John Martyn - Solid Air - 1978 (Reaction)

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
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    #johnmartyn #reaction #musicreactions

Комментарии • 48

  • @simonrangeley
    @simonrangeley 4 месяца назад +5

    Master guitarist. Master songwriter. Master performer.

  • @scotland5370
    @scotland5370 2 месяца назад +3

    His best performance of this song I've seen. John had a great blues, soul, jazz , folk voice, they all came out in this song. He didn't do may covers, preferring to invent his own music, but he could have done great versions of any of these genres classics. That slap plucking certainly gave rhythm without need for percussion. What range from deep growl to high tenor.

  • @LynneDallaway
    @LynneDallaway 5 месяцев назад +3

    How good is he 😮

  • @TheAtticradio
    @TheAtticradio 11 месяцев назад +4

    John Martyn was an eccentric genius with a guitar and that voice - smooth and jazzy.
    Saw him three or four times
    Could be loud obnoxious charming elegant once he got playing he was in the zone and you would be in a Zone with this type of music.
    Everybody should have the Album Solid Air in their collection he has some amazing gems on other albums his most famous being May you never but there is so much more The mighty JM has to offer.
    Cool Reaction

  • @jamesjackson8652
    @jamesjackson8652 5 месяцев назад +2

    far out... so glad i came across this... what a fantastic live performance..

  • @roballen5718
    @roballen5718 Год назад +8

    i'm so happy to find a reactor loving John Martyn. i've been a fan since the early 80s. you noticed how comfortable he is, with his guitar; coming from tuning it, to playing. he came from a folk tradition, but then experimented with pedal boards, even creating his own, as no-one made them to do what he wanted one to do. he even tunes his guitar differently, for different songs. to flip from one tuning to another, then back again, must take such a familiarity with every facet of playing. you should react to his live performance of 'I'd Rather Be the Devil', 1973, on the Old Grey Whistle Test. it'll show you just what can be done with an acoustic guitar that no-one else was doing. truly a one-off.

  • @etarepsedllits48
    @etarepsedllits48 Год назад +5

    Was lucky enough to see him live several times, as he played Leeds. He was a superbly gifted musician and vocalist, a raconteur, and a larger than life character.
    Sadly he succumbed to the Rock n Roll lifestyle.
    My life is better for knowing of him.

  • @CaptainBlood2010
    @CaptainBlood2010 4 месяца назад +3

    Off his head. Wonderful. 🔥

  • @Owlstretchingtime78
    @Owlstretchingtime78 6 месяцев назад +3

    This song is about his great friend Nick Drake, who had died three years earlier. Both have such unique styles!

    • @gillesserrigny6324
      @gillesserrigny6324 Месяц назад +1

      Not exactely. The album was released in February 1973. Nick Drake died in November 74. Solid Air was written by John Martyn for Nick certainly in 1972 or at the very beginning of 73.

    • @Owlstretchingtime78
      @Owlstretchingtime78 Месяц назад +1

      @@gillesserrigny6324 Within the right ballpark! 😉

    • @gillesserrigny6324
      @gillesserrigny6324 Месяц назад

      @@Owlstretchingtime78 Yeah, we can say that 😉. But, if he dies three years earlier, no Nick Drake albums, 🤔

    • @gillesserrigny6324
      @gillesserrigny6324 Месяц назад +1

      @@Owlstretchingtime78 But we are probably agree : two giants.
      One was extraverty, and the other introverty.

    • @Owlstretchingtime78
      @Owlstretchingtime78 Месяц назад

      @@gillesserrigny6324 Chalk and cheese musicians.

  • @primalengland
    @primalengland 7 месяцев назад +1

    So glad I stumbled over your video. I have loved John since he first did the folk club circuit. I watched him with my ex wife as he toured globally and cried as I left one of his last gigs at the Salford Lowry Theatre. Have you ever had a hero that ends up like that? Still love you John. Soundtrack to my life.

  • @ethandavis8090
    @ethandavis8090 Год назад +5

    I’m scrolling through your channel… seeing soundgarden, pearljam , STP, John martyn. My favorite artists! You have amazing taste, and I love seeing your enthusiasm and joyful reaction to John Martyn. Probably the only person I have seen who gets as excited as I do for this musical legend.

  • @timarmstrong3251
    @timarmstrong3251 Месяц назад

    John was actually English, born in New Malden, London (ish), but from the age of 5 spent half of his time in Glasgow after his parents divorced. I think he would have described himself as British.

  • @kelvinsmith4381
    @kelvinsmith4381 Год назад +4

    Great Reaction, an under appreciated artist. Over the hill or Go down easy are worth listen.

  • @louisrobertbrown
    @louisrobertbrown Год назад +5

    Funny you bring up him being English, he grew up in Scotland but spend time growing up in Surrey too, and he seemed to flick between the accents at different times.

    • @kingofdubb2133
      @kingofdubb2133 10 месяцев назад

      He was brought up in Glasgow, and paid for his first guitar by getting up at 4am to do the milk round, his real name was Iain McGeachy, I believe his folks split up, and he spent the school holidays with his mother in Surrey

  • @kingofdubb2133
    @kingofdubb2133 10 месяцев назад +2

    He's actually Scottish (his real name was Iain David McGeachy) , and was brought up in Glasgow, but his parents split and his mum lived in England, so he would spend the school holidays in London, he would put on his English accent when he played in England, and Scottish accent when playing in Scotland. He kept braking strings because almost every tune he played had it's own unique tuning. May You Never was a popular poppy song, but definitely not one of his best

  • @ianlaker9161
    @ianlaker9161 11 месяцев назад +2

    John was an underappreciated genius in my opinion. The way he used rhythm with effects like echoplex on the acoustic guitar. I'm a huge fan and have seen him many times down the years in the 80s and 90s. He left us too early, as did the subject of this masterpiece - Nick Drake.

  • @saragodres-tomes1032
    @saragodres-tomes1032 Год назад +2

    He always kinda had the feel of if Joe Walsh and Cat Stevens had a baby. Love John Martyn! Thanks for reacting.

    • @gillesserrigny6324
      @gillesserrigny6324 11 месяцев назад +1

      For the baby, l will rather think Joe Wash and Joni Mitchell !

    • @saragodres-tomes1032
      @saragodres-tomes1032 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@gillesserrigny6324 🤣
      Okay. I'll go along with ya. Cheers. 🍻

    • @TheAtticradio
      @TheAtticradio 11 месяцев назад

      @@saragodres-tomes1032ha !!

  • @TheFlyingHogini
    @TheFlyingHogini 2 месяца назад

    Scottish. Sounded English when sober. Broad Glaswegian when he’s had a few.

  • @woke2woke153
    @woke2woke153 6 месяцев назад

    Listen to the studio version of Strange Feeling by Tim Buckley. It'l] take your breath away with its beauty. I've been listening to it for over fifty years and it never fades. The best thing he ever did - that and Blue Melody.

  • @jessem470
    @jessem470 Год назад +7

    Small Hours next
    Might not be good for reaction because it would leave you speechless

  • @rk41gator
    @rk41gator 9 месяцев назад

    Amazing. For some odd reason I think of Joe Cocker and Bob Marley as I listen to his wonderful voice. Bizarre.

  • @iaincphotography6051
    @iaincphotography6051 8 месяцев назад

    His real name is David Nigel McGeachy and spent a lot of his Childhood in Glasgow and he could switch between southern English to being a total Weegie.

  • @foxbor0
    @foxbor0 Год назад +1

    che voce!

  • @rk41gator
    @rk41gator 9 месяцев назад

    I try to skip the 3-minute string break and tuning intro.....
    He is Scottish. I believe Phil Collins called him a friend and one of the best singer/songwriters he had ever known. 'Praise from Caesar is praise indeed!' I am beginning to see what he means.

    • @rk41gator
      @rk41gator 9 месяцев назад

      You are right about his great feel. Funky rhythm and feel is hard to come by and he definitely has it. Raw. Hard, true.

  • @sidstewart7399
    @sidstewart7399 10 месяцев назад

    Seen John live 5 or 6 times...when hes on it it's divine...when he wasnt it was crap. Much missed.

  • @timfeeley714-25
    @timfeeley714-25 Год назад +1

    I see why Michael hedges liked him

    • @jessem470
      @jessem470 Год назад +1

      I love that you mentioned Michael Hedges
      Rory should react to MH doing his version of Frank Zappa Sofa

    • @jessem470
      @jessem470 Год назад

      Or being a Beatles fan maybe MIchael’s version of While my Guitar Gently Weeps

    • @timfeeley714-25
      @timfeeley714-25 Год назад

      I absolutely agree, it's one of the best covers of a Frank song by anyone ever.

  • @saorsa5
    @saorsa5 7 месяцев назад

    Scottish not English

  • @fuckamericanidiot
    @fuckamericanidiot Год назад +3

    Rory you should do 'I couldn't love you more' next

    • @jessem470
      @jessem470 Год назад +2

      Couldn’t Love you More was played at my wedding
      The version off One World
      He re resorted it with Phil Collins on drums and Eric Clapton on guitar
      David Gilmour and Steve Windwood played with him too
      Musicians loved him
      He was unique