Rag mama rag 2:15 Long black veil 6:20 Up on cripple creek 11:30 Shape I’m in 16:47 It makes no difference 21:16 Milk cow boogie 27:57 Mystery train 31:29 King harvest has surely come 35:55 voodoo music 40:00 Ws walcott medicine show 45:20 You don’t know me 48:47 Stage fright 52:29 Caldonia 57:13 Chest fever 1:03:19 Java blues 1:11:00 I shall be released 1:16:18 Back to Memphis 1:20:30 1:24:27 the weight I don’t want to 1:31:20 Blaze of glory 1:35:40 Willy and the hand jive 1:39:16 Ophelia 1:45:39 Just love everyone’s energy for this concert. Rick danko and Levon seemed to have such fun playing this night and just love this performance. I hope I got all the times and songs right, if not pls lmk
Amazing thing about this concert despite the absence from Robbie Robertson is it feels more like a band performing than Martin Scorsese's constant focus on Robertson's performance in the Last Waltz. Even when he wasn't singing.
Thank you for uploading this! One of my favorite Band concerts! My ONLY critique of the concert is this: the performance of "It Makes No Difference" here MIGHT'VE been the best version of this great song--which says A LOT, cuz there are SEVERAL stand-out versions of this song!--IF Richard's vocal mic HADN'T been louder than all of the others'! You can hardly even HEAR Rick's voice during the choruses. 😕
@@peterlittlehorse5695 Here's my favorite performance of "It Makes No Difference". (I've gone through dozens of performances/recordings cuz I love this song so much!): ruclips.net/video/N8XZBq826QY/видео.htmlsi=myyNs8VPnD7n99BX
YEAH THE BAND I LIKE HOW THEY INTRODUCE YOU IT IS 13 O CLOCK AND I AM DRINKING A COFFEE AND SMOKING A CAT ATE AND WENT OUT IT IS SUNNY OUTSIDE AND IT IS GETTING HOT I AM GOING TO EAT A HALF AN ORANGE YOU ARE THE BEST BAND REAL LEGENDS I LIKE TO LISTEN TO YOU
I love the Band! And they were great! But my favorite was the kid from Turkey Scratch Arkansas. I always said Levon was the heart and soul of The Band.
The all had unique talent. Robbie wrote most of the song, played killer guitar, Levon and Richard great singers, I love them, Garth outstanding, however my favorite is Rick, he is so soulful, sings with such emotion and has such and endearing personality.
They all said so themselves. They called Garth Honey Boy. He surrounds the music with his warmth. If you haven't read Barney Hoskyns' book about The Band Across The Great Divide already you absolutely should.
Taylor, couldn't say it any better....still brings chills up my spine...recalls Brother Ray...written by Cindy Walker (and Eddy Arnold too?). The genesis of this song ends with this performance...no one could do it better!
Any chance you think some members may have been enjoying cocktails before the show? Lol. Still an amazing show and they are having so much fun it's awesome to watch
He wanted to go out with a bang, in 1976….. and out he stayed!! Never welcome back with The Band again! Thankfully!! Greed and all the money from The Last Waltz and being an egotistical ass got him axed from any future involvement of any kind. Now he’s dead too!
Only Robbie the rest of the boys soldiered on till the late 90’s , When Rick Died in 99 that kind of put a end to it , But Levon had a resurgence in his career in the 2000’s and went strong for nearly a decade after he had the throat cancer but finally succumbed to it in 2012
@@castanzes really.. so all those other guys are just, what... schmoes??And, if you talk to the other members you might find that this "Robbie wrote all the songs" idea is just a myth.
@@castanzes There is a simple answer to who wrote The Band's songs. Look at the credits on the first two albums. On 1968's "Music From Big Pink," Robbie Robertson is credited as the sole writer of four songs, "The Weight," "Caledonia Mission," "To Kingdom Come," and "Chest Fever." Richard Manuel has three solo writing credits ("In a Station," "We Can Talk," "Lonesome Suzie,") and a co-write with Bob Dylan ("Tears of Rage"). Rick Danko is credited, along with Dylan, for "This Wheel's on Fire." The Band also covers Dylan's "I Shall Be Released" and the Marijohn Wilkin/Danny Dill chestnut "Long Black Veil." On the second album, 1969's "The Band," Robertson is credited as the sole author of eight of the 12 songs, shares credit with Manuel on three others and with Levon Helm on "Jemima Surrender." From this we might deduce that Robertson is the primary creative engine for the Band, with others making significant lesser contributions. Had Helm not famously disputed this, had he not vociferously protested that Robertson took advantage of his bandmates who were more interested in the process of music making than the assigning of credit (and future royalties), we would accept Robertson as one of the great rock 'n' roll songwriters. Helm's position was that Robertson was just the one who filed the papers. And there is something to that -- who thinks of "Chest Fever" as anything but a Garth Hudson song? "Does it even have lyrics?" Robertson, its putative lyricist, once asked, and there are accounts of the lyrics been improvised by the singers Helm, Manuel and Danko. Hudson started it out interpolating Bach's Tocatta and Fugue in D minor, and there's a weird part where Manuel is sawing on a violin while Hudson honks on a sax. But J.R. Robertson is listed as the sole songwriter.
@@mufngruf This has been long discussed. The rest of the band didn't put much effort in songwriting after the first record. It's such a pity, but they preferred to concentrate in performing and enjoying the rockstar way of life.
I love that song. In the last waltz he seemed to put his heart and soul into it. Maybe he thought he’d done it so good that he never wanted to make it worse. I just love the song, wish he did sing it again
I have read that when he was complimented on his fabulous performance of the song during The Last Waltz, that his reply was “thank god I’ll never have to do it again” 😞
According to Sandra Tooze’s biography of Levon, he reportedly hated doing Robbie’s material. I’m not sure how he thought that he’d be able to avoid it IF they weren’t writing new material. I know that when I saw them in Chicago in 96, there was precious little material outside of Robbie’s songs. They did stuff off Jericho and High On The Hog, which was good.
It's the Band, going on without Robbie. Rick got up to at least 350 pounds and then commited suicide. Why couldn't any of them leave Robbie behind and not repeat those songs. Yes, those songs were theirs.It didn't help them. Love them 🥰. However, go on or stop. I guess you can tell, I thought Robbie was the main guy. They were a band, of course. But why do this? The Band was over. Over.
my grandpa was the man introducing the band at the start of this video he grew up with the guys and travlled the world with them
Rag mama rag 2:15
Long black veil 6:20
Up on cripple creek 11:30
Shape I’m in 16:47
It makes no difference 21:16
Milk cow boogie 27:57
Mystery train 31:29
King harvest has surely come 35:55 voodoo music 40:00
Ws walcott medicine show 45:20
You don’t know me 48:47
Stage fright 52:29
Caldonia 57:13
Chest fever 1:03:19
Java blues 1:11:00
I shall be released 1:16:18
Back to Memphis 1:20:30
1:24:27 the weight
I don’t want to 1:31:20
Blaze of glory 1:35:40
Willy and the hand jive 1:39:16
Ophelia 1:45:39
Just love everyone’s energy for this concert. Rick danko and Levon seemed to have such fun playing this night and just love this performance. I hope I got all the times and songs right, if not pls lmk
Thank you, James. Times are ALWAYS appreciated. At least by ........ the ME!!
@@timoconnor8520 and me too when I come back to this lol.
Amazing thing about this concert despite the absence from Robbie Robertson is it feels more like a band performing than Martin Scorsese's constant focus on Robertson's performance in the Last Waltz. Even when he wasn't singing.
It was indeed a little too obvious that Robbie got to Hollywood.
Wow!!! This show just gets better with every song ! Richards’s best “I Shall be Released”.!! Awesome!! Such a talent gone much too soon. Demons!!
*ALWAYS ..NEVER FORGET ONE OF THE GREATEST BAND EVER*
忘れようがないよね ザ・バンドほど素晴らしいグループは二度と出てこない❗️大好き‼️
自分が生まれる20年前に来てたんだ、、
見たかった、
ロビーの入った全員のザ・バンドが見たかった それも今では叶わない…でもリチャードの最後の勇姿が見られるのが慰めです ガース お身体大事にしてください
I AM DRINKING MY AFTERNOON COFFEE SMOKING AND LISTENING TO YOU I LIKE IT
私ここに居ました
いやーまさか観れるとは驚き・・・・ありがとう
新宿厚生年金会館 高校3年の思い出です
Thank you for uploading this! One of my favorite Band concerts! My ONLY critique of the concert is this: the performance of "It Makes No Difference" here MIGHT'VE been the best version of this great song--which says A LOT, cuz there are SEVERAL stand-out versions of this song!--IF Richard's vocal mic HADN'T been louder than all of the others'! You can hardly even HEAR Rick's voice during the choruses. 😕
I agree that Rick's vocal performance here surpasses even that on The Last Waltz.
@@peterlittlehorse5695 Here's my favorite performance of "It Makes No Difference". (I've gone through dozens of performances/recordings cuz I love this song so much!): ruclips.net/video/N8XZBq826QY/видео.htmlsi=myyNs8VPnD7n99BX
@@brandonmatuja6498 Thanks.
What a band !
The Band !
I SEE MY LIFE IS COMES SHINING SHINE YOUR LIGHT ON ME MR. TAMBOURINE MAN YOU ARE MY MAN
SOME OF YOU R.I.P.
I love Levon the most!! But Richard did his best right here.
Levon Kill’n it this night 😎
YEAH THE BAND I LIKE HOW THEY INTRODUCE YOU IT IS 13 O CLOCK AND I AM DRINKING A COFFEE AND SMOKING A CAT ATE AND WENT OUT IT IS SUNNY OUTSIDE AND IT IS GETTING HOT I AM GOING TO EAT A HALF AN ORANGE YOU ARE THE BEST BAND REAL LEGENDS I LIKE TO LISTEN TO YOU
I love the Band! And they were great! But my favorite was the kid from Turkey Scratch Arkansas. I always said Levon was the heart and soul of The Band.
The all had unique talent. Robbie wrote most of the song, played killer guitar, Levon and Richard great singers, I love them, Garth outstanding, however my favorite is Rick, he is so soulful, sings with such emotion and has such and endearing personality.
This just proves that Garth, Richard, Rick and Levon were The Band.
Absolutely!!! RR was a snake, and is now a good guy!
Godamn.. Garth the best
and Levon never sounded better
They all said so themselves. They called Garth Honey Boy. He surrounds the music with his warmth. If you haven't read Barney Hoskyns' book about The Band Across The Great Divide already you absolutely should.
Richard singing You Don't Know Me is one of the best moments in music history
48:47
🤙 ☝️
the dude was so great 🚬🤠
1:16:18
Somewhere Ray Charles smiles every time that part is played.
Taylor, couldn't say it any better....still brings chills up my spine...recalls Brother Ray...written by Cindy Walker (and Eddy Arnold too?). The genesis of this song ends with this performance...no one could do it better!
I love this king harvest
And the signal wented 'kaput'. Well done, Mon Capitaine.
❤ Rick
The Band los recuerdos e llevan el Arrayan con iii compadre Hector ,Jano,Nacho
It's easy when you know how.
Levon, Rick, Richard and Garth….. One more time!! And the lack of RR makes it perfect!!👍
Sad to see, sorry you boys had to do so many hours
❤️
Any chance you think some members may have been enjoying cocktails before the show? Lol. Still an amazing show and they are having so much fun it's awesome to watch
I like chest fever just as much as king harvest
Your videos are absolutely amazing. Please keep uploading them. Do you have anymore with Richard?
I'm hoping someone right now has gone to buy uncles
You don't know me is the song of a Pagafantas
MY NEIGHBOUR ANDREJ IS MOWING THE LAWN I SAID HELLO TO HIM
WHERE IS ROBBIE
Robbie’s stint with THE BAND ended in 1976
He wanted to go out with a bang, in 1976….. and out he stayed!! Never welcome back with The Band again! Thankfully!!
Greed and all the money from The Last Waltz and being an egotistical ass got him axed from any future involvement of any kind. Now he’s dead too!
🥀🙄🌱💚
Ditto
garth hudson the best multintrumentist of history ¡¡¡¡
I thought they quit with the last waltz in 76.
Robbie Robertson left, the others came back to restore the band.😊
Only Robbie the rest of the boys soldiered on till the late 90’s , When Rick Died in 99 that kind of put a end to it , But Levon had a resurgence in his career in the 2000’s and went strong for nearly a decade after he had the throat cancer but finally succumbed to it in 2012
@@terryblankenshipmusic1322
Wow ! 2012 , time flies
@@terryblankenshipmusic1322 Richard Manual died in 1986
@@rob.schwartz yes I know that , guess I should have been more specific, but they did continue on without Richard as well
Freak show Scorsese wishes TLW was this good!! He and RR missed a much better show!! It’s right here!!!
And Robbie was into sharing Native American rythums, truly astonishing. This is hard to see, poor guys
❤
given the choice, I'll take Earl Cate over Robbie any day.... and without Robbie's ego, we get a lot more Rick, Richard, Garth and Levon
Maybe, but Robbie wrote the songs. It's crazy how so much people likes to bash him. Without him The Band wouln't have had not even 1% of its success.
@@castanzes really.. so all those other guys are just, what... schmoes??And, if you talk to the other members you might find that this "Robbie wrote all the songs" idea is just a myth.
@@castanzes There is a simple answer to who wrote The Band's songs. Look at the credits on the first two albums. On 1968's "Music From Big Pink," Robbie Robertson is credited as the sole writer of four songs, "The Weight," "Caledonia Mission," "To Kingdom Come," and "Chest Fever."
Richard Manuel has three solo writing credits ("In a Station," "We Can Talk," "Lonesome Suzie,") and a co-write with Bob Dylan ("Tears of Rage").
Rick Danko is credited, along with Dylan, for "This Wheel's on Fire."
The Band also covers Dylan's "I Shall Be Released" and the Marijohn Wilkin/Danny Dill chestnut "Long Black Veil."
On the second album, 1969's "The Band," Robertson is credited as the sole author of eight of the 12 songs, shares credit with Manuel on three others and with Levon Helm on "Jemima Surrender."
From this we might deduce that Robertson is the primary creative engine for the Band, with others making significant lesser contributions. Had Helm not famously disputed this, had he not vociferously protested that Robertson took advantage of his bandmates who were more interested in the process of music making than the assigning of credit (and future royalties), we would accept Robertson as one of the great rock 'n' roll songwriters.
Helm's position was that Robertson was just the one who filed the papers. And there is something to that -- who thinks of "Chest Fever" as anything but a Garth Hudson song?
"Does it even have lyrics?" Robertson, its putative lyricist, once asked, and there are accounts of the lyrics been improvised by the singers Helm, Manuel and Danko. Hudson started it out interpolating Bach's Tocatta and Fugue in D minor, and there's a weird part where Manuel is sawing on a violin while Hudson honks on a sax. But J.R. Robertson is listed as the sole songwriter.
@@mufngruf This has been long discussed. The rest of the band didn't put much effort in songwriting after the first record. It's such a pity, but they preferred to concentrate in performing and enjoying the rockstar way of life.
Got any evidence to support that wild theory??
I ATE A TIN OF FISH TOMATO MUSTARD AND BREAD FOR MY LUNCH NOW I FEEL MUCH BETTER
Is it possible that Levon decided not to ever sing Old Dixie again after Last Waltz?
i think so. its not written about anywhere though
I love that song. In the last waltz he seemed to put his heart and soul into it. Maybe he thought he’d done it so good that he never wanted to make it worse. I just love the song, wish he did sing it again
I have read that when he was complimented on his fabulous performance of the song during The Last Waltz, that his reply was “thank god I’ll never have to do it again” 😞
According to Sandra Tooze’s biography of Levon, he reportedly hated doing Robbie’s material. I’m not sure how he thought that he’d be able to avoid it IF they weren’t writing new material. I know that when I saw them in Chicago in 96, there was precious little material outside of Robbie’s songs. They did stuff off Jericho and High On The Hog, which was good.
Buena onda o no cuñado Jano
It's the Band, going on without Robbie. Rick got up to at least 350 pounds and then commited suicide. Why couldn't any of them leave Robbie behind and not repeat those songs. Yes, those songs were theirs.It didn't help them. Love them 🥰. However, go on or stop. I guess you can tell, I thought Robbie was the main guy. They were a band, of course. But why do this? The Band was over. Over.
Jeez. The band without Robbie?
Playing 2nd class joints all across our great country that would have them. What a fucking life.
Rick died in his sleep in 1999, he did get very heavy, too bad, he was very good looking when he was younger. Richard committed suicide in 1986.