Creedence Clearwater Revival LIVE at Woodstock 69- I Put A Spell On You- 3rd Song
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- Опубликовано: 23 дек 2024
- I hold no rights or copyrights to this video/music and no money is being made from it.
This is truly a Rare Video. CCR at WOODSTOCK Scheduled for Saturday August 16, 1969 and yes folks this is the real deal. John Fogerty never wanted this footage shown because of the sound quality that morning at Woodstock. They had just played behind The Grateful Dead, Some of the audience was silent and asleep. This is a classic. Leave a comment please.
SONG LIST:
1. Born On The Bayou
2. Green River (3:06)
3. Ninety-Nine And A Half (Won't Do) (3:41)
4. Commotion (2:45)
5. Bootleg
6. Bad Moon Rising
7. Proud Mary
8. I Put A Spell On You (4:34)
9. Night Time Is The Right Time
10. Keep On Choogin
11. Suzy Q
Janis Joplin was on after CCR, Then Sly and the Family Stone, The Who and Jefferson Airplane Last on Saturday.
I have the entire line up of bands in order with song list, send me an email if you want it.
Before Creedence: 1959-1967
John Fogerty, Doug Clifford, and Stu Cook (all born 1945) met at senior high school in El Cerrito, California and began playing instrumentals and "juke box standards" together under the name The Blue Velvets. The trio also backed singer Tom Fogerty- John's older brother by three years-at live gigs and in the recording studio. By 1964, the band had signed to Fantasy Records, an independent jazz label based in San Francisco at the time.
During this period, band roles underwent some changes. Stu Cook had gone from piano to bass guitar and Tom Fogerty became the band's rhythm guitarist. John Fogerty also began to write much of the band's material. Most notably, the young guitarist had taken over lead vocal duty. As Tom would later say, "I could sing, but John had a sound."
In 1967, Saul Zaentz purchased Fantasy Records from Weiss and offered the band a chance to record a full-length album, but only if the group changed its name. Never having liked The Golliwogs, the foursome readily agreed. Zaentz and the band agreed to come up with ten suggestions each, but he enthusiastically agreed to their first: Creedence Clearwater Revival. The band took the three elements from Creedence Nuball, a friend of Tom Fogerty; "clear water", from a TV commercial for Olympia beer; and revival, which spoke to the four members' renewed commitment to their band. (Other contenders were Muddy Rabbit, Gossamer Wump, and Creedence Nuball and the Ruby.) Unlike many other rock artists of the day, they eschewed drug use.
More importantly, AM radio programmers around the United States took note when a song from the LP, "Suzie Q", received substantial airplay in the San Francisco Bay Area as well as on Chicago's WLS. Blues aficionados doubtless appreciated the similarities between CCR's tough style and R&B artists on the Chess and Vee-Jay labels.
Peak success: 1969-70
Only weeks later, in March 1969, "Bad Moon Rising" backed with "Lodi" was released and peaked at #2 on the charts. The band's third album, Green River, followed in August and quickly went gold along with the single "Green River", which again reached #2 on the Billboard charts. The B-side of "Green River", "Commotion"-a one-chord two-step about the perils of city life-peaked at #30. The bar-band story of "Lodi" became a popular staple on then-emerging FM radio.[citation needed] The band's emphasis on remakes of their old favorites continued with "The Night Time Is the Right Time", which found its way into the band's live set as a crowd sing-along.
Creedence continued to tour heavily including performances at the Atlanta Pop Festival and Woodstock. Their set was not included in the Woodstock film or its original soundtrack because Fogerty felt the band's performance was subpar. (Several CCR tracks from the event were eventually included in the 1994 commemorative box set.) The band also complained that they had to take the stage at three in the morning because The Grateful Dead had jammed far past their scheduled set time. By the time Creedence began playing-"the hottest shot on Earth at that moment", said Fogerty-many in the audience had gone to sleep.
Woodstock didn't matter. Creedence was busy honing material for a fourth album, Willy and the Poor Boys, released in November 1969. "Down on the Corner", a good-time street-corner number, and the famously militant "Fortunate Son" climbed to #3 and #14, respectively, by year's end. The album was Creedence in its standard form, featuring Fogerty originals and two reworked Leadbelly covers, "Cotton Fields" and "Midnight Special". Both the latter songs also had been performed by actor Harry Dean Stanton in the movie Cool Hand Luke, suggesting a subtle non-conformist theme to an apparently tradition-oriented album.
John Fogerty, lead guitarist, lyricist, composer, vocalist, arranger.
No John Fogerty = No CCR. PERIOD !!!
Thanks for this post. Added to favorites.
Johm Fogerthy - the MAGIC man.. He was & is just FANTASTIC... CCR was just f... AMAZING !!!! Greatings from 69-model - Norway
probally the greatest American rock band ever
Your very welcome, and thanks again for such a brilliant posting. Their Woodstock performance was their best...at least on film..that I've seen, by a long margin. I've given them a fair few repeat viewings. And they'll get more in the future!!
cheers a brilliant live version of a brilliant tune
The sound is as it supposed to be at Woodstock!!! But the energy is evident even now!!!
I wish i were there!!!
hey man que super video nunca habia visto esta presentacion sabia que habian tocado en woodstock en el 69 pero ver esto esta super
Thanks for posting this, I think it's one of John Fogerty's best solo's and I was excited to actually find footage of him playing it.
it was said this never made the film because CCR didn't feel their performance was up to par. I'd love to hear a "good" night by them because this song blows away most of the artists at Woodstock by far.
even though the grateful dead didnt play their best at woodstock, they are still the coolest band from the sixties that anybody EVER saw!!!
Sou rockeiro desde quando nasci na vila Maria em 54 até hoje é sempre...graças a Deus!
fabulus merveilleux thank you merci
i saw ccr creedance clearwater revisted a free concert in atlanta.. ill never forget !
Indeed a very rare peice of footage; and a very welcome one as well. Very much appreciated, videojunkeez...Keep 'em coming!!
se escucha así porque es el tiempo de ante pero igual amo a los Creedence Clearwater Revival son los mejores cantantes del mundo mundial los amo con toda mi alma😍😍😍😍😍😍
CCR went on in the wee hours of the morning, after the Grateful Dead's rainy stop-and-start, technical-difficulty-plagued set. Fogerty was furious because he thought everyone was asleep, and cussed the band out as they left the stage.
Oh man, they really should have put CCR in the movie. I figured it was because they hadn't gotten any good footage of them. Apparently not the case. Thanks for posting.
Excellent editing of the 1969 Woodtock video to the 1968 1st album recording. Top notch all the way!!! Really captures old CCR in their prime. Thanks for sharing.
Rock on CCR! Few get to be this mesmerizing!
ccr was the heartbeat of america!
toda una joya y un verdadero recuerdo para la historia del rock and roll
salu2 y gracias por estos videos!!
sorprendentes obras e ineditas creo
hola un saludo desde Chile buen aporte....
SIMPLY WONDERFULL
спасибо огромное - люблю всю жизнь
this guitar solo must be the epicest i ever heard in rock history
Bass and drums don't play in unison. But the drive is amazing! Thank you for the clip.
This is cool! Thanks for posting.
i didn't knew CCR had a gig at woodstock as well! great quality
I agree with you about Fogerty...:-p
I like this version, especially the solo...
Even so, this is freaking classic.
encore une version méconnue!
The whole performance is incredible, but the solo is particularly excellent, note for note with the album version.
Yes, say noooo more. Tänk ett Woodstock idag... Skulle aldrig kunna mäta sig m då...
this song has the best guitar solo
@imjustpassinthru In response-- Doug Clifford, the drummer, was a neighbour of mine in California. He and John had a lot of problems, most notably a few years later when Fogerty screwed the whole band out of royalties from Who'll Stop The Rain. Never was any love lost between John and the rest of the band. Personally never had any problems with John but saw what a jerk he was to Doug and Stu and even his own brother Tom.
Love the t-shirt. Great stuff
Awesome although the sound is not that crisp but nevertheless a top fav song from those days it always having been and this footage is pretty much the same so again, AWESOME!! 10*, thanks!!!!
@craigpei ... Hello, thanks for your reply. I don't know the circumstances. Since I wasn't a direct witness, it's just hearsay. But this I can say, creative personalities can sometimes be like you describe especially when they are main attraction in a band or other enterprise. Not to deminish the talents and contributions of the other members of Credence Clearwater Revival, THEY WERE ALL REPLACEABLE. Fogerty was not replaceable. He was the voice, words and inspiration.
blusey rock,love it.
SUPERBE!
I have the whole show in mp3 format, and I thought it kicked ass!
When they ask what I believed in at my funeral, I’m gonna get them to just play this...fricken loud.
i love this version...haunting.
dont wana imply anything that may not be there...but whats goin on between drummer and fogerty 4.07...? thats one mean stare
Thats music...
Hendrix played in the morning of the LAST DAY!! to a very small waning croud! Monday Morning!
@videojunkeez why not think that the final look to Fogerty means:"Oh yeah Fogerty, we're rock n' rollin' !!" :D
@imjustpassinthru By doing that look the drummer is emphasizing the final punch of the performance. It's just his way of saying "There! Yeah. We kicked ass."
@videojunkeez It doesnt exist in BOOTLEG form..It exists on 16mm film reels that seem to be 'lost and forgotten"..someone needs to find the entire set on film and release it on Dvd
@imjustpassinthru I always thought it was over how the song ended with the guitar fx out of sync with the beat (and loud)... it was probably messing with his timing. Probably took a lot of concentration to play while simultaneously tuning out the guitar sound. He looked pissed.
WHY the F..ck was this NOT included on ANY DVD version of Wood stock? Please explain the lunacy of omitting this musical genius?
Like Bob Seger said; Fogerty is the Hank Williams of Rock and Roll.
The Drummers look had "How do you like me now?" written all over it hahahaaha or maybe - "We nailed it Yeah"
Hm, might be a bit of both points or observations. "Got it right" or "Bad vibes"...
Good vid though, and thank you for uploading.
@VanCiityy604 this is Rickenbacker :-)
ウッドストックのC・C・R! 歌良し、ギター良し、ジョン・フォガティー!
Hendrix played in the morning of the LAST DAY!!
Soi todos hun rokcestar lmL jiji Holi
@videojunkeez I have a bit of experience managing bands, and sometimes having to be a hard-ass to get the drummer to play the coda "the right way" (meaning my way and not his way), and my interpretation is that was the drummer communicating angry vibes at Fogerty that may well have been intended as "See, I played it the right way this time AND I hate you Fogerty".
There are plenty of stories that Fogerty had to play kind of the "hard-ass, play it my way or it will suck" role within the band.
This is awesome, and how come they had better camera positions for CCR than they did for Hendirx?
management and contract,s are mostly the reason that some band,s don't appear on woodstock the movie and album. rock on.
Eargasm!!!!
this is awesome were can i dl a bootleg of this?
@videojunkeez I don't know where my comment about this will show up but....having played for years with different drummers...if you listen closely you will notice that the snare is a LOT lower than he always played it (my point...probably broken)...when you are in a live show and that sort of thing happens it has a tendency to create an almost fight (ala cream style) in the music that gives live sound its appeal. I think the look was no more than saying "I kept up with your dynamics dammit"
This f**cking rocks. John Fogerty was a fool to let this footage languish in the vaults for 40 years... poor audio or not.....it could've been as iconic as Hendrix or CSNY or TYA or.....etc...
its the best i mean it
I'm going as a hippie this halloween.
@videojunkeez Hey yall, I think that probably before the show or at other shows the drummer would hit that cymbal at the end of the song as a closing. Fogerty might not have liked this or wanted a 'calm' ending and might have mentioned something to the drummer. I guess the drummer was just being a smart-ass. haha
Where did you get these Woodstock clips? Great stuff and very good quality! Thank you!
@imjustpassinthru No that is most definitely the look of the conviction shared between musicians after its been done right. Most drummer's carry a look of smug self entitlement whether they mean to or not. I know this from experience.
Now that you have it on You Tube it is no longer Rare!!! Where did you find the film footage?
@imjustpassinthru I think it was the acid
I don't know who are thue guys who make that the five stars are not shining,but it's a terrible song.the two solos are like the big brother of janis,wonderful.thank you.and i'm asking as pac401 why this set is not in the movie...but it's real that thére was so many good things,and it's difficult to make a choice.
What's going on there at the very end? The drummer hits the symbol and at the same moment turns abruptly and stares hard at John Fogerty. Watch Fogerty during that moment and as he turns away. Was that just a dramatic end to the song, or were their bad vibes going on between the drummer and guitarist?
Whoa, that is a scary "Look". I don't know what was up, but there was certainly bad blood in that group, which is very unfortunate. They were screwed by their record company as well. I cannot believe some of these bands who were hit-making machines but didn't see any money from record sales!
@imjustpassinthru They're just high and having a good time.
The producers of the "Woodstock" album put the fucking 'bebop' group Sha Na Na in the lineup, but not CCR.What a joke.
WHO THE F* DISLIKED THIS VIDEO?
I just cant understand why these guys and mountain arent in the original woodstock tapes but they put up crap up like Joan Baez and Country joe???
@imjustpassinthru ..... you are reading to much... it was just a very fine ending .....
i didnt know ccr played woodstock
Yah I dunno what it is. There is something soo sexy about it. :)
Love them
Adam should sing this .Monte should wail on the guitar.
Maravillosooooooooooooooo!!!
...che Marilyn Manson y su cover nada que ver...
The sound of the original recording are bad, i understand that John Fogerty decided not include theyr performance on original film soundtrack. Simply the sound are unacceptable.
I think it was just Doug Clifford'd dramatics at the end there. As we can all see, Clifford was the most animated of the bunch onstage.---- I see what John Fogerty means about the sound quality. The other two clips I've seen so far are good, but this one sucks, with Clifford's bass drum drowning out most everything else, which is the recording tech's fault, of course.
I can understand why Fogerty would not want this released. The album version is fucking incredible, and this version simply sucks. I also have a bootleg of the whole set, and the quality does a great disservice to one of THE GREATEST all time American rock n' roll outfits.
2:04
Oh Michelle, in case you are not living too far from Germany, well, gimme a sign, I'll cross rivers and climb mountains for you... I know you are worth the long way to your bed...
i think joe cocker was the funniest lol
CHECK OUT THIS VIDEO!! VERY FUNNY!'. "Yeshiva Daze"
no
"This is a truly rare video..." Yeah, no one watches RUclips. :)
God, the drums sound awful. No wonder they didn't want it on the record or movie. In fact the whole mix is brutal. what a shame.
este video es realmente una joya!!!
SIMPLY WONDERFULL
@videojunkeez I have a bit of experience managing bands, and sometimes having to be a hard-ass to get the drummer to play the coda "the right way" (meaning my way and not his way), and my interpretation is that was the drummer communicating angry vibes at Fogerty that may well have been intended as "See, I played it the right way this time AND I hate you Fogerty".
There are plenty of stories that Fogerty had to play kind of the "hard-ass, play it my way or it will suck" role within the band.