Ianthe is right about the outlook of the 1960s. In and after 1968 all optimism previously generated by the Civil Rights Movement, President Kennedy, and the Summer of Love, was shattered. With the back-to-back assassinations of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy, having been preceded five years earlier by the assassination of JFK, everything went straight to hell. Woodstock was the closing anthem of the decade. Still, in my opinion, it is the greatest decade in American history. And the music still holds up like a rock!
Mrs McGuinn seems like a very, very nice lady...got to check the book out. Surprised Roger hasn't written a memoir; he's always struck most people who know his work as very articulate and insightful.
@@thomaspick4123According to the book, Roger was growing increasingly distant over time and eventually fell in love with a big boob blonde named Linda. Actually, in Ianthe's account Roger comes across as cold and narcissistic.
Thank you! Ianthe, do you remember the black&white TV show Shindig (where the Brit magazine's name can only have come from)in the early to mid-60's? Where The Action Is and Hullabaloo, same thing. They always had dancing go-go girls frugging jerking twisting ponying mashed potato--ing &c. in cages above the lip-syncing performers, sometimes themed (for instance dancing w/guns for Bobby Fuller doing "I Fought The Law"). Which of these shows were the Byrds on, and did they have those choreographed dancing girls?
I remember in 2010, when asked, Roger McGuinn said that he would never write a book about his life "because if I told the truth, people would sue me!" I wonder if he might change his mind knowing that this book about his early life and career written by his exe exists.
@@munimathbypeterfelton6251 A friend told me about it ages ago. I don't know why he hasn't published it himself. The only thing I can guess is that it was a book *proposal* that no publisher picked up, and through the grapevine/telephone game became a book in itself. Someone should ask him about it.
You know, I offered a link to a video featuring Marty Stuart talking about how he became acquainted with the family of a deceased member of the byrds and would later become curator of "the sound" of the byrds by acquiring the signature guitar which effected that sound. Anyone who hears it and knows the byrds signature sound can identify it immediately. I have seen Marty Stuart live, he plays that guitar at every show of his that I have seen and tells the story behind it. I would include that link for the benefit of every "fan" here, but my comment keeps getting removed. My feeling is however that is happening, I am not getting canceled, Marty Stuart is getting canceled. More than that, by removing that comment twice now, the memory of the byrds past present living and dead is being canceled. So I will not be including that link. Sick part is that it is a RUclips link.
Marty Stuart just also happens to LOVE the Byrds sound, which is probably why he managed to obtain the guitar,... anyway if You believe something has magic in it,... then it does !
until recently, youtube wouldn't allow any links in the comments. But, now they do. Here is the link you were talking about and you're right, it's fantastic. Peace out.
@@shawnriffhard YT is weird, .. original set up as a way for people to share videos with friends or people with similar interests,... sometimes they seem to let one share links and other times not. what gives??? now the link is gone. try using search terms ..
The guitar you are referring to is the late Clarence White's telecaster. Clarence was not an 'original ' Byrd joining them in 1968 and stayed right till their break up in 1973. It is an iconic instrument as it featured the prototype b bender that Clarence and the Byrds 3rd drummer Gene Parsons invented and was patented. Marty bought the guitar from Clarences widow Susie White. Clarence did not use it initially when he joined the band , and it was on the album 'Ballad of Easy Rider' he first recorded with it. However in live appearances he may well have used it earlier than that. Of course Roger McGuinn played a Rickenbacker 12 string right from the start of the Byrds and that did give the band a distinctive sound......so really there were two instruments which were unique to the group
After i first heard the Byrds and saw Roger with his little square glasses I figured he was just the coolest guy to ever walk in shoe leather. I was only a 16 year old kid then and I knew I just had to have a Rick 12 string which I never did get. I seriously considered writing Roger and asking if I could play Rhythm Guitar for the Byrds. I figured I was as good as Crosby and maybe better. I never did it but I did consider it.
@@lastnamefirst4035 I smiled as yes Crosby was a pain..but he did write several of their best songs and was a hec of an innovator...besides..I would have loved to have played in The Byrds..and in my dreams I have done! :D
@@lastnamefirst4035 No Crosby, no 'See You', no 'Everybody's Been Burned', no 'It Happens Each Day', no 'Lady Friend', no 'Draft Morning', no 'Tribal Gathering', no 'Dolphin's Smile'. Best he stayed (for as long as he did) really.
The interviewer is so 'cringeworthy' ...When McGuinn mentions 'sweetheart of the rodeo' ( a landmark album ) the interviewer has no clue what she's talking about...lol ..I like 'Jim's' ex though..seems like a nice lady.
Why do they ask a young woman to interview a rock legend from an era she is unfamiliar with? McGuinn was coming off a Bobby Darin tour when he formed the Byrds. Look elsewhere for the truth. This only means her settlement was on the cheap side...."a time to ....reminisce, a time to kill."
I have never heard such a poor interviewer...if it wasn't for Ianthes volunteering topics and situations there would be no interview...who is this "wanna be?"
I couldn't agree more. I kept waiting to hear some history on McGuinn and the Byrds. This broad had NO idea what to ask. Who gives a shit about Harrison Ford and Brando?
In the interviewer’s defense, Iolanthe wasn’t very outgoing or lively (yes, she’s much older) which makes it extra hard to engage well on TV with limited time. That, plus I’m sure the interviewer is a generalist who has little time to prep for every guest. She might need to go do the weather segment in 10 minutes.
@@georgeyesthal6560 Really! When she went off on that tangent about Harrison Ford, I was saying “No, no, get back to Harrison…George! Far more interesting, I’ll bet than remodeling the kitchen.
I will never understand why people keep trying to coerce me into liking the Beatles. They haven't put out even one song that I really like. Even the Byrds have done that a couple times at least.
@@MIKECNW I was trying to say she is sharing the better memories because in her case,she doesn't want to badmouth him just because they couldn't continue as a couple.While cruel behavior is sadly widespread,some people end relationships for other reason.This is just one possibility.
"It was a tragic time, but the music pulled us through."
All I can say is: yeah man.
Ianthe is right about the outlook of the 1960s. In and after 1968 all optimism previously generated by the Civil Rights Movement, President Kennedy, and the Summer of Love, was shattered. With the back-to-back assassinations of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy, having been preceded five years earlier by the assassination of JFK, everything went straight to hell. Woodstock was the closing anthem of the decade. Still, in my opinion, it is the greatest decade in American history. And the music still holds up like a rock!
Okay, boomer 🙄
Lyndon Johnson was the worst President ever, until now.
@@lucasoheyze4597 So sorry you missed it. But it's not your fault you're young.
1968 was the year that Americans lived through more history than they could handle======G. plimpton
@@lucasoheyze4597 Okay Millenial.
Wow , What an interesting lady . She was right there . Must have been amazing. God bless her.
When I first saw the link I thought that was Rogers wife and I said wow being a rockstar really does pay off no disrespect to Mrs. McGuinn though
don't be shallow.
Boy, She must have heard an awful lot of cool things going on. What a great life. Sorry she and Roger didn't stay together.
@Negus Negast Got him a high maintenance Gal now!
@@jaya.0069 that's not good.
Mrs McGuinn seems like a very, very nice lady...got to check the book out. Surprised Roger hasn't written a memoir; he's always struck most people who know his work as very articulate and insightful.
This lady gives 3 times the interview McGuinn does. He'd need to do a book.
Why did this couple get divorced?
@@thomaspick4123According to the book, Roger was growing increasingly distant over time and eventually fell in love with a big boob blonde named Linda. Actually, in Ianthe's account Roger comes across as cold and narcissistic.
Thank you! Ianthe, do you remember the black&white TV show Shindig (where the Brit magazine's name can only have come from)in the early to mid-60's? Where The Action Is and Hullabaloo, same thing. They always had dancing go-go girls frugging jerking twisting ponying mashed potato--ing &c. in cages above the lip-syncing performers, sometimes themed (for instance dancing w/guns for Bobby Fuller doing "I Fought The Law"). Which of these shows were the Byrds on, and did they have those choreographed dancing girls?
Look for the show 'Shivaree' and the Shivaree dancers.
I realy like her.much respect
I remember in 2010, when asked, Roger McGuinn said that he would never write a book about his life "because if I told the truth, people would sue me!" I wonder if he might change his mind knowing that this book about his early life and career written by his exe exists.
Roger wrote a book ("Byrd's Eye View"). No publisher picked it up.
@@benmeltzer Really? Wow, that's too bad. When did McGuinn write that unpublished book? He could definitely self-publish it today if he wanted to.
@@munimathbypeterfelton6251 A friend told me about it ages ago. I don't know why he hasn't published it himself. The only thing I can guess is that it was a book *proposal* that no publisher picked up, and through the grapevine/telephone game became a book in itself. Someone should ask him about it.
You know, I offered a link to a video featuring Marty Stuart talking about how he became acquainted with the family of a deceased member of the byrds and would later become curator of "the sound" of the byrds by acquiring the signature guitar which effected that sound. Anyone who hears it and knows the byrds signature sound can identify it immediately. I have seen Marty Stuart live, he plays that guitar at every show of his that I have seen and tells the story behind it. I would include that link for the benefit of every "fan" here, but my comment keeps getting removed. My feeling is however that is happening, I am not getting canceled, Marty Stuart is getting canceled. More than that, by removing that comment twice now, the memory of the byrds past present living and dead is being canceled. So I will not be including that link. Sick part is that it is a RUclips link.
Marty Stuart just also happens to LOVE the Byrds sound, which is probably why he managed to obtain the guitar,... anyway if You believe something has magic in it,... then it does !
until recently, youtube wouldn't allow any links in the comments. But, now they do. Here is the link you were talking about and you're right, it's fantastic. Peace out.
@@shawnriffhard YT is weird, .. original set up as a way for people to share videos with friends or people with similar interests,... sometimes they seem to let one share links and other times not. what gives??? now the link is gone. try using search terms ..
The guitar you are referring to is the late Clarence White's telecaster. Clarence was not an 'original ' Byrd joining them in 1968 and stayed right till their break up in 1973. It is an iconic instrument as it featured the prototype b bender that Clarence and the Byrds 3rd drummer Gene Parsons invented and was patented. Marty bought the guitar from Clarences widow Susie White. Clarence did not use it initially when he joined the band , and it was on the album 'Ballad of Easy Rider' he first recorded with it. However in live appearances he may well have used it earlier than that. Of course Roger McGuinn played a Rickenbacker 12 string right from the start of the Byrds and that did give the band a distinctive sound......so really there were two instruments which were unique to the group
Harrison Ford was in the Force 10 From Navarone and then seemed to disappear. That's when he earned a living as a carpenter. Star Wars ended that.
Are you sure? He starred in Force 10 from Navarone (1978)
@@FuturePast2019 My bad, Force 10.
After i first heard the Byrds and saw Roger with his little square glasses I figured he was just the coolest guy to ever walk in shoe leather. I was only a 16 year old kid then and I knew I just had to have a Rick 12 string which I never did get. I seriously considered writing Roger and asking if I could play Rhythm Guitar for the Byrds. I figured I was as good as Crosby and maybe better. I never did it but I did consider it.
@@lastnamefirst4035 I smiled as yes Crosby was a pain..but he did write several of their best songs and was a hec of an innovator...besides..I would have loved to have played in The Byrds..and in my dreams I have done! :D
@@cliveedwards2958 Dunno man..."Winn, Stills & Nash" doesn't have the same pizzazz...but musically, maybe could have done OK!
@@wyattdoodat :D
@@lastnamefirst4035 No Crosby, no 'See You', no 'Everybody's Been Burned', no 'It Happens Each Day', no 'Lady Friend', no 'Draft Morning', no 'Tribal Gathering', no 'Dolphin's Smile'. Best he stayed (for as long as he did) really.
Wow
Why didn't she call it "In The Wyngs"?
I like that idea!!
Did she really need the money, yech!
It's a play of words n letters like the Byrd's..in the wings. On the side.. alongside..duh
I wonder if she is aware that Roger McGuinn and Harrison Ford were born on the exact same day, July 13, 1942, and both in Chicago.
The interviewer is so 'cringeworthy' ...When McGuinn mentions 'sweetheart of the rodeo' ( a landmark album ) the interviewer has no clue what she's talking about...lol ..I like 'Jim's' ex though..seems like a nice lady.
Why do they ask a young woman to interview a rock legend from an era she is unfamiliar with? McGuinn was coming off a Bobby Darin tour when he formed the Byrds. Look elsewhere for the truth. This only means her settlement was on the cheap side...."a time to ....reminisce, a time to kill."
I have never heard such a poor interviewer...if it wasn't for Ianthes volunteering topics and situations there would be no interview...who is this "wanna be?"
I couldn't agree more. I kept waiting to hear some history on McGuinn and the Byrds. This broad had NO idea what to ask. Who gives a shit about Harrison Ford and Brando?
@@georgeyesthal6560 movie star gossip always trumps rock star gossip. That was the interviewer's mentality.
Yes I wanted to hear about McGuinn dropping acid and sitting in his bath tub playing wild jazz influenced solos...apparently he did just that !
In the interviewer’s defense, Iolanthe wasn’t very outgoing or lively (yes, she’s much older) which makes it extra hard to engage well on TV with limited time.
That, plus I’m sure the interviewer is a generalist who has little time to prep for every guest. She might need to go do the weather segment in 10 minutes.
@@georgeyesthal6560 Really! When she went off on that tangent about Harrison Ford, I was saying “No, no, get back to Harrison…George! Far more interesting, I’ll bet than remodeling the kitchen.
Tina - you're a star!
what a nice lady
Reading a chapter may have been more interesting!!
Can't find this book for sale anywhere. I bet this lady was a knockout when she was younger.
I think that’s her in two or three still photos in this video. Look for the petite dark haired girl.
A time of changes and the music was a Oasis
Does she talk about Dylan?
VERY marginally.
She's just talking about actors.
Unfortunately, she got sidetracked from the subject, important musicians in an important era, of whom Ianthe had personal knowledge.
At the end of the day, just starstruck gossip, put it within the context of today, nothing much changes.right?
Had no idea she’s Tucson
Unfortunately, this is trivial inconsequential tosh.
you're right Emma
I agree... very mundane.
I'm afraid to say you are probably right..she didnt actually play in The Byrds...so yes..its gonna be title tattle
didn't want to give the book away, silly
@@joeblevins1058 No point in creating a video with that title then, silly.
Tell me. Not.. The story's...
You will never understand.
Interviewer.....ouch, cringe worthy
Wally Cox sold his house to Peter Tork ..and the parties continued!!
It's on my morning jog.
compelling interview just over whelming
Awful accent the presenter has.
Seriously. The word is "chaos", not "chaoticness" as the interviewer uttered.
Cousin Dodi
I will never understand why people keep trying to coerce me into liking the Beatles. They haven't put out even one song that I really like. Even the Byrds have done that a couple times at least.
What songs?
Oh behave! 🙄
😂😂😂 r u serious?
Not even one song? They may have been a bit overrated but I do like some of their songs.
I'm more or less with you. So many Beatles songs, especially early ones, were just silly. I did like a few, but none as much as some Byrds work.
sexy interviewer lol
was this Roger's wife who was seeing David Carradine while still married to Roger??
No, that was the blonde Linda!
Hell this is boring.
If you're not married to him anymore, why bother going on TV telling about so many great memories?
One possibility,only one, is she doesn't think he deserves a hatchet job like some might.Just couldn't continue as a couple,perhaps
@@Mrcssznh what does that mean?
@@MIKECNW I was trying to say she is sharing the better memories because in her case,she doesn't want to badmouth him just because they couldn't continue as a couple.While cruel behavior is sadly widespread,some people end relationships for other reason.This is just one possibility.
@@Mrcssznh She is pretty harsh in the book!🤣🤣🤣
Does she not know that Marlon Brando and Wally Cox were a couple? They both had their ashes scattered in a desert in CA after their deaths.
The classier thing you could do is not talk about your marriage to a celebrity.