Took my Dutch friends to see Widespread Panic in Amsterdam. Lol... They were the only Dutch people in the room. They loved it. Then seeing Warren there years later .... It was his own audience. Hard to believe I have been following Warren for 32 years. What an amazing asset to the music world.
Warren is magnificence personified in so many ways. A true Golden Soul that shines with pure love! A giving heart for helping others in need, a humble heart that is deeply rooted in the respectful ways of what we Southerners refer to as “being raised right”, (which is just a way of saying good core values of a loving family) and a pure love of music that is woven into the DNA. I believe that when music is part of you in that special way, it is just as essential as the breathing of air, taking the music in and letting it out. Any resulting fame, fortune or recognition are secondary. Thank you Mr. Haynes for sharing your shining rays that soothes my soul.
The closest to Duane Allman on slide I've ever heard, although Jack Pearson is pretty close too, but they both add their own mojo to the mix. Warren had become legendary at this point, definitely one of the all-time greats (Jack too)!
This is an amazing interview. No BS - real, meaningful beyond music. I am not a musician, I don't know Warren, part of the audience willing to go "there". Keep taking us "there", Warren!
Such a humble person. I've met him a few times and he a pleasure to chat with. 1st seen him with Dickey Betts back in 1988 doing Pattern Disruptive in Boston
Awesome,Thanks that was a Great Interview ..It was good to learn about Warren's early days .. So Humble yet So Great There is No One i'd rather see live then Warren Haynes /Gov't Mule . Actually just saw them at jay peak here in Vermont .. Great Show and Sept 15th they're coming back to VT on the Water Front..
Concerning the European fans of Warren (6:15): Well, I've seen the Mule four times in Germany, drove one time over four hours to see them play, after the concert slept in my small Volkswagen Golf Variant together with my two daughters which are Muleheads, too, and drove back the other day - and I'm just one of many fans in Germany that love Warren and the Mule and love them for being both a jam band and a rock'n roll band. Had to wait till the forth concert to hear "Soulshine" live (and it was the best version I ever heard, believe me, especially the bluesy intro): ruclips.net/video/Q0yggUrceyI/видео.html Wonder if Warren thinks so, too!
I know some took exception to David Fricke's wordiness, I don't mind it because he's probably in the top group of writers that's well versed on The Allman Brothers Band. Warren is absolutely an incredible songwriter, singer, guitarist and producer as well as being one of the nicest people you'll ever meet. He's a helluva storyteller too...
Warren was born 7 days after me and I too also had cousins who turned me on to the Brothers, Johnny Winter. Eric Clapton same growing up he had, I took the guitar up 5 years later and played in many bands.
I went to see Susan Tedeschi and the Allman Brothers in 2003 at Riverbend in Cincinnati and actually held a conversation with him and didn't even know who he was until the Allman Brothers came out to play
I'd like to know what it's like when they realize that they're a part of music history. That they made their mark and are leaving/have left their legacy. Like Gregg Allman, for example. I wonder if he ever thought about how much ABB affected rock & roll and the history and legacy they created. Or if Warren thinks about it currently, ya know. Do they consciously think about these things? I can only imagine the adrenaline rush they get going out in stage and playing. Gregg said he used to still get butterflies even in his 60s, up until he passed away. I can't imagine what that's like. Or what would've happened to Warren's career had he not joined ABB? Would he be as big as he is today? Probably. Gov't Mule stands on their own as an incredible band. He signed 90 CDs for a guy. Wow! That's a hell of a guy!
I have just watched the Rolling Stone interview with Al Cooper and now this one with Warren Haynes. Both performers came across as wonderful humble knowledgeable musicians. but the man who interviewed Al Cooper was so much better. He didn't get in the way like this guy with his opinions.
Hoped for more music depth. I think Warren peaked with Man in Motion in 2011, wish he broke up Gov't Mule at that time. Gov't Mule's peak to me is mid-2000s. Warren's one big musical slip was his bluegrass solo album. Just did not work, and live shows were cringy. I really wish he did a follow up to Man in Motion with same band, but I think his commitment to the guys in Gov't Mule got in the way For years now Gov't Mule has been a cover band for middle/late-middle age fan boys.
Omg. Warrren is 60!?! No. Nooooo. 😔😥 God I didn't realize he was that, old. I still see him as 40-something yr old Warren 😔 Gregg only made it 9 more years past this point. Smh. It really puts a lot into perspective. Warren was in his early 30s when he joined ABB. wow.
Because it's billed as 'a conversation' rather than an interview. I think by making it informal and casual we find out more about Warren than we might do in a formal interview in front of an audience.
dennis franklin wrote 2 of a kind working on a full house...NO Not at all. Somebody give Dennis Robbins some credit......He never gets any credit, and he is awesome.....
What's your point? That means absolutely NOTHING here. Leave that bs on Facebook. We don't need you wannabe Jr politicians FKN up every conversation with that, trash.
The hardest working man in show business
In music... Warren doesn't really make many concessions to "showbidness" but I know what you mean...
When I saw his video with Joe Bonamassa, I was hooked . Warren is so capable he could hang with anyone, in any genre. He's a musicians musician.
Took my Dutch friends to see Widespread Panic in Amsterdam. Lol... They were the only Dutch people in the room. They loved it. Then seeing Warren there years later .... It was his own audience. Hard to believe I have been following Warren for 32 years. What an amazing asset to the music world.
One of the most talented guitar/lead singer ever!!!
And songwriter. Warren is a rare triple threat!
I love me some Warren Haynes. He's one of the hardest working men in music. 🙏❤️🎸
Nice interview with the humble and gracious Warren Haynes.
He says "he's a peace loving hippie..." you can't but to love this guy!!
Oh please.
I met warren and Woody after a Gov't Mule show in 98.
Love Warren!!! Such a class act.
Warren is magnificence personified in so many ways. A true Golden Soul that shines with pure love! A giving heart for helping others in need, a humble heart that is deeply rooted in the respectful ways of what we Southerners refer to as “being raised right”, (which is just a way of saying good core values of a loving family) and a pure love of music that is woven into the DNA. I believe that when music is part of you in that special way, it is just as essential as the breathing of air, taking the music in and letting it out. Any resulting fame, fortune or recognition are secondary. Thank you Mr. Haynes for sharing your shining rays that soothes my soul.
Great to hear about Warren’s pre-Allman days.
I know people love Zep, beatles ,stones, HDX but for me. THANK GOD for southern rock. Im all tucker
Warren seems like a genuinely good guy. Great guitarist and singer.
The closest to Duane Allman on slide I've ever heard, although Jack Pearson is pretty close too, but they both add their own mojo to the mix. Warren had become legendary at this point, definitely one of the all-time greats (Jack too)!
This is an amazing interview. No BS - real, meaningful beyond music. I am not a musician, I don't know Warren, part of the audience willing to go "there". Keep taking us "there", Warren!
Warren is a national treasure.
Such a humble person. I've met him a few times and he a pleasure to chat with. 1st seen him with Dickey Betts back in 1988 doing Pattern Disruptive in Boston
What a humble, talented human being
Man I really want to meet Warren he has so much knowledge and kindness. Sending him love always!
Awesome,Thanks that was a Great Interview ..It was good to learn about Warren's early days .. So Humble yet So Great There is No One i'd rather see live then Warren Haynes /Gov't Mule . Actually just saw them at jay peak here in Vermont .. Great Show and Sept 15th they're coming back to VT on the Water Front..
A superlative interviewer and just as exceptional interviewee. Great convo all around!
Concerning the European fans of Warren (6:15): Well, I've seen the Mule four times in Germany, drove one time over four hours to see them play, after the concert slept in my small Volkswagen Golf Variant together with my two daughters which are Muleheads, too, and drove back the other day - and I'm just one of many fans in Germany that love Warren and the Mule and love them for being both a jam band and a rock'n roll band. Had to wait till the forth concert to hear "Soulshine" live (and it was the best version I ever heard, believe me, especially the bluesy intro): ruclips.net/video/Q0yggUrceyI/видео.html Wonder if Warren thinks so, too!
I know some took exception to David Fricke's wordiness, I don't mind it because he's probably in the top group of writers that's well versed on The Allman Brothers Band. Warren is absolutely an incredible songwriter, singer, guitarist and producer as well as being one of the nicest people you'll ever meet. He's a helluva storyteller too...
Warren was born 7 days after me and I too also had cousins who turned me on to the Brothers, Johnny Winter. Eric Clapton same growing up he had, I took the guitar up 5 years later and played in many bands.
The most versatile dude.. with the biggest heart.
David is such a great interviewer.
Warren your truly humble!
Channeling the unobvious to brilliance!
I went to see Susan Tedeschi and the Allman Brothers in 2003 at Riverbend in Cincinnati and actually held a conversation with him and didn't even know who he was until the Allman Brothers came out to play
I'd like to know what it's like when they realize that they're a part of music history. That they made their mark and are leaving/have left their legacy. Like Gregg Allman, for example. I wonder if he ever thought about how much ABB affected rock & roll and the history and legacy they created. Or if Warren thinks about it currently, ya know. Do they consciously think about these things? I can only imagine the adrenaline rush they get going out in stage and playing. Gregg said he used to still get butterflies even in his 60s, up until he passed away. I can't imagine what that's like.
Or what would've happened to Warren's career had he not joined ABB? Would he be as big as he is today? Probably. Gov't Mule stands on their own as an incredible band. He signed 90 CDs for a guy. Wow! That's a hell of a guy!
Warren is great!!!!!
I have just watched the Rolling Stone interview with Al Cooper and now this one with Warren Haynes. Both performers came across as wonderful humble knowledgeable musicians. but the man who interviewed Al Cooper was so much better. He didn't get in the way like this guy with his opinions.
4 minutes in and I'm still wondering if the interviewer is gonna let Warren say anything
Frike is very conservative in his choice of hair-dye.
Warrens the mannnnn
Are they talking about the Capitol Theatre in Passaic Jersey? If so, I saw a couple bands in the 80’s.
The scene is very much like Twin Peaks. Is special agent Dale Cooper lurking behind the curtains?
Hoped for more music depth. I think Warren peaked with Man in Motion in 2011, wish he broke up Gov't Mule at that time. Gov't Mule's peak to me is mid-2000s. Warren's one big musical slip was his bluegrass solo album. Just did not work, and live shows were cringy. I really wish he did a follow up to Man in Motion with same band, but I think his commitment to the guys in Gov't Mule got in the way For years now Gov't Mule has been a cover band for middle/late-middle age fan boys.
One of the musicians if not the only one that can play and sing a Brent Mydland song and play it just exactly perfect.
Omg. Warrren is 60!?! No. Nooooo. 😔😥 God I didn't realize he was that, old. I still see him as 40-something yr old Warren 😔 Gregg only made it 9 more years past this point. Smh. It really puts a lot into perspective. Warren was in his early 30s when he joined ABB. wow.
Page and Haynes would be excellent.
Why does it seem like the interviewer is talking more than Haynes?
Because it's billed as 'a conversation' rather than an interview. I think by making it informal and casual we find out more about Warren than we might do in a formal interview in front of an audience.
Difficult to enjoy this interview. My impression is the Rolling Stone dude loves listening to his own voice...
dennis franklin wrote 2 of a kind working on a full house...NO Not at all. Somebody give Dennis Robbins some credit......He never gets any credit, and he is awesome.....
Warren is god.
david frike would be a liberal...lol.
What's your point? That means absolutely NOTHING here. Leave that bs on Facebook. We don't need you wannabe Jr politicians FKN up every conversation with that, trash.