As a teen back in the late 80's, Little Steven and The Disciples of Soul's video for this song being all over MTV was the only reason I knew anything about apartheid in South Africa. Music makes a difference.
Estamos em 2023 e nunca esqueci este momento de 1990 Steven Van Zandt ( com cabeça coberta) foi como sempre um elemento espetacular, aliás já estamos habituados à presença dele na banda de Bruce Springsteen. Não desvalorizando Jim Kerr (Simples Minds) Chrissie Hynd (Pretenders) Lou Reed, Peter Gabriel, Patty La Belle ( voz potente) e Bonnie Rait ( que ganhou um grande prêmio de música country), mas, sem dúvida alguma foi o Steven Van Zandt que teve o seu momento glorioso e que ficará na História da música dos dias felizes.
Damn TTD in the house. He lit it up in the late 80's didn't he. Introducing The Hardline is one of the most incredible albums of that time. That dude had something special for a few years, should have been a generational artist. Too bad it didn't last.
A final hurrah for the electric 80s. Then Grunge happened when everybody wanted to be burnout hippie-punks with no message at all, and things went way downhill from there.
Stop acting as though people weren't sick of pop, new wave and hair metal when grunge broke big. When a decade ends, there is usually a cultural shift. Oh, and this song sucked ass and it really hasn't aged well considering what a disaster post-ANC South Africa has been.
Dont get me wrong , I am and always s have been a little steven fan. He is a brilliant songwriter and frankly without him Bruce woukd be nothing. Wheteher its ,No Nukes,this show, live aid ,farm aid ect. These Ridiculous shows paved the way for whats gone on today with all of these muscians and athletes sticking there political 2cents in..My mother used to say in the 70's "If i am going to pay $500 for a ticket to see Striesand,i want to hear her sing not talk about the war in Viet nam! Great show and great that this footage survived but there are enough issues in thr US to worry about
you think there aren't hundreds or even thousands of others who feel their voice is in this sound? music is always a form of rebellion, why wouldn't they do this? the more quiet people are the more the machine can walk over them
music is one of the first forms of civil protest. Without a voice, the people are nothing. I applaud every single person involved in these songs. They tell a story, make people aware of situations they might never even think of or care about. Every person involved is sending a message. It's up to you whether you care to hear it or not. The smart ones listen and act.
It wasn't like anyone asked this schmata mook to play there , but all these years later he makes time to call out a (God knows why) fan for complaining about 2 less songs on the usarily priced Boss concert! Marrone!
Elon Musk was born in South Africa in 1971. His father was an Engineer, a commercial construction developer, and a local polititian. As Elon grew up in South Africa, the white minority was becoming increasingly oppressed. By 1990, the liberals in the United States of America were supporting the oppression of the white minority in South Africa. Here is an example of these liberals putting pressure on the white minority in South Africa, in 1990. - Well, in 1990, Elon Musk said, I am getting out of South Africa, and he moved to Canada with his mother. So, Elon Musk got away from the oppression of the white people in South Africa, and got his freedom in America. Elon was a diamond in the rough, in South Africa. Then, he made it to America, where he could grow. - You can oppress a group of people. But, they will try to survive, and they will get back up. That is what happened with the Musk family.
Thank God these awful cheesy, cringey " we're gonna save the world" sing alongs are a thing of the past. There were too many to count back in the day.🤮
As a teen back in the late 80's, Little Steven and The Disciples of Soul's video for this song being all over MTV was the only reason I knew anything about apartheid in South Africa. Music makes a difference.
One of the best guitarists of all times. He was a very engaged artist for injustices in the world
Estamos em 2023 e nunca esqueci este momento de 1990 Steven Van Zandt ( com cabeça coberta) foi como sempre um elemento espetacular, aliás já estamos habituados à presença dele na banda de Bruce Springsteen.
Não desvalorizando Jim Kerr (Simples Minds) Chrissie Hynd (Pretenders) Lou Reed, Peter Gabriel, Patty La Belle ( voz potente) e Bonnie Rait ( que ganhou um grande prêmio de música country), mas, sem dúvida alguma foi o Steven Van Zandt que teve o seu momento glorioso e que ficará na História da música dos dias felizes.
I was there, one of the greatest days of my life 😍
Poor life you have. All hail Sabbath!
To be sure 💯 🕊🌎🪶🪄🌹⚡️⚡️
Brilliant. Every-time I hear this song I watch till the end. It's that significant. We must never forget.
Little Steven lives now in Lillyhammer. Great Song.
🎶Don't don't don't you...forget about Steve.🎵
Queste canzoni sono come il buon vino a invecchiare acquistano sempre più valore, specie se confrontate con il 90% di quanto prodotto dopo il 2000
anni buoni quelli veniva fuori di tutto di più grande Little Stev
Still gives one the goosebumps! Thanks 🙏 for sharing your video!
My pleasure,Nancy,so glad to hear your reaction!
Best Wishes
One of the best intro ever...
Why were Wembley audiences always 10 times better than crowds in any other place?
Long-haired Peter Gabriel?! 👍👍👍
Long hair, short hair, no hair. What a sweet, beautiful soul.
Yes you're right. Such great songs
Damn TTD in the house. He lit it up in the late 80's didn't he. Introducing The Hardline is one of the most incredible albums of that time. That dude had something special for a few years, should have been a generational artist. Too bad it didn't last.
I love Chrissy Hynde’s look of righteous anger in her face. She meant it. Too bad FM wasn’t there, she would’ve belted him in the face
who fm?
Freddie Mercury
Why?
Who the fuck cares
@@skipads5141because he was a phoney bastard who knew he had an illness and still slept around
Anybody else not remember Sun City?? I was pretty busy back then 🤔🤔
..........RIP..............
NELSON MANDELA
Patti Labelle from 6:50 out, wow!!
Fabuloso
...remind me of the times when we here in jamaica stood up for something
Oh my the magical 80s were about to shift enormously in a few short months.
Love love love
Incredibile
The man!
young people should get to understand this song and the meaning behind it's making
And 32 years lster here in s.a. We're wondering when the new rulers will start ruling instead of ruining..
Blessed Mandela.
Heaven holds a place for you.
@@joebubbit Whoa dude. Who you talkin' to?
This is so inspiring and thrilling
Charlie’s guitar/rig sounded the absolute business around that time.
A final hurrah for the electric 80s. Then Grunge happened when everybody wanted to be burnout hippie-punks with no message at all, and things went way downhill from there.
Man I hated grunge so depressing. Thanks MTV you fucked up good music.
Stop acting as though people weren't sick of pop, new wave and hair metal when grunge broke big.
When a decade ends, there is usually a cultural shift.
Oh, and this song sucked ass and it really hasn't aged well considering what a disaster post-ANC South Africa has been.
@@thegreatergood8081The Union isn't any better lol
These eighties vapid, save the world singalongs are nauseating and embarrassing.
Evolution is not painless- But Joy can be part of the equation
Great protest song. Protesting Apartheid!!!!!
Screw that.
Was this the Stockholm concert for Mandela?
What a great way to speak
Don't forget Lowell Levinger
Is this before he joined the mob?
Freddie and the boys were blackballed and Little Steven went to join the mob some years later.
Jim & Chrissie were going through a divorce at the time. Chrissie’s mic didn’t work. Coincidence? 😂
LOL. Of course, the real reason the mic didn't work is the mics never work in these group finales. Same at Live Aid.
This is why their is only the human race.
Nice riff.
Sil went in the witness protection program after getting shot.
These entertainment people get all worked up over something, then they forget it and move on to something else.
Unfortunately that seems to be how everyone works. If it didn't George Floyd may never have been killed
Who you kidding. We are one people . Always were Always will be . The people spoke. Israel your next
You're
Yeor
I agree, please elaborate.
you are fucking insane and btw I have smashed this dvd to pieces
We helped free South Africa...now look what they've done to it. Mandela must be crying. "Meet the new boss, same as the old boss".
exactly liberalism is a mental disorder
Mandela was Part of the Decline of South africa.
@@tommypwood672 moron
Mandela was a Terrorist as well
Dont get me wrong , I am and always s have been a little steven fan. He is a brilliant songwriter and frankly without him Bruce woukd be nothing. Wheteher its ,No Nukes,this show, live aid ,farm aid ect. These Ridiculous shows paved the way for whats gone on today with all of these muscians and athletes sticking there political 2cents in..My mother used to say in the 70's "If i am going to pay $500 for a ticket to see Striesand,i want to hear her sing not talk about the war in Viet nam! Great show and great that this footage survived but there are enough issues in thr US to worry about
you think there aren't hundreds or even thousands of others who feel their voice is in this sound? music is always a form of rebellion, why wouldn't they do this?
the more quiet people are the more the machine can walk over them
music is one of the first forms of civil protest. Without a voice, the people are nothing. I applaud every single person involved in these songs. They tell a story, make people aware of situations they might never even think of or care about. Every person involved is sending a message. It's up to you whether you care to hear it or not. The smart ones listen and act.
Glad nobody was like that back in the 60s.
That has to be one of the most god awful solos I've ever heard. Get it together Silvio
It wasn't like anyone asked this schmata mook to play there , but all these years later he makes time to call out a (God knows why) fan for complaining about 2 less songs on the usarily priced Boss concert! Marrone!
ain,t going to play in israel
You're an ignorant Nazi
why?
@@LeighMetapartheid same as south Africa
@@mohshihadeh1601 no its not
Elon Musk was born in South Africa in 1971. His father was an Engineer, a commercial construction developer, and a local polititian. As Elon grew up in South Africa, the white minority was becoming increasingly oppressed.
By 1990, the liberals in the United States of America were supporting the oppression of the white minority in South Africa.
Here is an example of these liberals putting pressure on the white minority in South Africa, in 1990.
-
Well, in 1990, Elon Musk said, I am getting out of South Africa, and he moved to Canada with his mother.
So, Elon Musk got away from the oppression of the white people in South Africa, and got his freedom in America.
Elon was a diamond in the rough, in South Africa. Then, he made it to America, where he could grow.
-
You can oppress a group of people. But, they will try to survive, and they will get back up. That is what happened with the Musk family.
Thank God these awful cheesy, cringey " we're gonna save the world" sing alongs are a thing of the past. There were too many to count back in the day.🤮