I love your reactions. I would love to see you react to Johnny and Edgar winters version of tobacco road live from 1970 to unappreciated musical geniuses from back in the day
"He's got.....is it a bit of rasp or something?" LOLOLOL Yeah, Joe's got about as much rasp as a locomotive tearing by you at 60 mph has got "choo-choo"
Dear lady i am a grumpy 62 years german.Now when i first was able to listen any woodstock i was about 10 years old. at that time hardly anyone owned a tape recorder. still there was one place in my hometown in germany playing this kind of music. no radio station was playing this. so i sneeked in , got blown away big time and got my first kiss ever by the girl i was adoring that days, never ever i will forget that moment, well it was very very innocent but i remember thinking : If this is love i am in love 😃 i was a very happy "man" greets from bavaria
Joe Cocker felt it his whole life - voice like a gravel truck, body movements like he's just stepped on a high voltage cable, and god damn does that combo work.
Joe Cocker puts his whole body into the song like some sort of saintly singing savant leaving the audience with no other option but to feel awe. You will love 'You are so beautiful' by Joe, it will melt your heart.
I can feel what he's singing. I want to play music like that. I guess I need to practice. This is inspiring. I want to feel the music like that. But sometimes when I play music the people I play with don't feel it.
I do believe he had Synaesthesia and did in fact FEEL the sound. This is why a lot of musicians can't exist offstage. It hurts to hear discord and aharmony.
Nice reaction! When Joe died in 2014 he lived on a dog sanctuary ranch in Colorado. When he passed there was a great story in one of the Colorado newspapers titled "Just A Regular Joe". He would go into his town and shoot pool with the other old ranchers and he also spent a lot of time growing tomatos. He went out peacefully ..
It’s one of Woodstock’s great numbers. Backstory is the girl singers missed the connection in to the show. So the guys sang backup. If you want to hear it live with everyone n filmed much better, see the version from his concert film Mad Dogs and Englishmen!! That film, maybe moreso than Woodstock is the best video document of the real hippie generation. Also, on the original record Jimmy Page played guitar!
Hey. Have you seen the live video with female backup singers ( that's why the guys singing here are doing it falsetto) and Leon Russell on guitar behind Joe....and wearing a stove top hat ?! Brilliant.
At about 5:55 into your reaction, check the guy on the left side of the screen getting the groove on! Is this where playing air guitar got popular?? Better believe it!!
Joe is from my home City, Sheffield in the North of England. He was a humble gas fitter and remained humble throughout his whole life. Joe didn't sing, he didn't perform, he LIVED music, his movements were purely involuntary. I only got to see him once, but he was amazing. I envy you watching this for the first time ever...
Seen Joe a yr before he died boy!! When he sang the hair on my kneck stood I knew then I'm in the presence of god wow!!! Ive seen hundreds of concerts from kiss Pantera heart to name a few let me tell u Joe was so dam good it was a night I will never forget a true true true soul sent to help our soul love u Joe thank u for touching my soul and millions of others rip!!!!!!
As the Joni Mitchell classic says, "By the time we got to Woodstock, we were half a million strong." So that day Joe had all the friends he needed. And as the old farmer on whose land it all took place told the crowd, "You've shown the world that young people can get together for three days of peace, love and music. And ONLY peace, love and music." And the whole thing happened only one month after we landed men on the Moon! 1969, a year without limits !! Glad you enjoyed it, Ms. Rogue.
im not taking ANYTHING away from joe. he was a rare talent and I'm a fan but he wasn't just feeling the music here... he was LIT. like most others that day.
@@davidroberts4769 what he is saying is...that Joe absolutely made the song his own even though the Beatles wrote and recorded it....Paul McCartney even said that its now the Beatles doing a cover of Joe's song
check out the version from the Mad Dogs & Englishmen tour, with Leon Russell leading the band and the Rita Coolidge Ladies Vocal Ensemble providing the backing vocals. phenomenal.
My brother and I hitchhiked from Indiana to Woodstock I was 16 and he was 17 we both joined the Marine Corps in 1970. He was a helicopter mechanic and I was an Arial Observer (cat killer) in Vietnam, he rotated back to the world without a scratch I was shot down twice.
That rasp is something of a combination "smoking" and toking of the time, but its also the pipes. You see he has that barrel chest that can belt out notes over a somewhat constrained larynx. His rocking out is something ppl often do when they are totally immersed in whatever. Its very much like you part of the music not just performing or singing it. Thats what made soul, soul.
The quivering falsetto was wonderful Joe Cocker literally incredible in the true sense of the word . Great God I wish I could turn my back on this world and go back to those times.
There's a story behind the rasp. Apparently late for a gig and not wanting to let his audience down, Joe chewed through a mountain to cut down the journey time. Some of the gravel from that fateful night remained in his voice. Joe cocker is also unique as he is the only known human to have their soul in their mouth.
I saw Joe Cocker in 1970 at the depot in mpls. He did this song! On believable! I will ever forget it. Rest in piece Joe. It was a few months after wood stock
Simply, one of the greatest live performances ever. It never ceases to captivate....as you say...imagine being in the audience at Woodstock and hearing this...phew!
Joe was a cover Artist who made every song he covered his own. He was the voice of a Generation. We lost him just a couple years ago, but Joe will be with us forever.
Joe was physically possessed by the music when he sang. The studio version used female backup singers, at the live concert they guys tried to simulate that, kinda, sorta. RIP Joe, the world misses you.
there are some people that sing from a place soooo deep that it reaches you sooooo deep.. Joe was definitely one of those singers. The Beatles may have written this song, but it became joe's, Your reactions are priceless.... your joy is contagious
I WAS IN THE CROWD AT THE WINTERS END FESTIVAL IN ORLANDO IN 1970 AND JOE WAS JUST ONE OF MANY THAT PERFORMED ALL WEEKEND LONG 250,000 PEOPLE. LIFE WAS GOOD.
You belonged in that crowd, Royce! You were feeling this! That's good ole Joe Cocker for you.... He always sang with his whole body, very dynamic! Super reaction!
speaking of woodstock you should watch joni mitchell live in studio explaining the backstory of the song (she wrote it) and performing “Woodstock “ so sweet
Joe was a massive star back in the day, his voice was something different the raspiness didn't draw you into his voice it dragged you in kicking and screaming but what a voice.
The backup singers are supposed to be female (that's the studio version). The didn't have the backup singers at the concert so the band members tried their best to fill that role. It doesn't really work very well lol, but it doesn't take away from Joe's performance.
I would say- listen again. The guy trying to sing the solo female part, no. But when the rest of the band tries the "..by with, with a little help, from my.friends.." they mostly stay in tune and someone is hitting that high note too.
I was in high school when this movie came out. Had never heard of Joe Cocker but when I saw this it blew my mind. Saw him in the early 2000s with the Guess Who and he still had it.
He knew this was a once in a lifetime moment and gave a once in a lifetime performance that is one of the most iconic moments in rock history. For fun you should find a link to the video of Cocker performing on the old Saturday Night Live with John Belushi aping him. They do a duet. No one contorted while singing like Joe! Blessings.
Everyone at Woodstock was 'off their heads' Joe a little more than most. He never changed with age either, but this has become such a memorable performance. Go Joe!!!!!
While it's been discussed for years (medical, autism), his body movements was simply how his body reacted to the music around him. A free spirit that let the music take him over, completely.
I read an interview with Joe in The Guardian newspaper and he said exactly what you just did. When he saw himself on RUclips he was a bit shocked. He didn't do it intentionally, or consciously. It was just Joe being Joe.
You just watched one of the greatest live performances I've ever seen in 60 years of enjoying music.
DAMN!
His back up singers never got there due to the traffic so these guys did an incredible job. So Joe live after this and he was amazing!
Those of us so fortunate to be there, just stood there in total shock.
Yes, also there. Hard to see and listen everyone but Joe and Santana (Soul Sacrifice) made Woodstock
I'm jealous!
@wesedwards1128 Had a blast playing in the mud, though
Once Joe Cocker decided to cover this it ceased to be a Beatles song and became his own. One of the greatest soul singers of all time.
Paul McCartney even said so.
royalties suggest otherwise, but cocker killed it
It’s one of the rare instances where a someone covers another band and actually does the song better.
Nunca mais os beatles cantaram!!!!
Portuguese!!!!!!!
Someone stole something from some scousers .....
Just watching Joe has always been an experience in itself!
His voice was raspy whether he was singing or talking. He was my favorite musician and still is.
I caint never get sad no more. A reporter asked John Lennon how he felt about Joe doing this Beatles song.
Lennon replied, it's his song now.
Macca too.😊
This is where air guitar comes from. Lukcy enough to see him when i was 8 in Brisbane ❤❤❤. Never forget that
Joe cocker had more feeling and soul and emotion in his little finger than all of the artist today put together will never be another like Joe
I love your reactions. I would love to see you react to Johnny and Edgar winters version of tobacco road live from 1970 to unappreciated musical geniuses from back in the day
You are praising Joe by denying the latent that is there today. You are wrong.
@@Poetic_Justice1962 He's not denying it. He's saying the "talent" today, or lack thereof, can't equal Joe, even after over 50 years.
@@johnnygaffney4089 And he is correct.
I was going to say you would NEVER EVER see a performer put out that king of emotion today.
1970 and still i enjoy his songs.
1969
The greatest scream in Rock history.
You can’t do his music without the visual of how much he throws himself into every song
One of the best singers to ever live, hands down
Beauty in power and desperation. Just beautiful!
He is a very old soul and a brilliant artest peace to you
I have read that when the Beatles heard Joe's version of their song,they just gave it to him because they like it better than their own.
The greatest live concert ever!
Once in a lifetime a genius comes along,that was the incredible Joe cocker
It was a Beatles song but he owned it. Paul McCartney said that song was his. So much soul.
"He's got.....is it a bit of rasp or something?" LOLOLOL Yeah, Joe's got about as much rasp as a locomotive tearing by you at 60 mph has got "choo-choo"
He sings every song like this.
Joe was beyond amazing....I miss him and his
beautiful voice....lyrics tattooed on my body
Dear lady
i am a grumpy 62 years german.Now when i first was able to listen any woodstock i was about 10 years old. at that time hardly anyone owned a tape recorder. still there was one place in my hometown in germany playing this kind of music. no radio station was playing this. so i sneeked in , got blown away big time and got my first kiss ever by the girl i was adoring that days, never ever i will forget that moment, well it was very very innocent but i remember thinking : If this is love i am in love 😃 i was a very happy "man"
greets from bavaria
Joe doesn't feel the music. He lives it. He IS music.
tanother. who used to hangout and and record in lin in little muscle. shoals Alabama 😊out
as was the reason the ruling stones and
The Letter, You Can Leave Your Hat On, Up Where We Belong… the well is deep with him. Soft and soulful.
You Can Leave Your Hat On - great fun Cocker song
AWWW MAN....YOU GOOOO JOE!!! ANYBODY ELSE REMEMBERS THE WONDER YEARS.....MAN.
One of the greatest live performances ever!
Check out "Woman to Woman" by Joe Cocker, and you'll hear his falsetto, as well as a melody that was used for a well known 90s song! 😁
Joe Cocker felt it his whole life - voice like a gravel truck, body movements like he's just stepped on a high voltage cable, and god damn does that combo work.
He said he was so stoned on acid at that concert!!! 😁
Joe Cocker puts his whole body into the song like some sort of saintly singing savant leaving the audience with no other option but to feel awe. You will love 'You are so beautiful' by Joe, it will melt your heart.
That song was the only thing I could do on karaoke when I lived in Japan because I can't sing and really had to be blasted before I would even try.
I can feel what he's singing. I want to play music like that. I guess I need to practice. This is inspiring. I want to feel the music like that. But sometimes when I play music the people I play with don't feel it.
I do believe he had Synaesthesia and did in fact FEEL the sound. This is why a lot of musicians can't exist offstage. It hurts to hear discord and aharmony.
a saintly savant. I like that If you can't be moved in that piece you gotta be dead.
Young person sees freedom with own eyes for the first time 🍿
Nice reaction! When Joe died in 2014 he lived on a dog sanctuary ranch in Colorado. When he passed there was a great story in one of the Colorado newspapers titled "Just A Regular Joe". He would go into his town and shoot pool with the other old ranchers and he also spent a lot of time growing tomatos. He went out peacefully ..
J
The man alone emits music from every fiber of his body and being.
He doesnt feel himself, he feels the music.
Yes, imagine being in that crowd with 400,000 of you closest friends! Also, he did not invent air guitar but this performance really popularized it.
It was like taking this song and putting it into a 3D photo!
I love, Love, LOVE Joe. He’s such a Spaz, in the most affectionate way.
It’s one of Woodstock’s great numbers.
Backstory is the girl singers missed the connection in to the show. So the guys sang backup.
If you want to hear it live with everyone n filmed much better, see the version from his concert film Mad Dogs and Englishmen!! That film, maybe moreso than Woodstock is the best video document of the real hippie generation.
Also, on the original record Jimmy Page played guitar!
That imperfection makes this performance all the more endearing. RIP Joe.
Delta Lady from that one absolutely destroys me
I didn’t know Paige played in that. Mad Dogs is the best. RIP Cocker. RIP Russell.
Hey. Have you seen the live video with female backup singers ( that's why the guys singing here are doing it falsetto) and Leon Russell on guitar behind Joe....and wearing a stove top hat ?! Brilliant.
@@elisaabolafia9542 I HAVE!! 🙂 Agree!! See that whole concert!! See who all was in the entourage. True hippie era spirit at its best!
At about 5:55 into your reaction, check the guy on the left side of the screen getting the groove on! Is this where playing air guitar got popular?? Better believe it!!
Joe is from my home City, Sheffield in the North of England. He was a humble gas fitter and remained humble throughout his whole life. Joe didn't sing, he didn't perform, he LIVED music, his movements were purely involuntary. I only got to see him once, but he was amazing. I envy you watching this for the first time ever...
Goosebumps each time I see this...
This might be the G. O. A. T of all of the live performances.
Great Presentation . And By The Way , You Can Leave Your Hat On .
Joe sang with nothing BUT emotion his entire career. It’s rumored his soul and body are still undulating since his death in 2014. R.I.P. Joe 🙏
Seen Joe a yr before he died boy!! When he sang the hair on my kneck stood I knew then I'm in the presence of god wow!!! Ive seen hundreds of concerts from kiss Pantera heart to name a few let me tell u Joe was so dam good it was a night I will never forget a true true true soul sent to help our soul love u Joe thank u for touching my soul and millions of others rip!!!!!!
The kicker....he sings EVERY song that way.
The perfect compliment to this is Joe near the end of his career singing "You are so Beautiful to Me". Older but like fine wine.
One of the greatest singers, all about raw emotions like his voice
Joe Cocker is great and I love his T-rex arms when he sings.
Ladies and gentlemen welcome to Woodstock, where everything is born.
In loving memory of one of the best ever :Mister Joe Cocker!
My favorite musican.Bluesy and soulful voice.I grew up listening to this!❤
As the Joni Mitchell classic says, "By the time we got to Woodstock, we were half a million strong." So that day Joe had all the friends he needed. And as the old farmer on whose land it all took place told the crowd, "You've shown the world that young people can get together for three days of peace, love and music. And ONLY peace, love and music." And the whole thing happened only one month after we landed men on the Moon! 1969, a year without limits !! Glad you enjoyed it, Ms. Rogue.
You'd be surprised how different it was from the original. I'm a big beatles fan but this is by far my favorite version
im not taking ANYTHING away from joe. he was a rare talent and I'm a fan but he wasn't just feeling the music here... he was LIT. like most others that day.
Absolutely the BEST cover of a Beatles song EVER
Possibly alongside John Farnham's 'Help'
This was written to Joe Cocker. The Beatles covered this song after the success!
@@renepauly3344 BS. The Beatles wrote it and recorded it in 1967. Joe Cocker recorded his COVER version of it in 1969
@@davidroberts4769 what he is saying is...that Joe absolutely made the song his own even though the Beatles wrote and recorded it....Paul McCartney even said that its now the Beatles doing a cover of Joe's song
@@davidroberts4769 He was joking🙄
check out the version from the Mad Dogs & Englishmen tour, with Leon Russell leading the band and the Rita Coolidge Ladies Vocal Ensemble providing the backing vocals. phenomenal.
My brother and I hitchhiked from Indiana to Woodstock I was 16 and he was 17 we both joined the Marine Corps in 1970. He was a helicopter mechanic and I was an Arial Observer (cat killer) in Vietnam, he rotated back to the world without a scratch I was shot down twice.
Thank you for your service, sir!
Joe Cocker the Yorkshire plumber, who'd have thought ! His voice is gritty
'you can leave your hat on" Great song.(love your reactions)
That rasp is something of a combination "smoking" and toking of the time, but its also the pipes. You see he has that barrel chest that can belt out notes over a somewhat constrained larynx. His rocking out is something ppl often do when they are totally immersed in whatever. Its very much like you part of the music not just performing or singing it. Thats what made soul, soul.
The quivering falsetto was wonderful Joe Cocker literally incredible in the true sense of the word . Great God I wish I could turn my back on this world and go back to those times.
Mr Joe Cocker, top 5 live shows I have attended. RIP
There's a story behind the rasp. Apparently late for a gig and not wanting to let his audience down, Joe chewed through a mountain to cut down the journey time. Some of the gravel from that fateful night remained in his voice. Joe cocker is also unique as he is the only known human to have their soul in their mouth.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 stop .... please .... can't ... breathe ... 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Steve Parker- nicely put !
🤣😂🤣😂🤣
Yeah man. True story I hope
I saw Joe Cocker in 1970 at the depot in mpls. He did this song! On believable! I will ever forget it. Rest in piece Joe. It was a few months after wood stock
To me, this is one of the most iconic live performances of all time.
No one was more soulful than Mr. JOE COCKER!!!
Simply, one of the greatest live performances ever. It never ceases to captivate....as you say...imagine being in the audience at Woodstock and hearing this...phew!
The great Joe Cocker. One of the best, if not the best, voice of the last seventy years & he just kept on getting better until his passing.
Joe was a cover Artist who made every song he covered his own. He was the voice of a Generation. We lost him just a couple years ago, but Joe will be with us forever.
I met Joe late in his life 2007ish. Super cool and gracious and he still sounded great
It's so much fun seeing someone of your generation enjoying the music we grew up with (I'm 69). Thanks for the great presentations you do.
Great performance of dear Prudence done by Joe cocker as well
Joe was physically possessed by the music when he sang. The studio version used female backup singers, at the live concert they guys tried to simulate that, kinda, sorta. RIP Joe, the world misses you.
Band pulled up their jeans REAL high when the female backup singers couldn't get there
I went to see Joe Cocker four times between the 70’s and the 80’s. He never disappoints.
there are some people that sing from a place soooo deep that it reaches you sooooo deep.. Joe was definitely one of those singers. The Beatles may have written this song, but it became joe's, Your reactions are priceless.... your joy is contagious
Need to listen to his song
Unchain my heart
You can leave your hat on
Joe Cocker, the male version of Janis Joplin!
I WAS IN THE CROWD AT THE WINTERS END FESTIVAL IN ORLANDO IN 1970 AND JOE WAS JUST ONE OF MANY THAT PERFORMED ALL WEEKEND LONG 250,000 PEOPLE. LIFE WAS GOOD.
You belonged in that crowd, Royce! You were feeling this! That's good ole Joe Cocker for you.... He always sang with his whole body, very dynamic! Super reaction!
Joe Cocker Legend!!! This show was at Woodstock 1969. The whole festival was a UNFORGETTABLE EXPERIENCE!!!
speaking of woodstock you should watch joni mitchell live in studio explaining the backstory of the song (she wrote it) and performing “Woodstock “ so sweet
ruclips.net/video/cRjQCvfcXn0/видео.html
Grow up with Joe crocker cause of my parents.. They are big fans and we're on so much concerts.. Still got goosebumps..
Got to love Joe. Every song done with every ounce of his being.
Never leave home without your air guitar...
She needs to hear "Up Where We Belong" with Joe and Jennifer Warners, for the movie "An Officer and A Gentleman" the song won an Academy Award.
You are SO beautiful... By Joe Cocker. You should definitely check that out. The epitamy of SOUL.
The cameraman trying to track Joe Cocker earned hazardous duty pay for this one.
Joe was a massive star back in the day, his voice was something different the raspiness didn't draw you into his voice it dragged you in kicking and screaming but what a voice.
The backup singers are supposed to be female (that's the studio version). The didn't have the backup singers at the concert so the band members tried their best to fill that role. It doesn't really work very well lol, but it doesn't take away from Joe's performance.
That imperfection makes this performance all the more endearing. RIP Joe.
They were stuck in the traffic gridlock and could not make it on time.
I would say- listen again. The guy trying to sing the solo female part, no. But when the rest of the band tries the "..by with, with a little help, from my.friends.." they mostly stay in tune and someone is hitting that high note too.
That explains that! I never knew. It always was my favorite part because it's such an odd choice.
One of the greatest covers of a Beatles track ever.
For this song, it's the best cover ever. RIP Joe ❣
I was in high school when this movie came out. Had never heard of Joe Cocker but when I saw this it blew my mind. Saw him in the early 2000s with the Guess Who and he still had it.
He knew this was a once in a lifetime moment and gave a once in a lifetime performance that is one of the most iconic moments in rock history. For fun you should find a link to the video of Cocker performing on the old Saturday Night Live with John Belushi aping him. They do a duet. No one contorted while singing like Joe!
Blessings.
10 cameras wouldn’t be enough to keep with Joe !
The man put his soul into that performance
Everyone at Woodstock was 'off their heads' Joe a little more than most. He never changed with age either, but this has become such a memorable performance. Go Joe!!!!!
While it's been discussed for years (medical, autism), his body movements was simply how his body reacted to the music around him. A free spirit that let the music take him over, completely.
I read an interview with Joe in The Guardian newspaper and he said exactly what you just did. When he saw himself on RUclips he was a bit shocked. He didn't do it intentionally, or consciously. It was just Joe being Joe.
I appreciate the emotional sensitivity expressed in your eyes.