Rapper FIRST time REACTION to The Animals - House of the Rising Sun (1964) !! Is this about...

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  • Опубликовано: 3 апр 2024
  • #animals #houseoftherisingsun #reaction
    Rapper FIRST time REACTION to The Animals - House of the Rising Sun (1964) !! Is this about...
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Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @BlackPegasusRaps
    @BlackPegasusRaps  2 месяца назад +188

    I think I confused the TV show “Tour Of Duty” for “Hamburger Hill” I think the Animals song “We gotta get out of this place” was on the movie Hamburger Hill. I need to look it up now. I swear I saw it on a Vietnam war flick but I was super young haha. I’m still tripping that The House of the rising sun is a Brothel. I would have never guessed that. I would have needed a clue, like lust or women. N.O. is a party spot so it makes sense.

    • @hoosiernationsindiana2085
      @hoosiernationsindiana2085 2 месяца назад +10

      Hamburger Hill and Farenheit 9/11 featured the song "We Gotta Get Out Of This Place". There is two versions of the song, the toned down one is what was sent to MGM and the one played the most.

    • @burntcookie270
      @burntcookie270 2 месяца назад +7

      No idea if it was the theme song but "We Gotta Get Out of This Place" was def on the Tour of Duty soundtrack - we used to listen to it on road trips when I was a kid.

    • @nedludd7622
      @nedludd7622 2 месяца назад +3

      @@hoosiernationsindiana2085 "Hamburger Hill" is one of the best war movies.

    • @sethzuern37
      @sethzuern37 2 месяца назад +8

      That song was pretty much in every viet nam movie/TV show

    • @pitmatix1457
      @pitmatix1457 Месяц назад +25

      If I remember Tour of Duty correctly (and it's been over 30 years since I watched it) they used The Rolling Stones "Paint it Black" as the theme song, another stone cold classic tune from the era.

  • @nanalynne
    @nanalynne Месяц назад +61

    I’m a 75 year old Canadian woman. I love to see these reactions to “our” music. It was the best and transcends time!

    • @nicholassullivan1239
      @nicholassullivan1239 7 дней назад +1

      Instant classics, timeless and a lot of mainstream artists could learn from them.

  • @pgray5223
    @pgray5223 Месяц назад +73

    As an old lady that was a teenager in the 60s, I get a kick out of how almost stressed these young reactors are when they don't understand what the "story" in the song is. Maybe my friends and I were different, but we didn't always care what it was. If we liked the sound, that was what mattered. I mean we loved I Am the Walrus. 😂

    • @StellaOgilvie
      @StellaOgilvie 15 дней назад +7

      Yeah i noticed that too, 😅 like you said we just liked the sound, and beat', I was 9 years-old when I first saw them on the Ed Sullivan Show' my favorite tune back then in the early 70s, I got to see the guess who, sing American Women' these kids get a kick out of it' but this generation here, they are becoming utube celebrities ' they know all about the amazing technology ' they are amazed by there singing, it's not auto tuned . Real talent' that's what they're saying ' now days' loved this song'

    • @jeffreymontgomery7516
      @jeffreymontgomery7516 2 дня назад +1

      Born in the 70s, growing up in the 80s, I was one who listened to the lyrics... not just the music.
      I didn't like the direction music was going in the 80s... so listened to older and older music. I prefer music from the 1920s to the 1980s, some - but limited - from the '90s, but almost nothing after about 1995 released in the U.S. Selena caught me by surprise in 1995... A few songs here and there since...
      Now Japanese pop (which I got into in the early 2000s), I have a difficult time finding good translations for, but still try to pay attention to the lyrics...
      I also listen to a few French, German, and S. Korean groups/artists, such as Alizee, Blümchen, and S.E.S. I'm a bit more reserved with S. Korean, only having two groups I "trust" as I don't know the language at all - S.E.S. sings in Japanese too - but the reality is that I like to know the topic and words to a song.
      But I prefer knowing the lyrics so if I'm listening to a song about debauchery, at least I know it's a song about debauchery... :)

  • @DeborahThurmond
    @DeborahThurmond 2 месяца назад +12

    Eric was always way ahead of his time. He is still performing.

  • @willblood7082
    @willblood7082 Месяц назад +9

    It’s definitely a haunting song and meant to be a warning… what’s really cool is this was 1964!

  • @peterjack840
    @peterjack840 2 месяца назад +681

    “House of the Rising Sun” was a really old song, probably dating back to English “broadside” ballads. It was originally about a prostitute from a brothel called “The House of the Rising Sun”, it was told from the prostitute’s point of view. In the opening verse she sings “And it's been the ruin of many a poor girl
    And me, oh god, I'm a-one”. She sings about her sweetheart being a gambler and a drunk. She tries to warn her little sister away from her lifestyle:”Oh tell my baby sister
    Not to do what I have done
    But shun that house in New Orleans
    They call the risin' sun”. At one point it seems to suggest that she tries to leave the life of prostitution behind, but fails: “Well, it's one foot on the platform
    And the other foot on the train
    I'm goin' back to New Orleans
    To wear that ball and chain”. The ball and chain isn’t jail, but it’s the life of prostitution that she can’t leave. At the end she says “I'm a-goin' back to New Orleans
    My race is almost run
    I'm goin' back to end my life
    Down in the risin' sun”. That might suggest suicide, or just resignation that she’ll be in that life until she dies. Bob Dylan recorded this version of the song in 1962, the Animals recorded their version in 1964 with changed lyrics.

    • @kelleewolfe2834
      @kelleewolfe2834 2 месяца назад +26

      Very interesting! Thanks!

    • @mamabear9325
      @mamabear9325 2 месяца назад +7

      first way I heard it, too....❤

    • @jjcustard6378
      @jjcustard6378 2 месяца назад +17

      That was a great comment, thankyou

    • @nataliemorton5568
      @nataliemorton5568 2 месяца назад +23

      Wow! All these decades later and you have finally filled in the backstory of this song for me!!! Thank you, such a classic and unique record it was, and still IS !! 📻

    • @BLew657
      @BLew657 2 месяца назад +16

      My father told me it was originally called “Rising Sun Blues” in 1933 by Clarence Ashley

  • @DawnOverTheBay
    @DawnOverTheBay 14 дней назад +5

    It's eery also because they look so calm strolling around while belting out how people throw their lives away.

  • @gothmamasylvia462
    @gothmamasylvia462 5 дней назад +3

    Eric Burdon is still singing, too. His voice in this video is a voice of an old man who has lived this li8e.

  • @trevahamby2934
    @trevahamby2934 Месяц назад +40

    I'm 74 and I grew up listening to their music! They are fantastic!!!

  • @paulascott5701
    @paulascott5701 2 месяца назад +180

    That recording was done in one take. They drove down to London from their home in North Eastern England, took their instruments out of the car, dashed into a recording studio, performed the song and that was it. Studio time is costly. Eric Burdon was all of 22 years old when he did that.

    • @phronsieone
      @phronsieone Месяц назад

      I heard he was 19.

    • @adiebarrett
      @adiebarrett Месяц назад +5

      I remember reading long time ago that their producer Mickie Most didn't like the song, didn't want them to do it, and only permitted this if they did that long, unimaginable journey (as @paulascott5701 says) which was in the early hours and do a real early start. 1 take and 10 minutes is al it took!

    • @uverambriz7382
      @uverambriz7382 9 дней назад +1

      I heard they may have possibly be drunk, also note the guy in the back smiles prior to bowing

    • @colmanconnollymusic
      @colmanconnollymusic 7 дней назад +3

      @@phronsieone Actually, he'd just turned 23.

    • @justtere
      @justtere 7 дней назад +1

      When “I” was a kid, everyone who either played the guitar or tried, this was the song they aspired to play. Those chords are killer. I don't think anyone I knew ever managed them.

  • @CrypticConversions
    @CrypticConversions 2 месяца назад +188

    Eric Burden had a really rough upbringing in a bad part of town. His pain seems to be reflected in his singing. One of the greatest blues singers ever, IMO. There's a lot of soul in him.

    • @jackstrawful
      @jackstrawful Месяц назад +1

      Is he from New Orleans? It occured to me that the way the band was almost at a slow march behind him throughout the video could be an homage to the famous musical processions on the streets of New Orleans.

    • @CrypticConversions
      @CrypticConversions Месяц назад +6

      @@jackstrawful They were a British band.

    • @terrybpickin9941
      @terrybpickin9941 Месяц назад +7

      Hey, he's from my part of town (its not that bad )😆
      He used to be my mother's friend when they were really young.

    • @tonybanton362
      @tonybanton362 Месяц назад +6

      Eric Burdon is from NE England - same as Sting, Mark Knopfler (Dire Straits), Brian Johnson (AC/DC), Chris Rea, Paul Rogers (Free, Bad company), David Coverdale (Deep Purple, Whitesnake), Bryan Ferry (Roxy Music) and many others.

    • @TheCourage89
      @TheCourage89 Месяц назад

      @@tonybanton362 The north has never been treated well by the south of england, and by that, I mean Westminster and London.

  • @batgirlte9953
    @batgirlte9953 Месяц назад +16

    Eric Burdon has a soulful emotional voice, like a bleeding heart.

  • @bettydavis943
    @bettydavis943 2 месяца назад +28

    Yes, the Animals sang We've Gotta Get Out Of This Place.

  • @robhauser5660
    @robhauser5660 2 месяца назад +138

    Remember, 1964, this was not a video as we know it today. This was on a TV show. Live in 1 take, all analog, no autotune or post processing. True musicians. The color is stock. The House of the Rising Sun is about a Brothel. Originally recorded by an Artist Lead Belly.

    • @richdiddens4059
      @richdiddens4059 2 месяца назад +23

      No, this wasn't on a TV show and it wasn't done in one take. These types of videos were typically filmed to be shown in bars and similar places. They did this song and one other (Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood?) in one session on the same set and in the same outfits. They cut the filming a few times to adjust placements and angles, like moving the keyboard from the back to the front. The audio is the original record laid over the video. If you'll notice there were no cords plugged into the guitars and they didn't have wireless pick ups in 1964. In a few places Eric's singing wasn't in synch with the audio.

    • @roberteatwell6827
      @roberteatwell6827 2 месяца назад +3

      Yeah, like they are playing live. no guitar leads, no mikes on the drums .Have a word with yourself.

    • @DavidPChristian2
      @DavidPChristian2 2 месяца назад +5

      @@roberteatwell6827 And no, Leadbelly wasn't the first to record the song.

    • @meyerhave
      @meyerhave 2 месяца назад +1

      @@richdiddens4059 Thank ye for setting straight the facts about this film clip: with (in true living color) Eric lip synching his legendary vocal along with and to that of the likewise legendary four piece instrumentation audio from the original studio recording that became their worldwide super hit record.

    • @francesdoll4039
      @francesdoll4039 Месяц назад

      ​@@richdiddens4059yes and watch his throat. He's not singing THOSE NOTES!. Just think of Ren doing this in the SpontNeous Stream Jam.

  • @emerje0
    @emerje0 2 месяца назад +190

    You'll recall from The Devil Went Down to Georgia the line "Fire on the mountain, run, boys, run, The Devil's in the House of the Rising Sun", same place.

    • @barbaramatthews4735
      @barbaramatthews4735 2 месяца назад +5

      Well, one is in Georgia, and the other is in Louisiana. Maybe not quite the same place unless there is a different map out there that I haven't seen.
      Both are great songs 🎵 I still gave a thumbs up for your comment.
      I only thumbs down for rude, offensive, and derogatory comments.

    • @Ian-if2lf
      @Ian-if2lf 2 месяца назад +3

      @@barbaramatthews4735 sarcasm , always the best way to get thumbed ...

    • @emerje0
      @emerje0 2 месяца назад +11

      @@barbaramatthews4735 Here's the thing, that portion of the song isn't actually part of Johnny's story, It was Charlie Daniels borrowing lines from other songs. For example "Fire on the Mountain" is a folk song about the California gold rush (which is also not in Georgia 😉) as well as the name of Daniel's first album, it's also the name of a song written by Daniels' friend George McCorkle who was hoping Daniels would record it, but he passed and it ended up getting recorded by McCorkle and The Marshall Tucker Band and Daniels played guest fiddle on it. The other lines in that section have similar stories, nothing to do with Georgia.

    • @CreateWithCara
      @CreateWithCara 22 дня назад

      That was a well known euphemism for a whorehouse back in the day.

  • @Nicovertime
    @Nicovertime Месяц назад +13

    Chills every single time I hear this song.. what a voice 😮

  • @52montoya
    @52montoya Месяц назад +15

    The Animals did "We gotta get out of this place". Famous during the Viet Nam War.

  • @S.A.M.O.
    @S.A.M.O. 2 месяца назад +145

    The House of the Rising Sun was a brothel

    • @dragon-lu3mk
      @dragon-lu3mk 2 месяца назад +7

      it also refers to jails

    • @bobsblues9944
      @bobsblues9944 2 месяца назад

      It was an oriental opium den that had prostitutes

    • @joeabraham8390
      @joeabraham8390 2 месяца назад +9

      Old brothels also had booze, pool tables, gambling, and food. Once you were in, they didn't want you leaving with any money, for any reason

    • @coletedeux
      @coletedeux 2 месяца назад +1

      Also an opium den.

    • @rosaliedelcastillo6893
      @rosaliedelcastillo6893 Месяц назад

      Correct!

  • @alanmcclure9546
    @alanmcclure9546 2 месяца назад +10

    Most of us, who play a lifetime of guitar, started out with this song as our very first to learn.

  • @user-lk1bk9lo5c
    @user-lk1bk9lo5c 2 месяца назад +13

    If you visit New Orleans you can see the House of the Rising Sun. It was a notorious brothel. In the 1960's they would get no radio airplay if they sang about a brothel so they thinly disguised the real meaning of the lyrics.

  • @cherylfisk7698
    @cherylfisk7698 Месяц назад +18

    The "ball and chain", was referring to the addiction of gambling (like his father). The House of the Rising Sun, was not just a brothel, but also a gambling den, as they were referred to back then, (the 1940's - the 1960's and beyond). So the "prison" as some thought of it, was their addictions to gambling and sex, that were linked together hand in hand. Not to mention the booze and drugs (morphine) flowing freely in those "joints". Another old phrase for establishments like them.

    • @davidgross990
      @davidgross990 Месяц назад +1

      Also opium which was big in the late 1800's and early 1900's

  • @saradunn3938
    @saradunn3938 2 месяца назад +155

    Burdon was about 24, I think, looked about 16 and sang like he was 50. "Sky Pilot" is another good one. The House was a "house of ill repute", to put it gently.

    • @nedludd7622
      @nedludd7622 2 месяца назад +7

      "Sky Pilot" is wonderful.

    • @recycledapathy7411
      @recycledapathy7411 2 месяца назад +7

      One thing that always throws me for a loop when I watch a video of an Animals song is how that sound should not be coming from those boys. Like, none of them look like they should be able to go as hard as they do in their music.
      And I can watch the same video 100 times and still it's "holy crap, those kids don't look like badasses, but they totally are."

    • @talltulip
      @talltulip Месяц назад +5

      Sky Pilot was a rarity: one song spread out over both sides of a single/45, because it was over 7 minutes long. I was 8 when this song came out, and wasn't really very aware of the whole Vietnam War situation. But this song, with its sound effects, began to raise my awareness.

    • @captainmoretokin2172
      @captainmoretokin2172 Месяц назад +2

      The long version is the only one i will listen to.

  • @purpleelephantdebh
    @purpleelephantdebh 2 месяца назад +164

    Eric Burdon is a vocal beast. The band was tight. Everything about them was savage.

    • @travissmith2848
      @travissmith2848 Месяц назад +6

      How can such a young and fresh looking face have such a rough quality.......

    • @static65days...
      @static65days... Месяц назад

      Facts!...

    • @honestlord
      @honestlord Месяц назад +4

      @@travissmith2848 100% could be a street urchin /pickpocket straight out of charles dickens ..im a londoner & i got a mate looks like him

    • @travissmith2848
      @travissmith2848 Месяц назад +2

      @@honestlord I'm talking more the sound..... Voice like that I'd expect to show more signs of a rough life.

    • @pabmusic1
      @pabmusic1 Месяц назад

      @@carla6558 Yes.

  • @Dej24601
    @Dej24601 2 месяца назад +13

    From Wikipedia: “The House of the Rising Sun" is a traditional folk song, sometimes called "Rising Sun Blues". It tells of a person's life gone wrong in the city of New Orleans. Many versions also urge a sibling or parents and children to avoid the same fate. The most successful commercial version, recorded in 1964 by the British rock band The Animals, was a number one hit on the UK Singles Chart and in the US and Canada. As a traditional folk song recorded by an electric rock band, it has been described as the "first folk rock hit".
    The song was first collected in Appalachia in the 1930s, but probably has its roots in traditional English folk song. The narrative of the lyrics has varied between male and female narrators. The Animals had begun featuring their arrangement of "The House of the Rising Sun" during a joint concert tour with Chuck Berry, using it as their closing number to differentiate themselves from acts that always closed with straight rockers. It got a tremendous reaction from the audience.”

  • @dixie3058
    @dixie3058 Месяц назад +9

    The Animals are from my home town in ne England were a great sensation 👌

  • @John_Chu
    @John_Chu 2 месяца назад +241

    Alan Price on organ was a monster. Had some solo success in the late '60s. The bassist Chas Chandler "discovered" Jimi Hendrix playing at The Cafe Wha? in Greenwich Village, NYC in 1966 and became Jimi's manager, bringing him over to England , where he teamed up with two British musicians to form The Jimi Hendrix Experience. The rest is history. Eric Burdon, the lead singer, went on to form War and have a big hit with "Spill the Wine." After he left War, they went on to their string of '70s hits like "Cisco Kid," "Slipping into Darkness," and "Why Can't We Be Friends."

    • @mariajobson739
      @mariajobson739 2 месяца назад +12

      I love SPILL THE WINE..BP I think would enjoy that one !

    • @ColourboxNow
      @ColourboxNow 2 месяца назад +12

      @@mariajobson739 Excellent info. Eric's still around today. 82 years old.

    • @AntonyFleck
      @AntonyFleck 2 месяца назад +3

      'Spill the Wine' is Incredible!!
      But please check out the Beat Club version (70s Deutche TV show)!!...

    • @natashab3412
      @natashab3412 2 месяца назад +3

      Lowrider

    • @MsAppassionata
      @MsAppassionata 2 месяца назад +1

      @@natashab3412 Me And Baby Brother

  • @lesley4085
    @lesley4085 2 месяца назад +136

    I’m a child of the 60’s and to me and my peers this song was always about a brothel 😁

    • @travissmith2848
      @travissmith2848 Месяц назад +1

      Born in 80 and that's how I read it.

    • @IggyStardust1967
      @IggyStardust1967 Месяц назад

      Born in the late 60s, and I can tell you, they didn't shield us from anything back then.

    • @donotsupportterroristgroups
      @donotsupportterroristgroups Месяц назад

      The original version which was sung by a poor black woman with many children is the one I believe was about a brothel.
      That Woman sold her original song for a pittance.😢

  • @slgibbs1
    @slgibbs1 2 месяца назад +6

    Eric Burdon is an English singer and songwriter. He was previously the lead vocalist of the R&B and rock band the Animals and the funk band War. In 1969, while living in San Francisco, Burdon joined forces with California funk rock band War. In April 1970, the resulting studio album was titled Eric Burdon Declares "War" which produced the singles "Spill the Wine" and "Tobacco Road". "Spill the wine "is one I would love to see you react to.

  • @denisem8356
    @denisem8356 2 месяца назад +5

    This song always gives me goosebumps! One of my favorites! So happy you listen to the request! I was one of the ones that requested it!

  • @lsarancha
    @lsarancha 2 месяца назад +103

    Eric Burdon (the lead singer) and War, Spill the Wine, is a song to definitely check out!

    • @JoyL351
      @JoyL351 2 месяца назад +6

      Yeah, since BP is into lyric interpretation, he'll have fun with this one

    • @slcs369
      @slcs369 2 месяца назад +4

      Spill the Wine is the best song to crank up if you are vacuuming the home. Such a groove!

    • @larkljc
      @larkljc 2 месяца назад +3

      Omg I’m gonna pull that one up! Haven’t heard that in years!

    • @WinModel88
      @WinModel88 Месяц назад +2

      I second this!! BP would love this one!

    • @Icedmorgans
      @Icedmorgans Месяц назад +2

      Yeah , the live jam, also Tobacco Road . 14 minutes of madness 👍

  • @robinmills8675
    @robinmills8675 2 месяца назад +49

    I am 69 years old and still madly in love with Eric Burdon. 😊
    He does alot of great blues songs.

  • @Natasha-px2gw
    @Natasha-px2gw Месяц назад +4

    My daughter is 11 years old and this is still her favorite song of all time

  • @mistydevillier2197
    @mistydevillier2197 2 месяца назад +7

    Through the whole thing, I'm thinking, "Man, it's gonna be funny when he sees what this is really about."

  • @vincentdarrah
    @vincentdarrah 2 месяца назад +29

    This was an early Folk and Blues song. The Animals "electrified" it and made this masterpiece

  • @allenruss2976
    @allenruss2976 2 месяца назад +143

    Just starting. this song is about a brothel. Another great classic. Thank you

    • @bobsblues9944
      @bobsblues9944 2 месяца назад

      It was not just a brothel it was an oriental opium den that also had a brothel . You went there and between the opium and ther prostitutes you got never left .

    • @RedWitch79
      @RedWitch79 2 месяца назад +8

      The house of the rising sun is about a Brothel in a shady part of New Orleans.

  • @kathybowles495
    @kathybowles495 2 месяца назад +8

    When I was 12, we were stationed in Scotland in 1962/63 when the Animals hit in the UK. All the music that came out of the UK during that time was amazing and we got a jump on what eventually came to America during The British Invasion. Eric Burdon's voice is so bluesy and unique...I loved everything the Animals did. Since then, I have seen him 4 times here in Colorado, (3 times in the Colorado Springs area). He still sounded amazing.

  • @cherylfisk7698
    @cherylfisk7698 Месяц назад +4

    The one foot on the train and one on the platform, was where his Mom is trying to keep him from heading back to New Orleans, and the House of the Rising Sun.

  • @bobdelp2023
    @bobdelp2023 2 месяца назад +169

    IT'S 60, SIXTYYYYYYY YEARS AGO NOW, INSANE! 😮😊

    • @TXplowgirl
      @TXplowgirl 2 месяца назад +14

      Believe me I know, I turn 60 next month and I still wonder how in the world did that happen? LOL.

    • @debbieharkness7661
      @debbieharkness7661 2 месяца назад +3

      Wow, haven't heard this in years. I still would like to see you react to Lady Sings the Blues by Billie Holiday , the movie was her life story same name !

    • @Zalentsia
      @Zalentsia 2 месяца назад +6

      I'm nearly 54 and this century... I'm feeling like I blinked and missed it!!! It's flying by too fast ❤

    • @karenglenn6707
      @karenglenn6707 2 месяца назад +5

      I’m 63 and the older we get the faster it goes. My 20’s seem like yesterday when I was wild and free and partying with friends. No alcohol for me anymore, 20yrs ago I had a hangover which lasted for 2 days and I decided never again. Miss my vodka though 😂

    • @donaldduck2139
      @donaldduck2139 2 месяца назад

      you got that right, I'm 65 was only few weeks ago it seemed I was 40 and thinking, I have heaps of time, am only half way 🤣. . . where the hack did it go @@karenglenn6707

  • @jacquelinejob2766
    @jacquelinejob2766 2 месяца назад +20

    Eric, the singer, was a hard man for sure. From Newcastle, which is the northern part of England.

  • @thomasferguson2795
    @thomasferguson2795 2 месяца назад +4

    “It’s my life” is another great one from the Animals in this era.

  • @TheSadezoe
    @TheSadezoe 2 месяца назад +4

    It's talking about brothels. Animals aren't the first to sing it but made it famous.😊

  • @shannonotoole3526
    @shannonotoole3526 2 месяца назад +71

    Almost every Boomer learning guitar played this as their first song. All the major chords

    • @Bob1014ify
      @Bob1014ify 2 месяца назад +4

      There is an A minor chord. Unless you meant all the open chords commonly used.

    • @tprnbs
      @tprnbs 2 месяца назад +5

      Amin, CMaj, DMaj, FMaj and EMaj, intro is super easy to play :)

    • @JudyDuduks-gm4rb
      @JudyDuduks-gm4rb 2 месяца назад +1

      Yes

    • @dianaspy6733
      @dianaspy6733 Месяц назад

      Yes I was about 10.

    • @peggyshouse-gill8395
      @peggyshouse-gill8395 Месяц назад

      Our band played the front porch and local venues in our early teens. One of the first songs we did that was rock 😊

  • @eekus1494
    @eekus1494 2 месяца назад +19

    The Animals were mostly a cover band. So despite big success they didn't make much money. "We toured non-stop for three years, doing 300 gigs a year and we hardly got a penny." Those are the words of Animals bassist Chas Chandler. So he became a talent scout, artist manager, and record producer. He started with... Jimi Hendrix having heard the then-unknown "Jimmy James" in a NYC nightclub.

  • @laurenblainebamartistmgt
    @laurenblainebamartistmgt 2 месяца назад +4

    I love the keyboard in this, too. Communicates musically the hysteria of “no way out” “have to break free”. Kicks ass.

  • @jimbeckettplay
    @jimbeckettplay 2 месяца назад +8

    Funny that you mentioned that Low Rider vibe. Eric Burden was the singer for that, too.

  • @seagull01-cp8pb
    @seagull01-cp8pb 2 месяца назад +26

    The organ solo, the vocals, the instrumentation😱💕👍🦇

  • @padrespeaks
    @padrespeaks 2 месяца назад +25

    the ball and chain is his addiction; i remember first hearing this song when my dad would drive me to my grandparent's house on christmas eve. it was a side road covered by trees on either side and the only light you'd see was from oncoming cars and it the snow would illuminate. it was the early 90's and this song came on the oldies situation and it hit me in the chest like lightning

  • @leeschaeffer3209
    @leeschaeffer3209 3 дня назад

    The song was written by a dude named Huddie Leadbetter, a.k.a. Lead Belly. He wrote several blues standards, including “Midnight Special,” a hit for Creedence Clearwater Revival.

  • @positiveproductions6699
    @positiveproductions6699 Месяц назад +1

    I still remember hearing this song for the first time and one thing I would never forget the first thing you hear from this song instrument wise that guitar riff is one of the most iconic in music history in my opinion due to this song

  • @walkofnails2923
    @walkofnails2923 2 месяца назад +29

    Looks 16, sounds 60. Amazing soulful voice ❤❤ And that guitar player at the end grinning at the camera always cracks me up. It’s like he is so happy to be on tv and can’t help it…kinda like Mark Wahlberg in that movie Rock Star where he was posing with the rock band and was supposed to look tough but could not stop smiling 😂😂

  • @lindaparker7199
    @lindaparker7199 2 месяца назад +34

    Eric Burden was called the "Bad Boy" of rock back in the day. Many people have already mentioned that "The House of The Rising Sun" was a house of ill repute. The Animals were an English group popular during the "English Invasion" of America when The Beatles first became popular. They had a string of hits as a group during the early to mid sixties.

    • @Rick-or2kq
      @Rick-or2kq Месяц назад

      Thought that title belonged to Mick Jagger?

    • @lindaparker7199
      @lindaparker7199 Месяц назад

      @@Rick-or2kq Don't know about Mick Jagger, but I heard Eric Burden called the "Bad Boy of Rock" during a performance on a television special when he was introduced.

  • @TheSableHeart
    @TheSableHeart Месяц назад +3

    The song is about a brothel in New Orleans. " The House Of The Rising Sun" was named after Madame Marianne LeSoleil Levant (which means "Rising Sun" in French) and was open for business from 1862 (occupation by Union troops) until 1874, when it was closed due to complaints by neighbors.

  • @terrell48
    @terrell48 2 месяца назад +3

    I was lucky enough to see these guys live while I was in college here in Texas about 1967

  • @proofprof50
    @proofprof50 2 месяца назад +24

    "The song tells the tale of a person who has led a troubled life in New Orleans, often associated with gambling, drinking, and other vices. The "house" in the song is often interpreted as a metaphor for various places of ill repute, such as brothels or gambling dens. The song's narrative typically revolves around regret and a warning against a life of vice."

  • @aaronm4782
    @aaronm4782 2 месяца назад +90

    Black Betty by Ram Jam, Gallow's Pole by Led Zeppelin, Midnight Special by Credence Clearwater Revival, Where Did You Sleep Last Night by Nirvana, and House of the Rising Sun by The Animals are all Lead Belly songs from the 1920's. Lead Belly was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1988.

  • @jteal6251
    @jteal6251 Месяц назад +2

    That was an iconic song for my generation. As a group, your viewers are very wise. I am very impressed by your ear for voices, sir. Well done.

  • @jakell99
    @jakell99 6 дней назад

    I can relate to the guitarist smiling broadly towards the end of the song - they probably didn't have many takes (it was probably just the one) and the smile says "we made it, we've made a circuit of the studio with no stumbles and now we're on the home straight" - it's a relief and movie people would say "it's a wrap!"..

  • @aliciahager2961
    @aliciahager2961 2 месяца назад +19

    This song was penned by Lead Belly (1888 - 1949) from Louisiana . He was known for Gospel, blues, folk; he is credited (finally) for founding the era of these musical genres. Midnight Special, Black Betty, Good Night Irene to name a few. American Folk and Folk Revival (60s) (Pete Seeger, The Weavers, certainly owe their early beginnings to this man. He was also instrumental in what was known as the British skiffle revival which produced an invasion of British folkies such as Lonnie Donegan, known for his cover of Rock Island Line, and includes The Animals. (Thank you for some of the info, Wikipedia.) House of the Rising Sun has a strong message about keeping to the straight and narrow. It is eerily haunting; try to imagine what kind of life a young black man living in the deepest South during Jim Crow, the Great Depression, Prohibition, racism, two World Wars; then listen to the mournful and soul filled sounds of any Lead Belly song. it wouldn't be too difficult to figure out where and what was behind that sound. 95% of songwriters and musicians owe tribute to this man. That soul you hear from Johnny Cash (Dyess, Arkansas) is an example of Lead Belly influence. As a student of music, I encourage you to look deeper into Lead Belly and his influence even today. I think you may realize you haven't missed out on music of the 60s, 70s, 80s. You just might find an untapped resource for rap.

    • @kat-den
      @kat-den 2 месяца назад

      Well said!

    • @castlesintheair2
      @castlesintheair2 2 месяца назад +5

      I'm pretty sure the song has older origins than Leadbelly, as he didn't even record it until 1944. Some people even connect it to old English folk songs and broadside ballads. The oldest published lyrics are from 1925, and it was first recorded by Appalachian artist Clarence Ashley in 1933, who said he learned it from his father. Miners in the area apparently knew the song in 1905. But Leadbelly certainly had a big impact on the song and a lot of influence on its trajectory regardless of where it came from.

    • @meyerhave
      @meyerhave 2 месяца назад +2

      "This song was penned by Lead Belly (1888 - 1949)"
      NO, the song was most certainly NOT "penned by Lead Belly".

    • @aliciahager2961
      @aliciahager2961 2 месяца назад

      I thank you for the corrections. Yes, the song goes back farther than lead Belly. I appreciate your thoughts. Thanks.

  • @Mvtobebo
    @Mvtobebo 2 месяца назад +19

    The keyboard player is awesome! I love this song. The first time I saw this video I couldn't believe that voice was coming out of that face lol.

    • @karenalex3274
      @karenalex3274 2 месяца назад +3

      His name is Alan Price.
      One of the best keyboard/piano players in the business. Known as a consummate Geordie.

    • @karenalex3274
      @karenalex3274 2 месяца назад +3

      Alan Price is an excellent singer in his own right.He left the Animals and had a few hits himself

  • @LoriTalbot-du2qt
    @LoriTalbot-du2qt 2 месяца назад +1

    Eric Burdon is still performing, and killing it in his eighties !. He also performed with war.

  • @dominiquebarby2209
    @dominiquebarby2209 Месяц назад

    This is believed to be one of the oldest continuous songs in human history- “old take song” that has been through a number of variations. It’s is from Northern England, sung in the pubs there for hundreds of years and this band would have grown up hearing it, as they are working class, northern Englishmen. They recorded this in one take as it was all they could afford. The Animals were wild boys, they peaked early and were trashing hotel rooms and getting up to god knows what while The Beatles were still singing, “I Wanna Hold You Hand”.

  • @momoze4418
    @momoze4418 2 месяца назад +10

    The Animals were a British band. The lead singer Eric Burdon was about 23 years old when they had a hit with this. It is incredible that a young lad from the North of England was gifted such a deep and timeless bluesy voice

  • @BlackPegasusRaps
    @BlackPegasusRaps  2 месяца назад +383

    It’s funny this is about a brothel!!?? That’s insane. I would have never guessed that in a million years. No talk of lust, beauty or women. How did y’all know that?

    • @philipem1000
      @philipem1000 2 месяца назад

      That's traditional version of the song is that it's sung by a woman who is a prostitute. What most think of the song is that the House is a place of vice, where liquor, gambling, prostitution reign. The singer tells us his father fell prey to those vices and he has too; the ball and chain are the attraction to those vices that will ruin his life. He laments but he is goiong back to it anyway. THis is an updated version of a Blues song from the 1920s or even earlier.

    • @jmasta420
      @jmasta420 2 месяца назад +87

      I always understood the House of the Rising Sun as a metaphor for all vices that keep you up till sunrise and a brothel just epitomizes that vibe.

    • @donkfail1
      @donkfail1 2 месяца назад +49

      Don't know if there even was a place named "House of the Rising Sun", but I've heard it used in the same was as "Place of ill repute". And that's not just for brothels. But in my mind it's usually a place where you can engage in a few vices like drinking, gambling, sex and drugs. Imagine a more modern version of the classic western saloon on the wrong side of the tracks, run (or "protected") by the local mob.

    • @tobeski
      @tobeski 2 месяца назад

      The original was sung from the viewpoint of a woman who became a prostitute in New Orleans, not from a man's perspective at all. And please listen to UK eccentric John Otway's version, where he and a thousand fans turn it into the most amazing call and response song

    • @jayestahnke9917
      @jayestahnke9917 2 месяца назад

      It's an old song going back at least to the 1920s. In the oldest published version the story is told by a woman who was a prostitute in the House of the Rising Sun.

  • @debbieheckman
    @debbieheckman 11 дней назад +2

    I went to a hippie Christian school as a young teen and we would sing Amazing Grace to this music. Beautiful, really

    • @leeschaeffer3209
      @leeschaeffer3209 3 дня назад

      Did you also sing “In The Garden of Eden,” by I. Ron Butterfly?

  • @revaflowers3115
    @revaflowers3115 13 дней назад

    On May 11th Eric Burdon(lead singer) turned 83 years old.He lives in California these days.
    Btw The Rising Sun was a brothel in New Orleans. Ball and chain means he is going back to marry and settle down.

  • @mariajobson739
    @mariajobson739 2 месяца назад +30

    It kills me how clean cut these 60's groups were ( my generation) and my grandfather from the old country, said they looked like "monkies" because of their hair !!! Lol when we watched the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show...same thing ! Lol

    • @bkm2797
      @bkm2797 2 месяца назад +1

      Always preferred longish hair on guys, today it's too short or too long,lol.

    • @xheralt
      @xheralt 2 месяца назад

      The Monkees literally embraced the label!

    • @mzphillips53
      @mzphillips53 Месяц назад +1

      You are so right! I'm 71 and was 11 when we first experienced the Brithish Invasion. Loved the Beatles, Dave Clark Five and Rolling Stones. I think the Stones were the first to not dress the same. But they always said the Stones were unkempt and dirty. They weren't they were just different.

    • @bkm2797
      @bkm2797 Месяц назад

      mzphillips53,
      Yeah, they were unkempt and on the dirty side,lol. Remember their first album Beggars Banquet...just sayin.

    • @jaybennett236
      @jaybennett236 Месяц назад

      The dress was to be accepted by American audiences. The Beatles wore leather and boots like bikers with their slicked into DA's. But their manager said that they should change their appearance for their first American tour. Their "mop-tops" were first Ducktails!! Most American men still had flat-tops and really short hair. Elvis had greased back hair. The Beatles then morphed into superlong hair hippies!

  • @heartwork8318
    @heartwork8318 2 месяца назад +34

    It’s been covered by a pile of artists recently even during a Ren and Ruby J jam session 😁here for The Animals! Yes they did both “We Gotta Get Out of this Place” and “Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood “. Rising Sun was a prison of sorts, it was a “house of ill repute!” 😂😂😂❤️‍🔥✌🏻🫶🏻

  • @heathersibbald9464
    @heathersibbald9464 15 дней назад

    Apparently The House of the Rising Sun was not only a brothel, it was also a place where patrons could gamble. The clues are in the song - his father was a gambling man, and the story teller is addicted to gambling too. - that's why he couldn't stay away and called it his "ball and chain".

  • @inishireland
    @inishireland Месяц назад +1

    The Animals were brilliant and loved their music. It wasn't a jail it was a house of gambling and ladies of the night. Another British group that wasn't too bad was The Dave Clarke 5.

  • @user-ne3kq9cq4m
    @user-ne3kq9cq4m 2 месяца назад +13

    Chris Farlowe "Out of time", 1966 was before it's time.
    Ian Drury and the Blockheads "Hit me with your rhythm stick"
    You'll love these.

  • @NilZed1
    @NilZed1 2 месяца назад +10

    The song is an old American folk song. The house of the Rising Sun is a brothel. There are multiple versions and the older versions are about how the house has ruined many a poor girl, but I think it had already been turned to being about a man before The Animals recorded their version. But that’s why the train verse doesn’t quite work. The first verses work better about a girl stuck working in a brothel. There’s no way out once a girl is in that life.

  • @livenviouslywithnedaj.450
    @livenviouslywithnedaj.450 Месяц назад

    Most discovered this song when they watched Casino for the first time. 👍🏾 it’s hauntingly, beautiful. The instrumentation is bananas.

  • @Ally-StaffyLover
    @Ally-StaffyLover Месяц назад +1

    This song gives me goose bumps everytime I hear it. One of my biggest favourites from the 60's. I was born in 68 so grew up listening to the best music back then. This was first recorded way way back by a black band. Not sure without looking them up what they were called. And then by many different artists, but The Animals is my favorite.

  • @davesmtn1079
    @davesmtn1079 2 месяца назад +11

    He is singing about growing up in a Brothel/Gambling House. The ball and chain for him is gambling. He has become a gambler like his father and is returning to the House of the Rising Sun.
    I have heard the guitarist is smiling because they did the video in one take.

  • @wesmiddaugh230
    @wesmiddaugh230 2 месяца назад +29

    My favorite that year and still. 70mm wide screen that was not done back then. the tall guy found a man playing guitar in NY and took him to london and everyone was blown away by Jimmi Hendrix. notice that none of the instruments are connected to amps.

  • @LaptopLarry330
    @LaptopLarry330 2 месяца назад +1

    The Animals were a British Blues Rock group that had their greatest success during the 1960s. They were contemporaries with The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Who, The Yardbirds, and others. Eric Burdon was the lead singer. He is still alive, and still touring.
    Other big hit songs by The Animals are “I’m Crying”, “Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood”, “We Gotta Get Out Of This Place”, “It’s My Life”, “Don’t Bring Me Down”, “See See Rider”, “Sky Pilot”, and “The Night”.
    In 1970, Eric Burdon teamed up with the American Funk band, War, and had a hit single for their song, “Spill The Wine”. They put on a legendary live TV performance of the song on the West German TV music program, “Beat Club”. That TV performance is available for viewing here on RUclips. Please react to that TV performance, when you get the opportunity to do so.

  • @Ophelia_1668
    @Ophelia_1668 Месяц назад +1

    He is trying not to burst out laughing at the end of the video because they physically lifted the guy with the organ and moved him in front of Eric whilst they were still all playing and Eric was singing. Must of been a mad sight watching the guy and the organ in mid air still playing away.

  • @CrypticConversions
    @CrypticConversions 2 месяца назад +107

    The House of the Rising Sun was where the singer lived "in sin and misery." It's some sort of house of ill-repute, having at least one, if not all, of the vices like hookers, booze, gambling, etc. The ball and chain is the singer's addiction to his vice(s) His dad was a drunk gambler who probably deserted the family (he had a suitcase and a trunk). The singer was raised by his mom, but acting like his dad, some sort of addict.

    • @bobsblues9944
      @bobsblues9944 2 месяца назад

      It ws an oriental opium den that had prostitutes

    • @Bekka_Noyb
      @Bekka_Noyb 2 месяца назад +8

      yeah this!!

    • @natashab3412
      @natashab3412 2 месяца назад

      No. It was originally told from a women's ( prostitute) perspective. Read long comment above. Words were chained. Girl/ boy brother/ sister.

    • @emerald1805
      @emerald1805 2 месяца назад +2

      Various versions have evolved over the centuries. BUT - the “rising Sun” was slang in the 1700s-1800s for the Far East. (Land of the rising Sun). Opium Dens were known as “houses of the rising Sun” back then. Opium dens were rampant in England around when this song originated. It evolved to include New Orleans and different lyrics

    • @ffjsb
      @ffjsb 2 месяца назад

      @@emerald1805 BS. This song isn't that old. Blues didn't exist in the 1700's, and only originated at the end of the 1800's.

  • @karenglenn6707
    @karenglenn6707 2 месяца назад +6

    I’m Australian and remember this wonderful song from before I even was in primary school, I was 4. This is a classic and I love it to this day!!!

  • @jayberman9221
    @jayberman9221 Месяц назад

    The lead singer is Eric Burden & the band is from England. At their height The Animals rivaled the Beatles and the Rolling Stones in the early to mid 1960s. A little later they were known as Eric Burden & the Animals. Part of what because known as "The British Invasion," of the early to mid 60s, the Animals music survived them, although the band didn't stay together long, Burden eventually retired to live in the southwest deserts of the US.

  • @patriciakeith6755
    @patriciakeith6755 2 месяца назад +55

    Basically you start out going to a brothel, turn to illegal vices, get in some bad trouble and then end up wearing that old heavy ball and chain.

    • @emerald1805
      @emerald1805 2 месяца назад +2

      The ‘ball & chain’ was originally opium. Various versions have evolved over the centuries. BUT - the “rising Sun” was slang in the 1700s-1800s (when this song originated) for the Far East. (Land of the rising Sun). Opium Dens were known as “houses of the rising Sun” back then. Opium dens were rampant in England around when this song originated. It evolved to include New Orleans and different lyrics.

  • @77MrRd
    @77MrRd 2 месяца назад +10

    Eric Burden's voice has a unique sound , another of theirs which is a favorite of mine is "San Francisco Nights"
    What a nostalgia rush 😁

  • @gl15col
    @gl15col 2 месяца назад +2

    Eric Burdon does another song that suits that soul deep voice, "When I was Young". You'll need to look up the lyrics for that one too, but even without the lyrics it's worth a listen.

  • @teroholopainen1017
    @teroholopainen1017 Месяц назад

    I just saw the Animals on their farewell tour in Australia, twice. First in Sydney at the end of Feb and two weeks later in Canberra. Fabulous!!!! Granted the only original Animal was John Steele who's sat on the drummers chair since 1957. At the age of 83 he was still beating it like a champ!

  • @seagull01-cp8pb
    @seagull01-cp8pb 2 месяца назад +11

    I think the smiling at the end was relief that they got through it. There is a whole story behind the recording of this song. 💕👍🦇

    • @opaltaberna6817
      @opaltaberna6817 День назад

      He was laughing because the guy playing organ was being pulled into place for the last shot. I guess it wasn’t easy .

  • @chelseahaley8350
    @chelseahaley8350 2 месяца назад +8

    Yep! Still just crossing songs off my list left and right! 😊 Love this song! ❤

  • @jackstrawful
    @jackstrawful Месяц назад +1

    Having been familiar with this song for as long as I can remember, what I'm absolutely blown away by is this video! The players' movement through the frames, and the framing of the players, feels so modern - most of all the ending sequence, with the singer, face down camera, intimately advancing toward the screen, as everyone comes together behind him with the perfect composition for the final shot.
    Not what I would've expected from the typically stodgy, bland production values of the early 60s.
    It also occurs to me that the way the band members are almost at a slow march behind the band leader throughout, could be an homage to the famous musical processions on the streets of New Orleans.

  • @Morgaine
    @Morgaine Месяц назад +5

    The Animals were part of the British Invasion when The Beatles brought a wave of bands from the UK. You have to realize how revolutionary they were to Americans at that time. When Buddy Holly died, that was the end of the Ozzy & Harriet 50s when everyone had short hair. The hair styles look normal now, but they were extreme in those days - musicians went from D.A.s to Ceasar cuts and Beatle mops. The animal theme you noticed represents the wildness and nonconfornity of these bands. Everything about them reverberated through fashion, culture and as the Vietnam war took off, rebellion came with them.

  • @debrafischer807
    @debrafischer807 2 месяца назад +7

    60 years ago we had Friday night teens night at our church…they had local bands come in and I remember them playing this song. Memories! I’m in my 70’s.

  • @garylogan3640
    @garylogan3640 2 месяца назад +7

    The theme song for Tour of Duty was Painted Black by the Stones, but We Gotta Get Out Of This Place was played during the show a couple of times as part of the soundtrack. The show was released as a box set a few years back but the license for Painted Black had expired so the new theme song was a guitar cover of Jimi Hendrix Voodoo Child I think.

    • @OkiePeg411
      @OkiePeg411 2 месяца назад

      Actually, the song it "paint it black".

  • @melissameeks7309
    @melissameeks7309 22 дня назад

    House of the Rising Sun (about a young man losing his way in a brothel) came out of the blues from the 20s & 30s. It was sung by Huddy Ledbetter, but it was the cover by the Animals that really catapulted it into international pop culture fame.

  • @thefluxcapacitor1
    @thefluxcapacitor1 Месяц назад +2

    I forgot about the show "Tour of Duty." I loved that show as a kid.

  • @annpriddy3870
    @annpriddy3870 2 месяца назад +23

    ‘House of the Rising Sun’ is originally a song by Georgia Turner recorded in 1937. It was covered by many artists, including British rock band “The Animals” in 1964.

    • @RiddleRascals
      @RiddleRascals 2 месяца назад +6

      The oldest known existing recording is by Appalachian artists Clarence Ashley and Gwen Foster and was made in 1933.

    • @nunuvyabusiness8550
      @nunuvyabusiness8550 2 месяца назад +3

      House of the rising sun is said to have been known by American miners in 1905. The earliest printed version of the lyrics is 1925.

    • @kathalinehansen7078
      @kathalinehansen7078 2 месяца назад

      link to Georgia's version
      ruclips.net/video/wxt1FYnTt1U/видео.htmlsi=5OziLFy24PX5KYF5

  • @garmit61
    @garmit61 2 месяца назад +6

    Chas Chandler played bass on this. He later became a record producer, discovered Jimi Hendrix in the US, brought him back to blighty and matched him up with Noel Redding and Mitch Mitchell and changed rock music forever. You're right about their other really big hit, We Gotta Get Out of this Place. Another fantastic song from the mid 60s when I was 3 or 4 yrs old 😂. Rising Sun still sounds as fresh and as great today. Alan Price's organ playing was haunting.

  • @rosemaryabbott1020
    @rosemaryabbott1020 2 месяца назад

    "The only time that he satisfied is when he's on a drunk." This came straight out of the South and the old blues singers before recorded music. The youth in Great Britain heard Blues music when a bunch of Blues artists went over in the late 50s and early 60s to gain an audience and the teenagers went wild for it. That's how we got Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck and John Mayall among many others. They got to hear B.B. King, Albert King, Freddie King, Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf and everybody else that could play the Blues went over there because the kids loved it! I humbly request that you do a reaction to "I Wonder" by Humble Pie off their "Smokin'" album.

  • @JohnHazelwood58
    @JohnHazelwood58 2 месяца назад

    Eric Burdon (lead singer) was also in the band called "WAR", before became a solo artist. "San Francisco Nights" is my fav, "Spill Wine", "It's my life", etc. are worth a listening - and much more! "Sky Pilot" is a must for sure, just as "When I was young"! In short: if you buy a best-of-cd ... < you can't go wrong and there is a lot of great music to discover. Back in the 90s, Eric Burdon (and the new animals) played several concerts in Germany over the years. I've been to their shows like 5 times in 7 years or something like that. I never got dissapointed, though. These were smaller concerts in clubs, not arenas or stadium. Maybe around 400-600 people a show ... liked it a lot. The last concert of Eric Burdon I attended was like 2008 ... so quite a while ago! :-/

  • @encrypter46
    @encrypter46 2 месяца назад +28

    When the organist was moved to the front for the end of the video, it created a big grin.

  • @Traveler13
    @Traveler13 2 месяца назад +7

    Growing up in the 60s n 70s in the UK the Animals were one of my favourite, Erics vocals are one of my favourite

    • @susanpeters5392
      @susanpeters5392 2 месяца назад +1

      Same from Nottingham 63 yrs old hi x

    • @Traveler13
      @Traveler13 2 месяца назад +1

      @@susanpeters5392 Ha ha same just outside Notts

    • @susanpeters5392
      @susanpeters5392 2 месяца назад +1

      @@Traveler13 Hucknall hi x

    • @Traveler13
      @Traveler13 2 месяца назад +1

      @@susanpeters5392 Long Eaton hi

  • @dababcock9
    @dababcock9 2 месяца назад

    You're right about "We Gotta Get Out Of This Place". Eric Burdon was/is the lead singer. The Animals were part of the "British Invasion".... and were awesome!
    As far as "House of the Rising Sun", you should also check out the version from Eric Burdon and the New Animals, Live at the Coach House (1998).
    Dave Meros - on Bass, and Neal Morse - on the keyboard were two of the band members that you should also take note of. At the time, they were in the band "Spock's Beard". You definitely should listen to their first song that essentially started the band, called "The Light". Neal's last album with Spock's Beard was their epic 2-disc "Snow" (there is a live performance from "MorseFest" in 2016 that you absolutely HAVE to listen to).
    Neal made a huge personal transformation from the release of "The Light" to where he is now that you can hear a good bit through the music that he put out with Spock's Beard. (He released two "Testimony" albums and an autobiography about his transformation). Neal has been with multiple bands (The Neal Morse Band, Transatlantic, Flying Colors, Yellow Mater Custard, etc)... a lot of the time, with drummer Mike Portnoy (of Dream Theater, and MULTIPLE other bands).
    With everything that Neal and his bandmates have worked on, it's really hard to say what you'll like the most. But I'd definitely check out:
    - "One" (Concept Album)
    - "?" [aka "Question Mark"] (Concept Album)
    - "Sola Scriptura" (Concept Album)
    - "The Call" (song)
    - "Waterfall" (song)
    - "The Similitude of A Dream" (Concept Album)
    - "The Great Adventure" (Concept Album)
    - "Jesus Christ The Exorcist" (Progressive Rock Opera)
    [Note that Neal Morse, through his studio, Radiant Records, has his own streaming service app, "Waterfall", where you have access to pretty much every album he's released, along with the music from a few other related bands.]

  • @IronRaspberry
    @IronRaspberry 2 месяца назад +10

    Ren sang a bit of this in the last Twitch performance you reacted to. .