I know exactly what you mean such a mythic time in music one of the last kernels of music from the 1800s being played in a truly authentic form but being slightly one foot in the future that's always what I've admired about the expansion of blues from like the twenties and the 30s and how it just kept growing as we hit the 60s and even today there is never been an era in blues music where you can say that wasn't very good everything the blues does for the most part as a whole is incredibly authentic
Ad free RUclips is included with a RUclips Music subscription. Best $10 a month I spend. Worth every penny. And as for "ad revenue reaching the survivors", this stuff is in the public domain. Advertising is how RUclips pays the bills.
The band backing Rufus Thomas was the re-formed Bar-Kays. Most of the original band were killed with Otis Redding in December,1967. The trumpet player you see is Ben Cauley. He was the only survivor of the crash. The bass player you see briefly is James Alexander, also an original member. Otis Redding's twin engine plane only carried a small number of people. That meant one member of the band had to fly commercial and they took turns. The night the plane crashed was James Alexander's turn to fly commercial... RIP Bar-Kays. You guys were great.
It was a great time in the music scene in memphis, with booker t, the barkays, the sons of willie mitchell, rufus, carla, eddie floyd, Bobby whitlock, and so many more. Glad I was there to enjoy it
Damn, Ben was on a Doc i watched not to long ago..Kid's of a prominent Memphis studio musician, then a owned a studio..Kid's run it now..He sat with alot of ole school Cat's..They also brought in some Rapper's, Snoop being one..A class of kid's learning music, an Lady back up singer's from the day..Something by the river i believe? And ya'll know you used "Walking the Dog" on their debut album don't you??
@@tonyedwards2064 I know what documentary you are talking about. The STAX museum in Memphis has a music school for inner-city kids. Local Memphis musicians donate their time. Ben was one of them. He passed away a few years ago. What Ben experienced the night of the crash was heartbreaking. He found himself outside of the plane in the water. A seat cover was floating by that doubled as a floating device and he grabbed it. The plane was floating for a while and the lights inside were still on. Ben could see everyone trying to escape but there was nothing he could do. They were all looking out the windows at him as the plane sank. He then used the floating device and swam ashore. He's lucky he didn't freeze to death. It was December in Wisconsin. For the rest of his life he had to live with the memory of his friends faces looking at him helplessly through those windows right before they died. Awful.
Всем здравия!😊...я наверное в прошлой жизни жил в Америке, поскольку вся эта музыка мне , как родная...хотя родился в этой жизни я в Сибири в 1966 году.....обожаю ритм анд блюз... рок-н-ролл и *nativ music ".👍🙌
God bless Memphis. Sat on bank of MI May '88 looking at pretty bridge. On way to NO. Walked down Beale, saw Sun and Graceland next day, then headed south through pine forest highway to Big Easy. Fried chicken and potato wedges at every gas station. 'If you don't know how to do it ...
Those old guitars just blow me away. the old electric Harmonies, tiesco, etc. they are hard to find and some of those are very finely made in japan guitars.
@@ciccioaporta3774 I know where there is an old Washburn Montgomery JS-6 Electric Guitar. Like 335 with the trap tail piece like new with case for 450; If it was stop tail I would buy it in heart beat. Wes Montgomery signature model
What a great chance to be back in '69 and able to see and hear James Son Thomas and Sleepy John Estes just sitting and drinking under a hard raining from Japan today !
Hell yes. The great JOHN LOUDERMILK from Tobacco Road itself, Durham NC. I love his songs, Paper Tiger, Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye, Big Daddy's Alabammy Bound, Break My Mind, Tobacco Road, Indian Reservation, Abilene, A Rose and a Baby Ruth, Ebony Eyes, Norman.
All of Gods people coming together in love of such great music. Memphis is where Iwas born and raised. This City has lost alot over the years. Thank God this music still lives in our hearts.
I was growing up and living the blues in Memphis and I remember at night sitting out in front of the "Sharecropper" club watching the guy's play ,you could see between the boards of the building no insulation in those days.All the blues great performed there,I lived across the street.
i am only five mins into watching this and i feel i want to say thank you for sharing this with us,,Rufus Thomas with The Bar-Kays performance was mesmerising,full of energy and positive vibes,,i was dancing around my bedroom and moving bits of me that aint moved in years,,and im not ashamed to tell you that it felt so good,lol
14:00 The incredible Jo Ann Kelly, all the way from Streatham, South London. Incomparable talent who never gets mentioned when talk of 1960's female artists comes about. Fantastic performance.
Never saw her before this I was looking around going who is singing.that voice is fairly shocking sounds like Son House.I had to look her up after that sadly short lived life.
Same here. The dictionary fails to describe this film. I read a festival review in Downbeat at the time. It's a relief to know that 1969 Memphis had a hippie counterculture. Jim Dickinson: Total genius hipster.
Memphis had a folk music culture. But we weren’t about “Puff the Magic Dragon” and shit. We’d go to the coffee house and see the same ole prewar bluesmen you see here. The Bitter Lemon was the spot!
Quite a Gathering toward the very late 60’s in the South - white , black , young ,old , police, male and female - all of us passing through rubbing shoulders moving on - ~Many thanks and Appreciation to everyone involved both then and now
Funny, you don't see all those "categories" as people. People. Naked of their nonsense, they are people. People like you better not meet people like me.
death Letter Blues by female artist, very good rendition, Nice reworking of R. J. classic "Crossroads Blues", and love that gospel blues of the Reverand Robert Wilkins, lot more too!! GThanks for posting!
John Fahey is quite a remarkable part of this. Rufus Thomas and the Barkays, Bukka White? This is some dynamite footage of some super real deal artists.
To me, this is so much better than the Woodstock movie. It's just the right length, and incredibly well-produced and edited. The director, producer, and editor deserves a lot of credit.
Woodstock was massively overrated and blown up into mythic proportions, Memphis blues festival, let's just say more people need to be into the blues and the less thing to music to take drugs too, too bad most of the legends are long gone
@@oursoullessguide6361 I was gonna say I've heard allot of the older blues folks probably indulged in Grass and even speed perhaps in the early days but never once were open to such indulgence or phases
This is one of the most inspiring things I've ever watched. This is music being played for LOVE. There are so many "OH SHIT!" moments here, it's just fantastic.
Mr Thomas had the look of a banker, but when he starts strutting (walking that dogg) dude is rockin it diggin .....btw tks 4 bar kay story sad but a part of rock tragedy all through time...🇺🇸✌
So glad I found this - this is great. I was listening to country blues back then starting as a young teenager - that's why I still like to play it! And I always preferred the Memphis Stax sound over Motown. Stax artists were the best.
I am so fortunate we lived there back in the day. God the exposure to music was fantastic. Something we took for granted as just "normal" Memphis is special.
Best music ever. 💯 1960's Great. One of the best music documentaries I've had the privilege of watching. Lots of soul and great talent. Love the movie cameras they were using. I was 17 in 1969. Thank you. God bless you. 💗➕💗
Politics can't save us. Neither can religion. But MUSIC? Yo...plug in the guitars, throw some ice over the beer, leave that BS in the alley with the trash and LET'S PARTY! I had an acquaintance who made it home from Vietnam in time to attend Woodstock, the week after being discharged from the army. Nobody called him a "babykiller" (although I know other vets who "busted some beaks" after being called that). But this guy? Dudes shared their "wacky terbacky" with him and several young women did their best to "heal" him of the horrors of war... In any case, *thank you* for this video. Never knew there was such a thing and watching this video has made my day...and it's been a pretty good day!
What a Mind Blower opening Act-Rufus and the Bar-Kay’s!!!! The Bar-Kay’s were the tightest Blues Fund Band on the Planet in 1969’--What a Treasure of The Roots of Blues/Gospel. So much Soul pours out of every act-Thanks from the Bottom of my Heart for putting this Amazing Treasure out here for posterity. -Please Keep it posted!!!!! I’ll be feasting on this Manna as long as it’s here❤️🇺🇸
I have wanted to see this for decades. Even though I live in Memphis area, I have never found a source for viewing it all. Really appreciate you finally making it available!
A tremendous piece of work, and wonderful to see such legendary blues maestros. Also seeing Jo Ann Kelly an absolute bonus, she was a sad loss to the blues.
An amazing document of this time and place. Thanks for the spots an John Fahey and Johnny Winter. I met and talked to John Fahey In L.A. in 1969. A brilliant and really nice guy, and quite learned in music.
Thanks, Fat Possum. Seen a lot of blues in my 67 years living around Chicago. Some took these guys for granted at the time. If you could bring them back you could fill a major stadium.
I've seen the name John D. Loudermilk on the back cover of many records, writing this and co-writing that, many years ago, but I've never actually seen him perform anything, until now. Interesting. Thanks.
Love me some Fat Possum! Thank You!!! This is the music and musicians I heard too many decades ago that keep me playing today. Music is life. At least it's life affirming. ;) Thank You, Jeff Esworthy and WKSU for exposing my mind and soul to the music that keeps me going 40 years later! ;O My gratitude is eternal. This music has been the salvation to my soul and sanity through many trying times. The last couple years being some of the most trying.
I agree. I read it before my wife and I went to Memphis a couple years ago, and it gave me such an appreciation for the music. The music you can hear at the Rock and Soul museum, the Stax/Volt studio is worth the trip alone. Not to mention going to Sun Studios and standing RIGHT THERE....
I remember listening to blues specials on the radio. And youd often hear the fat possum label mentioned. How bout Johnny winter playing that Mustang. ..wow..what a talent...worth the price of admission alone
Non poteva mancare nella rassegna dei concerti della controcultura giovanile di quegli anni 70 un festival tematico dedicato al Blues in un altra grande metropoli americana Menphis con una tradizione popolare musicale americana che descrive la sofferenza esistenziale della popolazione di colore nata sulle sponde del Mississipi molti dei grandi Blues Man degli anni 20 - 30 del secolo scorso capiscuola di questo stile musicale ebbero un destino triste molti di loro conoscendo la sofferenza del carcere che sprigiono' la loro creatività dando vita ad un movimento fondamentale per la storia della Musica Rock grazie per aver caricato in rete questo meraviglioso documentario.
i don´t have words to describe...amazing!!!!!
My sentiments exactly.
We ooooo
My thoughts exactly!!!!
I know exactly what you mean such a mythic time in music one of the last kernels of music from the 1800s being played in a truly authentic form but being slightly one foot in the future that's always what I've admired about the expansion of blues from like the twenties and the 30s and how it just kept growing as we hit the 60s and even today there is never been an era in blues music where you can say that wasn't very good everything the blues does for the most part as a whole is incredibly authentic
yezzzzzzzzzz lawd, a-mazing is the only word we need
big middle finger to youtube for the invasive ads
It is as bad as regular TV. Disgusting, just makes sic how corrupt.
Hopefully some of the ad revenue finds its way back to the families of the musicians and song writers
Ad free RUclips is included with a RUclips Music subscription. Best $10 a month I spend. Worth every penny.
And as for "ad revenue reaching the survivors", this stuff is in the public domain. Advertising is how RUclips pays the bills.
Get premium,cheapo.
Interrupted Billie Beene yesterday 4 different times with adds in a 42 minute show, I go to rumble when possible
The band backing Rufus Thomas was the re-formed Bar-Kays. Most of the original band were killed with Otis Redding in December,1967. The trumpet player you see is Ben Cauley. He was the only survivor of the crash.
The bass player you see briefly is James Alexander, also an original member. Otis Redding's twin engine plane only carried a small number of people. That meant one member of the band had to fly commercial and they took turns.
The night the plane crashed was James Alexander's turn to fly commercial...
RIP Bar-Kays. You guys were great.
It was a great time in the music scene in memphis, with booker t, the barkays, the sons of willie mitchell, rufus, carla, eddie floyd, Bobby whitlock, and so many more. Glad I was there to enjoy it
Incredibly tight.
Thanks for this info!
Damn, Ben was on a Doc i watched not to long ago..Kid's of a prominent Memphis studio musician, then a owned a studio..Kid's run it now..He sat with alot of ole school Cat's..They also brought in some Rapper's, Snoop being one..A class of kid's learning music, an Lady back up singer's from the day..Something by the river i believe? And ya'll know you used "Walking the Dog" on their debut album don't you??
@@tonyedwards2064 I know what documentary you are talking about. The STAX museum in Memphis has a music school for inner-city kids. Local Memphis musicians donate their time. Ben was one of them. He passed away a few years ago.
What Ben experienced the night of the crash was heartbreaking. He found himself outside of the plane in the water. A seat cover was floating by that doubled as a floating device and he grabbed it. The plane was floating for a while and the lights inside were still on. Ben could see everyone trying to escape but there was nothing he could do. They were all looking out the windows at him as the plane sank. He then used the floating device and swam ashore. He's lucky he didn't freeze to death. It was December in Wisconsin.
For the rest of his life he had to live with the memory of his friends faces looking at him helplessly through those windows right before they died. Awful.
Jo Ann Kelly‘s voice is unbelievable.
🎯
She was wonderful.
Sadly Left us way too soon 💫
Wasn’t familiar with her before this. Her entire set I waited to see who was singing until I finally realized it was her. My mind was blown.
I thought the same. Amazing
jo ann kelly's brother plays guitar with the BLUES BAND,from england,dave kelly.
Всем здравия!😊...я наверное в прошлой жизни жил в Америке, поскольку вся эта музыка мне , как родная...хотя родился в этой жизни я в Сибири в 1966 году.....обожаю ритм анд блюз... рок-н-ролл и *nativ music ".👍🙌
Jo Ann kelly and Johnny Winter, two Legends, RIP. Thank you.
just an incredible group of blues legends on one stage,we will never see this type of talent ever again.
I went for Johnny Winter but there were a ton of great acts. Good memories.
Rufus Thomas backed by the newly reformed Barkays!!! This film is priceless!!!! All of the artists are AMAZING!!!!
God bless Memphis. Sat on bank of MI May '88 looking at pretty bridge. On way to NO. Walked down Beale, saw Sun and Graceland next day, then headed south through pine forest highway to Big Easy. Fried chicken and potato wedges at every gas station. 'If you don't know how to do it ...
John Loudermilk's song really blew me away man. wow!
A beautiful, fresh take.
Tobacco Road
Those old guitars just blow me away. the old electric Harmonies, tiesco, etc. they are hard to find and some of those are very finely made in japan guitars.
@@ciccioaporta3774 I know where there is an old Washburn Montgomery JS-6 Electric Guitar. Like 335 with the trap tail piece like new with case for 450; If it was stop tail I would buy it in heart beat. Wes Montgomery signature model
What a great chance to be back in '69 and able to see and hear James Son Thomas and Sleepy John Estes just sitting and drinking under a hard raining from Japan today !
Hell yes. The great JOHN LOUDERMILK from Tobacco Road itself, Durham NC. I love his songs, Paper Tiger, Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye, Big Daddy's Alabammy Bound, Break My Mind, Tobacco Road, Indian Reservation, Abilene, A Rose and a Baby Ruth, Ebony Eyes, Norman.
You had me at Rufus Thomas...what a treat!
Jo Ann kelly, Fred Mcdowell and johnny winter playing a duosonic all in the same video, thank you!!!!
Son Thomas giving me those goosebumps. How lucky are we that we get to experience this 50+ years later.......
Me pasó lo mismo. Literalmente al escuchar como el slide recorrió el diapasón se me puso la piel de gallina
All of Gods people coming together in love of such great music. Memphis is where Iwas born and raised. This City has lost alot over the years. Thank God this music still lives in our hearts.
I was growing up and living the blues in Memphis and I remember at night sitting out in front of the "Sharecropper" club watching the guy's play ,you could see between the boards of the building no insulation in those days.All the blues great performed there,I lived across the street.
i am only five mins into watching this and i feel i want to say thank you for sharing this with us,,Rufus Thomas with The Bar-Kays performance was mesmerising,full of energy and positive vibes,,i was dancing around my bedroom and moving bits of me that aint moved in years,,and im not ashamed to tell you that it felt so good,lol
Yep. RT and the BKs have me all warmed up to enjoy the rest of the show too. Outstanding!
5 minutes in & I'm looking for my earbuds!
14:00 The incredible Jo Ann Kelly, all the way from Streatham, South London. Incomparable talent who never gets mentioned when talk of 1960's female artists comes about. Fantastic performance.
Thanks for the tip. I didn't know there was any footage of her. She always struck me as the real deal in country blues. What a treat.
Never saw her before this I was looking around going who is singing.that voice is fairly shocking sounds like Son House.I had to look her up after that sadly short lived life.
I grew up in Streatham and am a big sixties fan yet I had never heard of her until today.
@@GrahamCLester She was the real deal. Her 1969 album Jo Ann Kelly is a masterpiece.
Met her one time in a beer garden, I was stepping out with her sister Susan for a good while, Dave Kelly of the same name blues band is their Brother.
Same here. The dictionary fails to describe this film. I read a festival review in Downbeat at the time. It's a relief to know that 1969 Memphis had a hippie counterculture. Jim Dickinson: Total genius hipster.
Memphis had a folk music culture. But we weren’t about “Puff the Magic Dragon” and shit. We’d go to the coffee house and see the same ole prewar bluesmen you see here. The Bitter Lemon was the spot!
Too short. Nothing like blues played on a dirty guitar missing a peg. I'm selfish Can never get enough of Mr. McDowell. Thanks very much for sharing.
There most be more footage as even single songs are cut, including McDowell.
And then at 57 minutes in Johnny Winter blows everybody’s mind ! Love it !
I didn't expect to find this film, but I'm so glad I did. Enjoyed myself just kickin' back on a Saturday afternoon. Fantastic!
Quite a Gathering toward the very late 60’s in the South - white , black , young ,old , police, male and female - all of us passing through rubbing shoulders moving on - ~Many thanks and Appreciation to everyone involved both then and now
Funny, you don't see all those "categories" as people. People. Naked of their nonsense, they are people. People like you better not meet people like me.
Absolute gold dust. The real McCoy, the like of which we won’t see again. A happy and respectful audience.
This right here is why we love RUclips. Couldn’t get it anywhere else.
Thank you.
So...what is the story behind this?
When this was performed, i was only 13mos old growing up in South Memphis✌🏾👶🏾
death Letter Blues by female artist, very good rendition, Nice reworking of R. J. classic "Crossroads Blues", and love that gospel blues of the Reverand Robert Wilkins, lot more too!! GThanks for posting!
54:00 Moloch's singer drummer is something else.
Thank you Fat Possum and everyone. This is Memphis!
John Fahey is quite a remarkable part of this. Rufus Thomas and the Barkays, Bukka White? This is some dynamite footage of some super real deal artists.
From Silver Spring/Takoma Park. Wonderful. Montgomery Blair High School should honor him .
Fahey sounded like he was playing a band in a box
Johnny Winter’s solo was just abt everything. Bad man!
Phenomenal. And Nathan B. born during the Civil War.
To me, this is so much better than the Woodstock movie. It's just the right length, and incredibly well-produced and edited. The director, producer, and editor deserves a lot of credit.
Not as up itself as Woodstock.
Less LSD and Coke was involved, I'm sure.
Woodstock was massively overrated and blown up into mythic proportions, Memphis blues festival, let's just say more people need to be into the blues and the less thing to music to take drugs too, too bad most of the legends are long gone
@@wildeman1253 I'm pretty sure there was quite a bit of Coke, blues Man weren't saints
@@oursoullessguide6361 I was gonna say I've heard allot of the older blues folks probably indulged in Grass and even speed perhaps in the early days but never once were open to such indulgence or phases
This is one of the most inspiring things I've ever watched. This is music being played for LOVE. There are so many "OH SHIT!" moments here, it's just fantastic.
Mr Thomas had the look of a banker, but when he starts strutting (walking that dogg) dude is rockin it diggin .....btw tks 4 bar kay story sad but a part of rock tragedy all through time...🇺🇸✌
Furry Lewis’s Let Me Call You Sweetheart had me melting, absolutely fantastic!!
One of the best concerts I've ever watched. Really good days back then
cannot believe i have never heard this before ? Am 74 , still finding amazing music thanks to those that found and posted this GEM
oh my god, what an absolute treasure this is.
Fantastic, cool to see the insect trust in there, and Joanne Kelly, excellent
Great line up! The umbrella held by pretty young ladies was also a great idea.😎💙
I was 14. Just starting.
Great music. Thanks for posting.
I was there! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 Thanks for sharing this. I see friends long gone now. ❤️
Did you see yourself in the vid
So glad I found this - this is great. I was listening to country blues back then starting as a young teenager - that's why I still like to play it! And I always preferred the Memphis Stax sound over Motown. Stax artists were the best.
This is at least as interesting as the Woodstock Festival which took place a couple months later. Thank you for sharing it here.
Thanks Fat Possum. Thanks Gene "Adelphi" Rosenthal. Thanks to everyone who made this happen. Australia loves you all!
Mississippi Fred McDowell, fantastic record of his performance. And Rufus Thomas with The Bar-Kays was a blast.
I am so fortunate we lived there back in the day. God the exposure to music was fantastic. Something we took for granted as just "normal" Memphis is special.
Wow! This is blues gold. Whomever brought this to the surface. Holy (&)(*&)(, THANK YOU 100 X
Never felt so much warmth in my entire life.
I love John Fahey 's song, from the Zabrieski Point picture
So good picture quality and the colours so vivid.
Thank you for sharing this!
This is holy freaking footage! Thanks to Fat Possum from Denmark!
Oh Maaan! That opener with Rufus Thomas really kicked my ass! Thanks for sharing this beautiful piece of music history.
Best music ever. 💯 1960's Great. One of the best music documentaries I've had the privilege of watching. Lots of soul and great talent. Love the movie cameras they were using. I was 17 in 1969. Thank you. God bless you. 💗➕💗
And I've been a Blues fan, tried and true, exactly since 1969 ! Big Love.
I graduated from Memphis State in January, 1969. whoaaaa!
Class of 81' 🐾
@@bethbartlett5692 Smile!!!!
I remember Memphis St (Larry Finch) v UCLA (Bill Walton) '73 nc game
Johnny Winter is AWESOME,...I consider myself lucky to have seen him perform twice.
Politics can't save us. Neither can religion. But MUSIC? Yo...plug in the guitars, throw some ice over the beer, leave that BS in the alley with the trash and LET'S PARTY! I had an acquaintance who made it home from Vietnam in time to attend Woodstock, the week after being discharged from the army. Nobody called him a "babykiller" (although I know other vets who "busted some beaks" after being called that). But this guy? Dudes shared their "wacky terbacky" with him and several young women did their best to "heal" him of the horrors of war...
In any case, *thank you* for this video. Never knew there was such a thing and watching this video has made my day...and it's been a pretty good day!
What a Mind Blower opening Act-Rufus and the Bar-Kay’s!!!! The Bar-Kay’s were the tightest Blues Fund Band on the Planet in 1969’--What a Treasure of The Roots of Blues/Gospel. So much Soul pours out of every act-Thanks from the Bottom of my Heart for putting this Amazing Treasure out here for posterity. -Please Keep it posted!!!!! I’ll be feasting on this Manna as long as it’s here❤️🇺🇸
I'd love to see that 8mm film footage the young woman is shooting as well. Great documentary--thank you Fat Possum!
BRUCE, THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR KEEPING HOPE ALIVE 🙏
Ole “Newgene” Wilkins of Moloch. My friend, Lenora, married him twice.
Haha.... you go Lenny!
Moloch?
She should be
Ashamed of herself
And so should he
Oh my only concerts be this good once again.
Take it easy on them Booker! What a master craftsman.
The musicians throwing down. Salute to these talented legends
Wow…Rev Robert Wilkins…whole set? Absolutely brilliant and far too short! The whole thing is good but deffo my highlight.
Priceless.
I have wanted to see this for decades. Even though I live in Memphis area, I have never found a source for viewing it all. Really appreciate you finally making it available!
Unreal!? What a treasure. I only wish that it were 12 hours long and featured more songs by each artist! - Ramcey in Nashville
Man what a scene with Fred McDowell, cool to see the dude there recording it too :)
a great historical document. Some people in the crowd I recognize which is pretty funny. It's been 50 years...wow.
God bless you 🙏
A tremendous piece of work, and wonderful to see such legendary blues maestros. Also seeing Jo Ann Kelly an absolute bonus, she was a sad loss to the blues.
Nice to see Johnny Winter.
******* Rufus Thomas & his band , Just Superb !! ----
Burka White. Fucking fabulous
An amazing document of this time and place. Thanks for the spots an John Fahey and Johnny Winter. I met and talked to John Fahey In L.A. in 1969. A brilliant and really nice guy, and quite learned in music.
Thank you. Wonderful.
Rev. Robert Wilkins & Family blew my mind!! SO SIMPLE but SO POWERFUL and SOULFUL... All other bands are great too, indeed
Thanks, Fat Possum. Seen a lot of blues in my 67 years living around Chicago. Some took these guys for granted at the time. If you could bring them back you could fill a major stadium.
Of my friends that never made it you could fill a stadium. God Rest their souls.
I've seen the name John D. Loudermilk on the back cover of many records, writing this and co-writing that, many years ago, but I've never actually seen him perform anything, until now.
Interesting. Thanks.
Johnny Winter with "Memory Pain" from "Second Winter" great moment !!!
Love me some Fat Possum! Thank You!!! This is the music and musicians I heard too many decades ago that keep me playing today. Music is life. At least it's life affirming. ;)
Thank You, Jeff Esworthy and WKSU for exposing my mind and soul to the music that keeps me going 40 years later! ;O My gratitude is eternal. This music has been the salvation to my soul and sanity through many trying times.
The last couple years being some of the most trying.
So glad to see this here!!! I was there in 69 and I can not get over how beautiful the sound is!!!!
It’s a real treat to see this vid.
I read somewhere that Derek Trucks has Bukka White’s steel guitar. Said the Bukka White is BB King’s cousin.
Sunbrella girl for Sleepy John !
Alléluia, merci Seigneur pour le Gospel et la foi en Jésus de cette génération !
Oh man this is just so good right from the very first song Walking that dawg. Best version of Tobacco road I've ever heard.
JD Loudermilk, wrote the song. Certainly an absorbing rendition by the writer.
Greetings from England. Thanks so much for sharing, it's great to see some of these true blues legends.
Many thanks to Fat Possum for upload this gem. I'm grateful.
✌🏻🍄🎸
One of the best things on RUclips
I never thought that Insect Trust's and Moloch's archival footage ever existed!!!
FABULOUS film, THANK YOU so much
A very good book on the 1960's Memphis music scene written by Robert Johnson---"It Came from Memphis", discussed the festival in detail.
That would be Robert Gordon - his book Respect Yourself: Stax Records and the Soul Explosion is another fine record of the period.
I agree. I read it before my wife and I went to Memphis a couple years ago, and it gave me such an appreciation for the music. The music you can hear at the Rock and Soul museum, the Stax/Volt studio is worth the trip alone. Not to mention going to Sun Studios and standing RIGHT THERE....
Johnson was dead decades before this.
@@daylesuess552 Robert Gordon is the author's name.
I remember listening to blues specials on the radio. And youd often hear the fat possum label mentioned.
How bout Johnny winter playing that Mustang. ..wow..what a talent...worth the price of admission alone
Non poteva mancare nella rassegna dei concerti della controcultura giovanile di quegli anni 70 un festival tematico dedicato al Blues in un altra grande metropoli americana Menphis con una tradizione popolare musicale americana che descrive la sofferenza esistenziale della popolazione di colore nata sulle sponde del Mississipi molti dei grandi Blues Man degli anni 20 - 30 del secolo scorso capiscuola di questo stile musicale ebbero un destino triste molti di loro conoscendo la sofferenza del carcere che sprigiono' la loro creatività dando vita ad un movimento fondamentale per la storia della Musica Rock grazie per aver caricato in rete questo meraviglioso documentario.
Cheers from Brazil...this Channel and Alan Lomax Archives Channel are the best true USA music at RUclips!
Thank you! Post of the century as far as I am concerned.