented in some way or another. Who knows?

    • @MrOatmeal5150
      @MrOatmeal5150 3 года назад +19

      @@frankmarsh1159 That sir, is exactly what they did do.... Might wanna do a little research, check some song writing credit and some recording personnel.

  • @alanpeterson6768
    @alanpeterson6768 2 года назад +74

    For me, 1968 was the best year. Among many others, try "Born to be Wild" (Steppenwolf), "Mony Mony" (Tommy James), "White Room" (Cream), "Hey Jude" (Beatles), "Jumpin Jack Flash" (the Stones) and my favorite "Piece of My Heart" by Janis Joplin. No one could put more emotion into a song than Janis.

  • @dancingonfire
    @dancingonfire 3 года назад +102

    The Monkees are the reason I became a drummer. When I was 8 years old, watching reruns on Much Music in Canada for their 25th anniversary, I became obsessed with them and knew that I wanted to play drums in a band, which I've been doing for almost 30 years now! Hopefully we get more episodes on the Monkees from POR!

    • @JoeRoscoe_DFW
      @JoeRoscoe_DFW 3 года назад +10

      The same reason I picked up the guitar at the same age.

    • @labyfan1313
      @labyfan1313 3 года назад +8

      Much Music introduced me to the Monkees as well. In the late 90's when I was 13 I caught their show on Much Music and I was instantly hooked and completely obsessed with them too. They've been my favourite band ever since.

    • @brianthomas2434
      @brianthomas2434 3 года назад +10

      Micky Dolenz had been in bands as a guitarist. When he was cast in the Monkees, producers mandated he be the drummer, and he eventually learned to be acceptable at it.

    • @arishiakoneko
      @arishiakoneko 3 года назад +7

      @@brianthomas2434 The story I've heard is no one wanted to be the drummer. Mike and Peter, the two dedicated musicians, took up guitars. The producers felt that Davy would be the biggest draw as the cute, British one, and no one would be able to see him behind a drum set, so Micky drew the short straw as it were. To his credit, he took lessons and became a decent drummer in his own right. A bit of trivia: Micky drums left handed, because his instructor was left handed. =D

    • @melissatyree566
      @melissatyree566 2 года назад +6

      The monkees were just awesome. Unfortunately, rip, Mike, Peter and Davey.

  • @bigvrocks2480
    @bigvrocks2480 2 года назад +6

    Professor, great video! I'm 70 and loved everything you just went over. What a time. Many songs from many different genre's/styles. Nothing but the best of the best! What a time to be a teenager!!!

  • @BenLapke
    @BenLapke 3 года назад +229

    The Monkees caught a lot of grief because they weren't a “real band,” whatever that means. They were disparagingly referred to as the prefab four. What we know now is that The Wrecking Crew played on quite a few songs by bands that didn't get the same flack, such as The Association and even the later Beach Boys songs. Hey, at least The Monkees owned up to it.
    And, Mike Nesmith was actually a very good songwriter, Mickey Dolenz and Davey Jones were very good singers, and Peter Tork was a talented musician.

    • @sillyme8302
      @sillyme8302 3 года назад +19

      I always liked them anyway the Monkees were one of the 1st records I bought, I really liked Mickey's vocals.

    • @dinodasbunce6224
      @dinodasbunce6224 3 года назад +29

      Let's not forget that Davy (before the Monkees) was nominated for a Tony Award for his portrayal of the Artful Dodger in the Broadway Musical "Oliver".

    • @jaakpotts
      @jaakpotts 3 года назад +19

      Not only all of that, but they were so much fun to watch and listen to. True entertainment for the masses.

    • @llamasarus1
      @llamasarus1 3 года назад +11

      That's like saying Walt Disney wasn't a real animator because he covered fairy tales.

    • @Butters66
      @Butters66 3 года назад +7

      Agree 100%. Is the music good and do you enjoy listening to it and go back and listen again? That is what matters. Not how they got started.

  • @imkluu
    @imkluu 3 года назад +19

    66, 67, and 68 were the greatest years for rock music.

  • @michaelrochester48
    @michaelrochester48 3 года назад +116

    When I think of 1966 I think of the Mamas and the Papas one of the greatest vocal groups of all time.

    • @GeraldM_inNC
      @GeraldM_inNC 3 года назад +5

      When I first heard "California Dreamin' " I said to myself "This changes everything!" It was so dark, somber, serious, pessimistic, moody, cynical. It stuck a dagger through the heart of the old "boy meets girl" formula.

    • @JETZcorp
      @JETZcorp 3 года назад +2

      @@GeraldM_inNC I actually really dislike that song. It has the tone of "you're destroying the world and you should hate yourself" but the lyrics are actually a bippity-bobbity tune about how great Los Angeles is. You could give that lyric sheet to Mickey Mouse and it would fit, but it doesn't fit with the dark and moody sound they put it with.

    • @leighsaldivar4439
      @leighsaldivar4439 3 года назад +4

      I love the mamas and the papas

    • @spiritof6663
      @spiritof6663 2 года назад +3

      @@JETZcorp The lyrics fit the music perfectly, what are you talking about?! The lyric is equally dark because it's sung from the perspective of a couple stuck in the freezing cold winters back East, dreaming of a California paradise but not able to get there. It exists as an unobtainable dream which haunts them. The scene where the narrator drops to his knees at church, praying he can escape the snow, is particularly evocative because he says "you know the preacher like the cold", which sounds to me like a pretty blunt comment on religion. Of course, the song wasn't actually released in 1966--it goes back to Dec '65. But there's no "bippity-boppity" here *at all* . You should pay more attention to what the lyrics are actually saying.

    • @petechau9616
      @petechau9616 2 года назад +2

      Yes they were great and I appreciate the fact that they wrote their hits.

  • @suzee2
    @suzee2 2 года назад +6

    Ah, I love hits of the sixties! I was 14, watched the Monkees TV show every Monday night…never saw them perform until the 80s revived the show, the music, and my two tween daughters were massive fans! For them, we went to a concert. So amazing to see Peter, Micky and Davy! I was ok until “Sleepy Jean” & then I teared up…

  • @rockitboyman
    @rockitboyman 3 года назад +41

    Crazy! It’s hard to wrap my head around the fact that I was there…I watched the TV shows, I heard the songs. Who knew they were legends in the making? Great show professor…thanks for digging all the way back into the sixties…I’m digging it!

    • @jjs2351
      @jjs2351 3 года назад +7

      The Monkees were my first concert in 1967 and I can still remember the excitement. I can attest to the fact that they were playing their instruments, except for Davy, who I think had a tambourine for a few songs.

    • @prussian5770
      @prussian5770 2 года назад +2

      All the happiness we were given through all the creativity.who'd have thought

  • @syater
    @syater 3 года назад +34

    Sunshine Superman is a favorite hit from 1966. What a fresh, unique sound Donovan had. You instantly know it couldn't be anyone else.

    • @MsAppassionata
      @MsAppassionata 3 года назад +2

      And with a guitar part played by a young Jimmy Page. They reunited not too long ago to reprise the song.

    • @MsAppassionata
      @MsAppassionata 3 года назад +3

      P.S. - It was actually recorded in December of 1965. Oh, and I forgot to mention that another future member of Led Zeppelin appears on this track: John Paul Jones on bass (😩 Sorry Jonesy).

    • @dennyj8650
      @dennyj8650 Год назад

      And how many girls were named Jennifer, after one of his songs!

  • @scottreynolds3565
    @scottreynolds3565 3 года назад +22

    Johnny Rivers, Poor Side of Town. Always takes me back to childhood when gas was cheap and you went on Sunday drives with your parents. The song had appeal to a broad age range. Even today I can listen to this and it takes me to this very peaceful happy place.

  • @alward5678
    @alward5678 2 года назад +4

    Beatles are my favorite band ever. Love 60s music and 70s. Thanks for your videos

  • @alliswede42
    @alliswede42 3 года назад +12

    I was born in 81, but I grew up watching reruns of the Monkees and had a couple of their albums on vinyl (I had a massive crush on Peter Tork 🤣). Now I work at a music teaching school and one of our teachers is a former student of the school who is currently obsessed with them! Love seeing them still having life through its younger generation of fans! Thanks for another killer redux video 🙏

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  3 года назад +1

      Thanks Allison.

    • @alliswede42
      @alliswede42 3 года назад +1

      @Anna Trail sometimes I *feel* that old, if it helps 😁👵🏽

  • @edquinn8182
    @edquinn8182 3 года назад +17

    Don't know if it qualifies streamwise but "Sometime in the Morning" by the Monkees is one of my favorite songs of all time. It made me know what kind of a feeling I should expect when I got my first girlfriend. I was only 10 at the time. Carol King/Gerry Gofin song, if memory serves me.

  • @spacemanspiff3052
    @spacemanspiff3052 3 года назад +23

    I was no older than an eight year old when I found my dad’s 8 track tape of the Monkees. When he took a break from wearing out his Loggins and Messina tape, which he loved. I shoved in the Monkees tape and was hooked on them ever since.

  • @ralphlozano9177
    @ralphlozano9177 2 года назад +9

    Great show Adam, I was born in 58' so the seventies music was the sound track of my life and consider it the greatest decade ever for popular music in every genre at that time and the 50' and 60's were our oldies and we all know how awesome those decades were for music!...

  • @carleppich4795
    @carleppich4795 2 года назад +3

    Last Train To Clarksville was the first song I heard by The Monkees and I was hooked on their music automatically and I still love their music to this day, they are my all time favorite music group

  • @henrymcdermott9851
    @henrymcdermott9851 2 года назад +1

    1965 was an awesome year for rock and roll! Look at June of that year! Thanks!
    LucasMac

  • @larryhillman5787
    @larryhillman5787 3 года назад +10

    I am glad that I was in my teens in the 60s. It was a great time to be young and the music was great. I turned 17 in 1966 and the Beatles were peaking and many other artists were as well. Thanks for reminding me of that great year.

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  3 года назад

      You're welcome. Thanks for watching!

    • @artguti1551
      @artguti1551 3 года назад +1

      Errr....The Beatles were Still making Great Music...they didn't peak out in 66...they were Still Climbing!!!

  • @charlenetherrien3788
    @charlenetherrien3788 2 года назад +4

    I was 16 when Good Vibrations came out and with my 1st hearing I was IN LOVE! I remember where I was! Genius!

  • @michaelhaller784
    @michaelhaller784 3 года назад +71

    I was in a bar in Seattle in the early 1980's, I was in my early twenties and this was before Karaoke, and the bar band was only playing Beatles songs and the singers were different people out of the audience. I remembered marveling at how much this single band impacted an entire generation...not only in America but in the whole world.

    • @NWLee
      @NWLee 3 года назад +7

      The blues revival, when the Brits reinterpreted the blues in form of pop music and the Americans were too, was amazing.

    • @BruceDuganSr
      @BruceDuganSr 3 года назад +4

      I moved to Buenos Aires in 2003 and was stunned how much they love the Beatles there, and local bands were covering them

    • @jamesmcinnis208
      @jamesmcinnis208 2 года назад

      Impacted like a wisdom tooth.

  • @laurelmacarthur3416
    @laurelmacarthur3416 Год назад +1

    The Monkees were my favorite band since I was a child in the late 70s. I discovered them through re-runs of their TV show, and watched them every afternoon after school for years. As I got older, I started collecting their records, and in the 80s, Rhino started releasing their deep cuts via their "Missing Links" records. By the time MTV revived the TV show in 1986, I knew every song by heart. That same year, their appearance in Bangor, Maine was the first concert I ever attended. I still love The Monkees as an adult. I have a more complex understanding of and appreciation for their later music, and the struggle they faced to gain artistic control of their music, and enjoy the silliness of their show even more than I did as a child. I even got the cover art of their fourth album, Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn and Jones Ltd. tattooed on my right arm.

  • @GringoLoco1
    @GringoLoco1 3 года назад +39

    FWIW, I've always preferred the Vanilla Fudge version as well.
    Which leads me to the story of a dive bar in Waikiki in the late 70s' early 80s. They had the BEST juke box in the islands loaded with "oldies". I considered my (numerous) happy hours there as a grad course in music appreciation...

    • @GeraldM_inNC
      @GeraldM_inNC 3 года назад +2

      Me too. Still one of my favorite recordings ever.

    • @sx20Ramar
      @sx20Ramar 3 года назад +6

      60's, 70's and 80's ...95% of my favorite songs were made in those decades.

  • @timmoser3526
    @timmoser3526 Год назад +2

    I’d say this is the best list you’ve done so far❤

  • @mikepthekangaroo7596
    @mikepthekangaroo7596 3 года назад +13

    I just saw, what’s left of the Monkees 2 weeks ago in Medford, Ma
    Mickey is still killing it.

  • @dodgerssuck1890
    @dodgerssuck1890 3 года назад +50

    It’s impossible to have a list that doesn’t include Hal Blaine in the 60s. Bobby Darren, Johnny Rivers, the Beach boys, and the Monkees. All Hal Blaine on drums.

    • @Victoria-ni3tf
      @Victoria-ni3tf 2 года назад +1

      That’s “Darin.”

    • @docprocmd
      @docprocmd 2 года назад +1

      @@Victoria-ni3tf Or, possibly, "James."

  • @ericbgordon1575
    @ericbgordon1575 3 года назад +37

    "Good Vibrations" is definitely an exquisite piece of music. Brian and Mike appeared to know what they were doing, whether they did or not. Part of me was holding out to hear about "God Only Knows", but that gem was probably big at an earlier point in '66. For anyone reading this comment, I highly recommend the Neil Diamond cover from 1977. That's how I was introduced to that song, despite it likely being next to unknown among Neil's material.

    • @scottsessions3240
      @scottsessions3240 3 года назад +4

      Good vibrations was the teaser to smile, which didn't get released until 40 years later. I do agree, as great as this song is, God Only Knows it's my favorite.

    • @billdesinger8604
      @billdesinger8604 2 года назад

      PLEASE don’t put Love in the same class of talent as Brian Wilson. Love was (is) a wannabe who was the musical weak link of the BB’s.

    • @scottsessions3240
      @scottsessions3240 2 года назад +6

      @@billdesinger8604 There's a reason there exists the "Mike Love's a douchebag" fan club. I won't list the many reasons here as we all seem to know what they are. What I do want to emphasize is that Mike was an integral part of The Beach Boys. I can't think of any other bass voice in recorded history that is so perfectly suited for their harmonies. He did a good job as a front man in their concerts which is part of their legacy, and he did come up with some good lyrics, especially with Good Vibrations. I personally think the line 'I don't know where but she takes me there" is genius and that came out of Mike's brain. Hate is poison, love is provident. We each get to choose what's best for ourselves. The Beach Boys are one of the greatest bands of all time. Let's leave it there and enjoy the music.

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 2 года назад +1

      @@scottsessions3240 The greatest bands have love/hate relationships. Mike and Brian, Keith and Mick, Paul and John, Eddie and Dave, etc etc.

    • @terrybromery6734
      @terrybromery6734 Год назад +1

      Pet Sounds.., one of the best albums of all time.

  • @judycolson6047
    @judycolson6047 2 года назад +1

    Always the fav of mine Vanilla Fudge version of Keep Me Hangin On. Hits it out of the park. Love the beginning and all the rest. That’s what I call rock n roll! Crank it up.

  • @mr.kiggleshasanopinion1713
    @mr.kiggleshasanopinion1713 2 года назад +4

    I may be “older” but I sure feel blessed that I heard all this music while they were happening.
    Greatest stuff you will ever hear.

  • @b_uppy
    @b_uppy Год назад +2

    Devil with a Blue Dress On is a song i forgot. Will need to listen to it after this...
    There was a lot more diversity of sound back then, despite big company control.

  • @edavenport9074
    @edavenport9074 3 года назад +10

    I was born in the late 70’s and my dad graduated high school in 1967. My dad was and is a big music buff, so every Saturday morning I would wake up to 60’s and 70’s music. I love the 80’s and 90’s music I grew up with, but still my favorite decade of music is from the 1960’s.

    • @petechau9616
      @petechau9616 2 года назад +1

      You have a great Dad!

    • @Galworld761
      @Galworld761 2 года назад +2

      I am a GenXer too. My Sunday mornings were filled with 60s, 70s rock & soul and Latin music. It was mom’s sign to get up and help her clean the house. The Supremes clip took me back. So did the Monkees & Beach Boys.

  • @perrymitchell7591
    @perrymitchell7591 3 года назад +1

    I grew up in the 50 and 60 the best bands ever.nothing like today.the music had meaning and sole.and funck.and rethem . you dance to it you could sing along with it.it had feeling.love that time
    So glad we have record it

  • @tedecker3792
    @tedecker3792 3 года назад +13

    96 tears-- the only time I ever played in a band. My cousins garage band The Sweet Nothings (Billings MT) was missing their keyboardist, so I filled in on their Farfisa Mini Compact keyboard. Didn’t know what I was doing but nobody complained.

  • @adrianbara-popa9960
    @adrianbara-popa9960 2 года назад +1

    1959 & 1963 are EPIC years that should be done

  • @musicianethanhopper
    @musicianethanhopper 3 года назад +11

    Woooooooo!!! HERMANS HERMITS!!!! Such an underrated band!!!

  • @kirbyralston5234
    @kirbyralston5234 3 года назад +5

    We were living in Berkeley in 1966. Towards the end of that year my dad entered a contest on the radio station KFRC in San Francisco. The prize was the entire top 100 of the year on 45s.
    For years after my twin brother and I would play DJ with all of them, permanently engraining them into our memories.
    Although we were only six at the time, that year is forever etched in our musical hearts.

  • @davereed4664
    @davereed4664 3 года назад +9

    I became a fan of the Monkees when I was in the 8th grade. I can remember some girls playing A Little Bit Me, A Little Bit You on a little portable record player in the 4 room school house I attended at the time. I finally got to see Mickey, Davy and Pete in Columbus, Ohio one year before Davy passed away. They put on an absolutely wonderful show. Ah those memories.....walking to a restaurant during my lunch break as a freshman in high school and hearing Pleasant Valley Sunday on the jukebox and the smell of hamburgers cooking as I walked up the street.....✌and love everyone...

    • @merriemisfit8406
      @merriemisfit8406 2 года назад

      I missed the original Monkees broadcasts. Then, a few years later when they were in Saturday rerun mode, my siblings and I were always leaving for piano lessons during the show intro. So I never actually saw a Monkees show until the 20th anniversary revival! But I must have been a very good and devout fan at that point, because I received my cosmic reward: a pair of tickets from KRTH 101-FM in Los Angeles for the Monkees concert at the Universal Amphitheatre on 09 July 1989. It was a 2½-hour show in which "Papa Nez" joined Micky, Peter, and Davy for the final hour. Over thirty years later, it's still #1 on my "favorite concerts" list. (And K-Earth even put out sandwich fixings and FED all of us contest winners and our guests before the show!!)

  • @NiteMoves2010
    @NiteMoves2010 3 года назад +1

    Walked up to the stage in the very small "MOD SCENE" in North Haven C...a dance club...storefront...circa 1965-66. Watched the stage version of "...hangin on"

  • @tomst.antoine7742
    @tomst.antoine7742 3 года назад +10

    The Beatles and The Monkees were my favorite groups in 1966. I still have all their albums, as well as complete Series 1 & 2 Monkee cards.
    Here There and Everywhere was our wedding song in 1978. The 60's had the best music.

    • @marvymarier8988
      @marvymarier8988 3 года назад +1

      The Beatles "And" the Monkeys ?......ha ha ha.....how is that possible ?
      Lol

  • @patrickf.4440
    @patrickf.4440 3 года назад +8

    Thanks for putting this together. I was a high school sophomore at the time, and these songs are all memorable; Winchester Cathedral, however, will always be considered (by me and probably a whole lot of people) a "novelty" song, not really a serious piece of music. That it charted so highly has always mystified me. When it came on the radio, one would usually switch to another pop AM radio station (the two biggies being WCFL and WLS in Chicago).
    On the other hand, I remember dancing like a madman (not well, but wildly) at "sock-hops" to "Devil with a Blue Dress." If I tried making those same moves today, I would end up in a hospital. Thanks again.
    Pat, in Chicago

    • @petechau9616
      @petechau9616 2 года назад

      "Winchester Cathedral" was my favorite song back then and I drove my parents crazy playing it over and over. Good memories.

  • @TimmyB1867
    @TimmyB1867 3 года назад +38

    I never thought of 'Last train to Clarksville" as a protest song, but the moment you mentioned it, it just clicked. Always a perpetual favourite. I loved The Monkees when I first saw them on Canada's version of MTV 'Much Music' and still do to this day.

    • @speedracer2336
      @speedracer2336 3 года назад +4

      @Ivan Schlotzky they outsold the Beatles and Stones in 1967. I was around, they were huge!

  • @Darjeelingla
    @Darjeelingla 3 года назад +37

    When the Beatles arrived on the scene, with screaming, hysterical girl fans, I was not impressed, and ignored what they produced.
    But Revolver changed my mind. It was more than listenable. I was compelled to explore their talent. As it’s said: the rest is history.

    • @speedracer2336
      @speedracer2336 3 года назад +2

      I was around 10 years before when all the girls were screaming and fainting for the King. As John Lennon said "before Elvis, there was nothing!"

  • @johnpsmith19
    @johnpsmith19 3 года назад +15

    1971 is the greatest to me too, no other year had the depth of the albums produced then in my opinion: David Bowie - Hunky Dory; Led Zeppelin - IV; Joni Mitchel - Blue; The WHo - Who's Next; Rolling Stones - Sticky Fingers; Carole King - Tapestry; Paul McCartney - Ram; Marvin Gaye - What's Going On; David Crosby - If only I could Remember my Name; John Lennon - Imagine; Allman Brothers - At Fillmore; Janis Joplin - Pearl; Don McLean - American Pie; America - America; Black Sabbath - Master of Reality and so very many more

    • @charlie-obrien
      @charlie-obrien 3 года назад +4

      Damn fine year for music!
      And you really only scratched the surface, as you say.

    • @bowtangey6830
      @bowtangey6830 2 года назад +2

      I so agree. 1971!!

    • @josephmcfarland8442
      @josephmcfarland8442 2 года назад

      1971 for me as well, English fella wrote a book. about it which I have. Was 7 then as opposed to 2

  • @debbieanne7962
    @debbieanne7962 3 года назад +8

    I had just turned 6 years old when these songs were released. Wow looking at the album cover of Good Vibrations really takes me back. I remember having it in my collection but have forgotten about it the last 45 years! Loved the Monkees on TV. Also remember Gomer Pyle and the Beverly Hillbillies

    • @ronsanders2527
      @ronsanders2527 Год назад

      The doors w here only together for 18 months incredible!

  • @Elwaves2925
    @Elwaves2925 3 года назад +43

    First caught The Monkees on Saturday morning UK TV, in either the late 70's/early 80's. They were part of re-runs of a Banana Splits show. Daydream Believer is a song that always cheers me up.
    I love the 80's but after that it's definitely the 60's.

    • @ProfessorofRock
      @ProfessorofRock  3 года назад +3

      Very cool!

    • @DDKaraokeOutlaw
      @DDKaraokeOutlaw 3 года назад +7

      Tra la la, tra la la, la
      Tra la la, tra la la, la
      Tra la la, tra la la, la
      Tra la la, tra la la, la

    • @krisgreenwood5173
      @krisgreenwood5173 3 года назад +5

      Anything by the Monkeys is great in any generation.

    • @jamesedwards2237
      @jamesedwards2237 3 года назад +4

      Loved me some Banana Splits.

    • @monza1002000
      @monza1002000 2 года назад +1

      @@DDKaraokeOutlaw Bet everyone sang that while driving a 6 wheel buggy! 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @lawrencecongdon8882
    @lawrencecongdon8882 3 года назад +20

    I would say The Supremes' "You Keep Me Hanging On" is the greatest and most influential song of the rock/pop era. Not only a great song whose lyrics are rooted in the blues tradition -- but the first song to purposefully use technology to create/amplify an emotionally impact - with the electric guitar's 'telegraphing'.

  • @Rossturnerphoto
    @Rossturnerphoto 3 года назад +18

    When you talked about the greatest single of all time I was thinking it was going to be God Only Knows. At least I got the group right. Good Vibrations is a great song as well, and certainly worthy of a spot on that list.

    • @theoccupier9273
      @theoccupier9273 3 года назад +6

      One human being wrote God Only Knows and Good Vibrations and Wouldn't It Be Nice and Heroes and Villains and Surf's Up within 6 months. Genuinely in a league of his own

  • @carycaldwell877
    @carycaldwell877 2 года назад +4

    Never before, likely naver again: April 4, 1964. All 5 of the Top 5 that week (plus 9 more with in the top 100, and a couple more that referenced them….. the Beatles absolutely OWNED the Billboard Charts that week!!!!

  • @MyName-pl7zn
    @MyName-pl7zn 3 года назад +7

    Absolutely love the music of 66, the music was changing so fast from here on, I am so thankful when you get to interviews with these legends and do the earlier stuff turn on some of the past music to younger audiences too.

  • @tysparks598
    @tysparks598 2 года назад

    I wasn't born until 74, but my mom played all this stuff, great memories, but THE MONKEES!?!
    I used to play sick to stay home from church b/c TNT (Ted Turner's cable channel) played 3 episodes of The Monkees back-to-back on Sunday mornings in the very late 1970s. My dad would cover for me (he didn't like going to church either) & we'd watch it together.
    Not long after this my parents split up.
    I've been a Monkees fan all my life, & rewatched the episodes on TV when MTV played them & again whenever someone would have a Monkees Marathon.
    And my mom & sisters & I used to go to a market on Monday mornings in Clarksville, TN, & we'd sing it every time.
    Thanks for the video, lotsa great memories.

  • @dougreimer2912
    @dougreimer2912 3 года назад +10

    Really enjoyed this episode. I was 10 in 1966 and was already buying records and living off the radio. My dad bought me a crystal radio that summer with a little ear speaker that I put under my pillow to fall asleep at night. I recall many of these songs and tv shows.

    • @tjseagrove
      @tjseagrove 2 года назад

      Ear speaker…I had an old square microphone for a cassette player that I snapped the mic plug off of and then plugged the other prong into the ear phone jack of my clock radio. Had that under my pillow for years back in the 70’s…

    • @dougreimer2912
      @dougreimer2912 2 года назад +2

      @@tjseagrove A good story. Music grabs us at such a young age, it's amazing, and what we do to have it. In the early 70s I travelled about with a portable cassette player long before the advent of the walkman. At that time it was precious to me.

    • @tjseagrove
      @tjseagrove 2 года назад +1

      @@dougreimer2912 And don’t forget that amazing invention the transistor radio with its mono speaker and we would hang it on a tree and listen to it outside. The number 9 V batteries we would burn through was staggering.

    • @dougreimer2912
      @dougreimer2912 2 года назад

      @@tjseagrove I recall learning about commercial transistor radios in the early 60s and that they were originally from Japan. Wasn't able to get one till I finished high school.

  • @nancywengert7301
    @nancywengert7301 3 года назад +13

    1966, the year that I graduated from high school, was a great year for music! The sixties and early seventies were the best years for music imo, started going downhill, with a few exceptions when disco hit it big. A lot of the songs had a relatable message, were easy to sing along to, had a beat and a melody. This music is imprinted in my brain and my heart.

    • @patrickryan1515
      @patrickryan1515 2 года назад

      But, please, in the beginning there was quite a lot of truly fine, very exciting disco music -- that could keep you dancing 'til the wee small hours of the morning. Around 78, however, the newer disco sounds were overly drawn out and quite repetitious. By then Disco had had its day.

    • @dennyj8650
      @dennyj8650 Год назад +1

      Salute! You were around for the beginning of rock & roll! Ain't it great!

  • @knightchamberlain4073
    @knightchamberlain4073 3 года назад +10

    Wow, for me that’s like trying to pick my favorite child - can’t be done, but here goes:
    I have great memories of music from 1964 when I was 8 - hello Beatles on the Ed Sullivan show - to 1978, the year I graduated from college.
    1964 - The Beatles
    1965 - The Rolling Stones
    1966 - The Monkees
    1967 - Buffalo Springfield
    1968 - Cream
    1969 - Crosby, Stills & Nash
    1970 - James Taylor
    1971 - Rod Stewart
    1972 - Carole King
    1973 - Elton John
    1974 - Joni Mitchell
    1975 - Chicago
    1976 - Al Stewart
    1977 - Fleetwood Mac
    1978 - Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
    And that’s just the tip of the iceberg.
    Thanks for inspiring the walk down memory lane, Professor. How about a show about the best music of 1967?

  • @christophercoughlin2886
    @christophercoughlin2886 2 года назад +2

    Here, There and Everywhere has grown and grown in popularity as more people hear it.. What a great tune! And a great arrangement by the Beatles.

  • @admirathoria0073
    @admirathoria0073 3 года назад +18

    The songs had a unique sound. Different songwriters doing their own take on the blues, skiffle, jug, folk, etc. That's why that era was so interesting.

    • @GeraldM_inNC
      @GeraldM_inNC 3 года назад +1

      So much more variety of style!

    • @karenryder6317
      @karenryder6317 2 года назад

      That's the exact reason why I love this music.

  • @michaelp5283
    @michaelp5283 3 года назад +9

    What was wonderful to me during that period was that everybody was listening to and discovering the same 20 new songs at the same time. Johnny Rivers song "Summer Rain" referenced how everyone was listening to the Beatles new album at that time. Whites were listening to blacks doing Motown music, kids were listening to country songs like "Ode To Billy Joe", and everybody was doing it together at the same time! It had a way of bringing everybody together like nothing else ever had. So the lack of access to anything new that you want being stripped down to just the Top 20 songs on the radio came with amazing benefits to society I believe. Maybe that's why for those of us who lived through it, we're still talking about it today.

    • @almavazquez6397
      @almavazquez6397 2 года назад +1

      What a great comment🎶🙋...totally agree, I loved Motown,Bobby Gentry, country, Rock & Roll, Dion Demucci,Dylan,just about everyone from the U.K. how bout, Instrumental Lonely Bull, Herb Alpert "This Guy" , I could go on& on🎵🎶

    • @michaelp5283
      @michaelp5283 2 года назад +1

      @@almavazquez6397 Yep I forgot to mention the instrumentals! Still some of my favorite records to this day! Thanks for the nice comment! 😃

    • @karenryder6317
      @karenryder6317 2 года назад

      I knew a guy who always referred to "Ode to Billy Joe" as that song that starts out telling how ""Mama's never been right"!!!

  • @rp6519
    @rp6519 3 года назад +17

    Great episode Adam, brings back memories of watching Adam West as “Batman” on television.
    Sad thing about Question Mark: seems he never really played many concerts, or had much in term of earnings from his songs. To make matters worse, at one point, around 2005, the house he was living in with friends burned to the ground and he lost everything. The home was not insured.
    Also, the keyboard player, "Little Frank" Rodriguez, was about 14 years old at the time, and it seems that the only member of The Mysterians who was actually old enough to sign a contract was Question Mark himself.
    I read one of his interviews, and, sheesh, you’d have a hard time interviewing him. He’s a rambler! But an innovator- the beginnings of punk!
    About Casey Kasem, there isn’t a warmer and fuzzier feeling than memories of hearing his shows on early Saturday mornings into the early afternoons. His storytelling and backstories were like storytelling time at summer campfires. Umm… smell that?… S’mores anyone?

  • @MrMusicbyMartin
    @MrMusicbyMartin 3 года назад +2

    I was impressed with the list of interviewees - and then you’re sitting there with Brian Wilson! Great show, some truly immortal songs here

  • @bandakae
    @bandakae 3 года назад +7

    Thank you, thank you, thank you for this video! The Monkees are my favorite group ever. I would love to see them covered more!

  • @remiska8655
    @remiska8655 3 года назад +2

    YES!! Listened to this music playing in my older sisters room. Playing stacks of 45's put that great music in my small child brain. Love it, it's my go to music everytime!

  • @dougsaroma
    @dougsaroma 3 года назад +5

    The Vanilla Fudge version of Keep Me Hangin' On was definitely the best. Epic, especially the long version. One of the best recordings of all time.

  • @rickelliott3683
    @rickelliott3683 3 года назад +11

    My son and I just saw the Monkees on their farewell tour.. Mike and micky together, their voices were phenomenal! They have had the most amazing staying power and an inspiration for so many artist/musicians. They should be in The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame! I would so much to see you do a program with them.

    • @jennifermcleod6587
      @jennifermcleod6587 3 года назад

      I've been enjoying the Monkees Pad Show on RUclips- as a Monkees fan you'd probably enjoy it too.

  • @JDoors
    @JDoors 3 года назад +11

    Why "Professor Of Rock?" Because I've heard Last Train To Clarkesville hundreds of times since I was eleven years old and I never knew the deeper meaning behind it until this video, and now I'll never know how I didn't see it. Thanks, Professor.

  • @mlad9944
    @mlad9944 2 года назад +1

    Brother, you are so appreciated. Of the songs you featured, Good Vibrations is out on its own. Looking back on this period in my life, young folks don't get the context, but it was all new to our ears. Every week we went to the music store to see the latest offerings and each week there were songs that would later become rock classics. We were so lucky. Honestly the mid to late sixties were so special in music. There was a lot of great music that came later but the sixties were amazing.

  • @lowelledlee8019
    @lowelledlee8019 2 года назад +2

    My favorite year was 1964. The Beach Boys came out with I Get Around and Don’t Worry Baby. The Dave Clark Five debuted Because. The Beatles came to the USA that year, She Loves You and I Want To Hold Your Hand. Suspicion by Terry Stafford. People by Barbra Streisand. Oh, Pretty Woman by Roy Orbison. Don’t Let The Sun Catch You Cryin’ by Gerry and the Pacemakers. The Four Seasons made Ragdoll and Dawn Go Away. Under The Boardwalk by the Drifters. DancIn The Street by Martha and the Vandellas. We’ll Sing In the Sunshine by Gale Garnett. A World Without Love by Peter and Gordon and MANY MORE!!

  • @bandcouver
    @bandcouver 2 года назад +2

    Actually The Monkees' first single 'Last Tran To Clarksvile' was released before their TV show debuted on August 16, 1966. It topped the Billboard Hot 100 on November 5, 1966 after their TV show debuted on September 12, 1966.

  • @florencecoach6639
    @florencecoach6639 3 года назад +4

    Definitely can't go wrong with a top ten list of the 60's. Keep it coming!

  • @oranges8302
    @oranges8302 2 года назад +2

    I was 14 in 1966, and all of these songs were great. I watched The Monkees all the time,. Good Vibrations is absolutely amazing - the harmony is exquisite. I still have my Revolver album that I bought in ‘66. Damn, those were good years with great music. Of course there was a whole lot of great music from the rest of the 60s. I’ll never forget seeing Cream in concert at Clowes Hall in Indy. Ginger Baker was out of this world.

  • @jackrichardson6925
    @jackrichardson6925 3 года назад +10

    I had heard that The Beach Boys "God Only Knows" sparked the writing of "Here There and Everywhere." And Paul has said that John gave him his only compliment for writing this song. It's been one of my favorites & was always shocked it didn't get more acclaim.

    • @debbiehanisch2099
      @debbiehanisch2099 3 года назад +1

      God only knows blows Here there and everywhere out if the water. The later is over produced pop drivel. Just saying.

    • @jackrichardson6925
      @jackrichardson6925 3 года назад +2

      @@debbiehanisch2099 "God Only Knows" (GOK) is a masterpiece & one of the best songs ever written. "Here There And Everywhere" (HTAE) is a simple, well written song so typical of Paul. Of course GOK is better than HTAE. I don't think many would argue that, certainly not me. Both are pop songs. The Beach Boys did pop almost exclusively & the Beatles certainly did a lot more rock and a little bit of country. It's particularly ironic to call HTAE "overproduced" when Pet Sounds is one of the most "produced" albums in history. Thankfully Brian reigned back the production on GOK but it is still far more "produced" than HTAE. "Drivel" is subjective hyperbole & really doesn't belong in any serious comparison.

    • @AmigoKandu
      @AmigoKandu 2 года назад

      Bridge Over Troubled Water song inspired Beatles' Long And Winding Road.

  • @vonniedemers5683
    @vonniedemers5683 3 года назад +1

    I'm 56 I've had a radio in my ear since forever. I still will watch the Monkees anytime I come across it. I grew up in California and back then everyone knew all the Beach Boys songs. I even won a radio contest where I won the entire BB catalog. Damn I'm old... But music has gotten me through everything.

  • @mikeronniward1261
    @mikeronniward1261 3 года назад +12

    I absolutely LOVE the Monkees!! They are my all time favorite bad, I would love to see you do more stuff on them. -Ronni

    • @kenperk9854
      @kenperk9854 3 года назад +3

      Being a 60s and 70s guy. I give the 70s the edge because a little bit of low tech was spicing up the goodies, led by Jeff, Lynne, Queen, the fun, fun, fun of the Autobahn! Kraftwerk! And more, without overdoing it the way the 80s did. The guitar was pretty much put in the closet until the 19 90s.

    • @anitaanderson2871
      @anitaanderson2871 3 года назад +2

      The Monkees are my #1 also

  • @CelestialNav1
    @CelestialNav1 2 года назад +1

    I saw The Monkees LIVE in 1967 in San Francisco. I was 16 years old and I lived across the Golden Gate Bridge in Marin County. I got my Monkees Album signed by all of The Monkees too. It was a really fun night!

    • @barbarapope349
      @barbarapope349 2 года назад +1

      I was 10 in 67 , I also lived in Marin County 🤗 that’s so cool that you saw the Monkees and they signed your album, I also loved the Monkees, I’m a life long Brian Wilson Beach boys fan ,I love the Golden Gate Bridge also

    • @CelestialNav1
      @CelestialNav1 2 года назад +1

      @@barbarapope349 Awesome 😎
      I lived in Mill Valley. We owned 5 acres at the foot of Mount Tam.
      My Dad was a famous Bay Area Jazz Musician. I love the Golden Gate Bridge too. 💜💙💜

    • @barbarapope349
      @barbarapope349 2 года назад

      Wow! What a great place to live! And your dad the jazz musician, very cool , it looks like you’ve been involved in great music during your life🤗 it’s so funny that I would look at this channel and the comments and see a” neighbor “almost my age 😳🤗 I grew up in Inverness and Pt Reyes our house over looked Tamales Bay, I was born at Marin General hospital, it’s such a beautiful place to live as you know . Thanks for your comment 🥰

    • @barbarapope349
      @barbarapope349 2 года назад

      @@CelestialNav1 I forgot to address your name 🤦🏻‍♀️

  • @Dumbledork_Prime
    @Dumbledork_Prime 3 года назад +6

    Love, love, LOVE the Beach Boys, but I think their best song is "Wouldn't it be nice". It's one of only a few songs that manages to make me cry; I love it so much.

  • @mrd6741
    @mrd6741 3 года назад

    I was an 18 year old senior in ‘66. How great it was cruising, listening to mono AM radio and if we were lucky we had a rear seat speaker. Two years later we had a garage band. Later on in college I took a fine arts elective about pop, rock and folk music culture. I remember the prof reflecting on the 60s saying that after Woodstock country took a deep breath, exhaled and moved into he 70s. I’m still stuck in the 60s. Thanks for this video.

  • @dennismason3740
    @dennismason3740 3 года назад +18

    Last Train to Clarksville is a studio masterpiece. The Elite (also known as "the Wrecking Crew" - Brian loves them) played on that session.

    • @raye402
      @raye402 3 года назад +5

      So to the amazing Carol Kaye playing cool bass rifts on over. 10000 tracks of all genres. Yes the Wrecking Crew true professional musicians👍

    • @finallythere100
      @finallythere100 2 года назад +1

      Yes, and since I was young, I learned only years later that it was the last stop for young guys before heading off to Vietnam... (trivia - 1966 was year Truman Capote's Emmy-winning A Christmas Memory - with Geraldine Paige, was released.)

    • @lloydkline1518
      @lloydkline1518 2 года назад

      Together ❤️ the 🐒 monkeys; should tv show dvd

    • @dennismason3740
      @dennismason3740 2 года назад +1

      @@finallythere100 - thank goodness I didn't see Clarksville when I turned 19 in 1972 - Thank you for the data, I did not know that. I had a high lottery number (lottery draft that year).

    • @finallythere100
      @finallythere100 2 года назад

      @@dennismason3740 - You dodged that bullet, legally..

  • @fredchatham6680
    @fredchatham6680 2 года назад +2

    "96 TEARS" reminds me, although I am a guitar player, I REALLY miss organ driven music.

  • @joannmartinez8295
    @joannmartinez8295 3 года назад +3

    I remember watching them every afternoon during the summer when we moved back to California in 1978 because my friends house had cable that was my first introduction to The Monkees and I was just about to turn 13. and unlike most of my friends Davy Jones was my favorite of the group.
    My parents were getting back together that summer the show allowed me to laugh during a very difficult time I loved the music and spending time with my friends.
    Last Train to Clarksville was a protest song?
    That's definitely pretty cool I never would have guessed it!

  • @debbiebonitz9041
    @debbiebonitz9041 2 года назад +1

    Monkees are my all time favorite band. My sister and I are in their concert dvd at the beginning going into the Orange County venue but you have to go frame by frame to catch it.

  • @MsAppassionata
    @MsAppassionata 3 года назад +13

    My favorite version of “You Keep Me Hanging On” is by The Supremes. All others pale in comparison in my opinion but to each their own.

    • @stshnie
      @stshnie 3 года назад +2

      Absolutely.

  • @charitylboisseau7526
    @charitylboisseau7526 Год назад

    My parents listened to all of these songs growing up in the 50s and 60s (they were born in 1951 and 1953). So, I grew up listening to these oldies! Love it! ❤

  • @secondace
    @secondace 3 года назад +6

    I got to see the monkeys a few years ago as it was my favorite band. It was truly Amazing 🥰
    I took my friend who was a little bit younger and she actually got one of the drumsticks how cool 🙌🙌🙌

  • @ronaldoleksy8264
    @ronaldoleksy8264 2 года назад +1

    In 1966 I was 5 years old. We had a Jukebox in the family room next to the TV. My mom wore GoGo boots when the came around great memories growing up

  • @BecomeConsciousNow
    @BecomeConsciousNow 3 года назад +12

    I love the 60s music as well as the whole vibe of that era. Yes, "Good Vibrations" by the Beach Boys is a great song!! Love the Beach Boys.

  • @TheAzureFae
    @TheAzureFae 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for mentioning my husband Rob's memory of Good Vibrations. After 15 years of marriage, I just fell in love with him and the music all over again.

  • @jwine4145
    @jwine4145 2 года назад +4

    At about 7 years old I can remember my oldest brother had the 45 of Winchester Catherdral. He was 8 years older than me and learning the trumpet and trombone which at least one is prominent in the song (if memory serves 🙂)
    He practiced too it. Another song I had not heard or thought of in probably 40 years !