Glen Campbell- Wichita Lineman (First Listen)

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Комментарии • 397

  • @paulhenry287
    @paulhenry287 3 года назад +5

    One word.....timeless.

  • @heavenlyguitar5913
    @heavenlyguitar5913 4 года назад +10

    Probably one of the most beautiful solos ever in this song. Simple but beautiful. The entire song. is hauntingly beautiful.

  • @luciusmalou4906
    @luciusmalou4906 3 года назад +9

    This is an iconic song that cut across many categories. This guy was superbly gifted. What great music and good vibes.

  • @roddmcleodable
    @roddmcleodable 5 лет назад +30

    This was a massive hit. He was a huge country star and this was a song where he was crossing into the pop world.

  • @gevlar
    @gevlar 3 года назад +6

    Written by the great Jimmy Webb.
    Contains maybe the single greatest song lyric of all time:
    “I need you more than want you, & I want you for all time.”
    Doesn’t get any better than that.

  • @richardw4336
    @richardw4336 5 лет назад +37

    This is a song that I have heard since it came out when I was a child and is one of those songs that is like an old friend that you're always pleased to hear from. On the musician deaths, I would have to say John Lennon, that had my mum and brother in tears and brought a real sense of tragedy to the household. The sad thing is that as you get older you lose more and more musicians that have become fixtures in your psyche over long periods of time, ( Glen Campbell for instance), and each can leave a mark of sadness to a greater or lesser degree.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  5 лет назад +3

      Very true about losing musicians as you grow older.

  • @kentmains7763
    @kentmains7763 4 года назад +23

    He was just an exceptional artist and a great guitarist.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  4 года назад

      Definitely. Thanks for watching Kent

  • @827dusty
    @827dusty 5 лет назад +15

    Considered one of the greatest session/recording studio guitarists ever, Glenn Campbell started out as a "Beach Boy" believe it or not. He went on to become a huge star in the late 1960s and on through to the eighties. Had his own TV show in the mid 70s "The Glenn CampBell Goodtime Hour, that was a combination variety/ comedy show, with a Big name star as guest host each week. He was also in the John Wayne movie True Grit. Unfortunatly, Glen passed away from a battle with Alzhiemer's just a few years ago. He was still playing in Vegas when in the middle of doing a song, he would have to stop because he couldn't remember the words to the song he was playing. The audiences knew about his condition, and they loved him so much, they would start singing the words for him until he got back on track. I was my mother's caregiver while she also battled the disease. She didn't even know me for the last 2 years of her struggle. She was down to 48 Lbs. the last year. It's a horrible thing to see a loved one go through. I loved Glenn Campbells music, even though I'm more of a "Classic Rock" guy. Good music, is good music, and Glen was a great artist and musician.
    Thanks for playing this song, I think it was his favorite.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  5 лет назад +1

      Man dusty, I'm so sorry to hear about your mom... thats a situation none of us should have to go through, but at least you were there for her.

    • @Fuphyter
      @Fuphyter 4 года назад

      So sorry for what you went through. I lost my mom 3 years ago and it's still so hard.

  • @rhwinner
    @rhwinner 5 лет назад +6

    This song is so evocative of a certain time and place, it's eerie....

  • @rbu83145
    @rbu83145 5 лет назад +33

    I was a secret admirer of both Glen Campbell and John Denver. It was not cool in my social circles to admit to this fact.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  5 лет назад +3

      No shame in liking whatever you like!

    • @DrakusRecords
      @DrakusRecords 3 года назад +1

      I've always been a fan of both of them and often play covers of their songs. Glen Campbell was an amazing guitar player too and had a lot of respect in the guitar community.

    • @rayrack5416
      @rayrack5416 2 года назад

      Try being a guy who is a Jane Austen fan.

    • @steve55sogood16
      @steve55sogood16 2 года назад +1

      I'm old enough now, not to care what others think of my appreciations! Always loved this song!

  • @-davidolivares
    @-davidolivares 5 лет назад +31

    “By the Time I Get to Phoenix “ is another must song sung by Glen, again written by Jimmy. Would love to see that reaction. You’re insights help me “get” the song better which, I heard on the radio when it came out. Appreciate.
    Stevie Ray Vaughan hurts still. Love that dude.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  5 лет назад

      Thanks so much David!

    • @jeromep
      @jeromep 4 года назад +2

      "By the Time I get to Phoenix" was a huge hit, and a precursor to Wichita Lineman. "Phoenix" was such a huge hit that the label went back to Webb and said they wanted a follow-up song. Now, follow-up songs are often not big hits, often times because they seem contrived or forced. So, Webb spent a lot of time thinking about the subject character in "Phoenix", kind of made up this back back story about his work in Kansas and built, what is arguably, a love song. Webb admits that he didn't really finish it. The studio wanted something to work with, he sent the charts over to them... and then heard nothing for weeks. By chance he met up with Glen someplace and said he was sorry it didn't work out for them. Glen replied that they had put down the track and it was coming out on the next album. They lengthened the song by putting in an instrumental interlude and then repeating the last lyrics to tie it all up. And from there they had a huge hit... and it was, effectively, an unfinished song.

    • @-davidolivares
      @-davidolivares 4 года назад

      @@jeromep
      Awesome back story Jerome, appreciate that... now gotta hear it again... and again...

  • @dingbat19
    @dingbat19 5 лет назад +6

    I'm a prog and classic rock fan who also likes metal, but let's face it, a great song is a great song, whatever the genre, and this is a wonderful track. What a lot of folks don't realise is that many guitarists view Glen as one of the all time great guitar players. A truly wonderful artist, RIP

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  5 лет назад

      Its a really really good song. Thanks for watching Ding!

    • @williamarbogast349
      @williamarbogast349 4 года назад

      dingbat hit the nail on the head. I'm a guitarist myself for many yrs, and Glen was in the top tier of all time guitarists, many people don't know that about him.

    • @abc456f
      @abc456f 4 года назад

      @@williamarbogast349 Casual listeners of his may not know, but if you're any kind of real fan, you know his guitar skills are legendary. Self-taught, didn't read music. Just born with an incredible gift.

  • @stevenmurano7863
    @stevenmurano7863 5 лет назад +7

    beautiful song that takes me back to my childhood. ;and i need you more than want you...and i want you for all time'. even as a little kid that was a powerful lyric to me...

  • @davidwindham5804
    @davidwindham5804 4 года назад +8

    John Denver. Traveled to Colorado every year as a child with my family and my parents would always put on John Denver as we played in the mountains. My father is gone now, but I still live those days when I hear John and appreciate it so much!

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  4 года назад

      That's so beautiful, thank you for sharing those memories with me David

  • @jobione3620
    @jobione3620 4 года назад +5

    This song has a special place in my heart & I’ve no idea why coz I was only 6 when it was released, just love his voice 🥰

  • @dantean
    @dantean 3 года назад +2

    His voice had a bell-like clarity. Thanks.

  • @rtwbikerider
    @rtwbikerider 5 лет назад +26

    Campbell was a studio musician in L.A. during the ‘60’s. There’s a great documentary out there about the “Wrecking Crew” that played on records by The Beach Boys and others. He was the go-to guitar picker at the time. The guys that stepped out of the studios to perform on stage (Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones, Rick Wakeman, Etc.) always had great chops. This recording is a little too lush for my tastes. But, you can’t fault a guy for sharing a bit of the recording budget with his orchestral friends.
    BTW, Wakeman is on a solo tour right now that may be passing through your area. Just saying, there are worse ways to spend an evening out.

    • @JeromeDukes
      @JeromeDukes 5 лет назад +2

      Did you see Rick Wakeman's RRHOF speach?, dude is fuk'n hilarious. Wrecking Crew, great doc.

    • @jimbricker4982
      @jimbricker4982 5 лет назад +4

      rtwbikerider - Good call on The Wrecking Crew doc. So SO great!

    • @rtwbikerider
      @rtwbikerider 5 лет назад +4

      Jim Bricker I think that there’s a documentary on the “Funk Brothers” from Motown (James Jameson, Marvin Gaye, etc.) that’s just as entertaining. My favorite though, is 20 Feet From Stardom, about back-up singers.

    • @rtwbikerider
      @rtwbikerider 5 лет назад +2

      DukesRocks I did see the RRHOF acceptance speech. Very funny, in a British Music Hall sort of way. He’s certainly more of a raconteur than Jack White;-) His stories of the wild early days of rock music, when he “drank for England”, are extremely entertaining.

    • @jimbricker4982
      @jimbricker4982 5 лет назад +2

      @@rtwbikerider - I've seen the 20 Feet doc, but not the Funk Brothers one; is that one called Standing In The Shadows Of Motown?

  • @OronOfMontreal
    @OronOfMontreal 5 лет назад +6

    One of the saddest deaths for me was Australian drummer Paul Hester, a late-joining member of Split Enz who followed Neil Finn when he formed Crowded House. He was also a great backing vocalist and one of the funniest musicians alive. Hessy battled depression all his life and finally, he hanged himself in 2005. CH reformed in 2007 with a new album and tour with a terrific U.S. drummer, but my joy at their show and seeing their concert videos is still tinged with sadness.
    Then again, the year 2016 saw more celebrity deaths than any other I remember. Keith Emerson AND Greg Lake, both of ELP, both died that year. And Lake died within a week of my londesman, Leonard Cohen.

  • @Ignats75
    @Ignats75 5 лет назад +8

    As I finished that story, I remembered a second one. I was an on air disc jockey doing a show on October 20, 1977 when the UPI teletype down the hall started ringing alarm bells. So I put on a record and went down to see what the news bulletin was. It was the story of the plane crash for Lynyd Skynrd. 3 members of the band including their lead singer were killed. I pulled the live album "One More From the Road" from the stacks; put the song "Freebird" on in the background and then read the news story. The rest of my show was all Lynyrd Skynyrd.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  5 лет назад +2

      Wow...
      GOtta say, love reading your stories Ig.

  • @chrisbarlow2131
    @chrisbarlow2131 4 года назад +3

    This is one of those soon gs that just captures a moment - something that is epherial and yet something that humans just "get" for some reason.
    It's cinematic, its like Marlboro country. Beautiful.

  • @BrianR.
    @BrianR. 5 лет назад +16

    George Harrison's death is the one that hit me hardest, because I'm such a huge fan of his solo work.

  • @mykevenable8180
    @mykevenable8180 3 года назад +1

    really opens the heart chakra in a big way !!

  • @stlmopoet
    @stlmopoet 5 лет назад +8

    I enjoy a number of Glen Campbell songs. He was much more talented than his discography would necessarily show. For years before he was famous he was a versatile session musician. I've seen clips where he performs amazing riffs, but those don't show up in his famous songs.
    As for musicians who died, the one who leaps to mind is John Lennon. I was almost 15 when he died, so I didn't really experience the Beatles firsthand, but I knew and loved the music. The way he died was so brutal and senseless, so at odds with his persona. His death was a cultural moment, grief was palpable everywhere. I experienced that, but given my age it was probably more a second-hand grief.

  • @BrianR.
    @BrianR. 5 лет назад +4

    This song was written by the great Jimmy Webb and it's an absolutely beautiful piece of music. I remember seeing Glen play this on his TV show back in the 70's.

  • @BigMacIain
    @BigMacIain 5 лет назад +9

    I’m a Brit and the reality of Americana didn’t register with me growing up. In 1980 and newly married, my wife and I stumbled upon Bruce Springsteen and his music became part of the soundtrack of our lives. When Clarence Clemons died, it felt like someone we knew had gone, something was lost to us and we wouldn’t get it back.
    When Chris Squire died, that hit me very badly. A touchstone of my adolescence, a guy who made my favorite music work was no more and it meant that Yes were finally done.

  • @mustangdebbie56
    @mustangdebbie56 5 лет назад +12

    Aside from his smooth voice, he was known as a guitar great. Even Eddie Van Halen wanted lessons from him. Check out the video Glen Campbell Shreds.
    My first musician death was Elvis.

    • @Squee_Dow
      @Squee_Dow 4 года назад +2

      Definitely find that video and watch it. And then read the comments on that video, especially the first one which is written by someone who toured with him for years (Jeff Dayton) who marveled at Glen's ability to deliver night after night after night.

  • @sherrifrazier5722
    @sherrifrazier5722 4 года назад +1

    Gentle on my mind 😍

  • @PianoDentist
    @PianoDentist 5 лет назад +2

    Another beautiful song.. thanks for sharing. This is my sisters favorite song of all time.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  5 лет назад +1

      Its a really good song, I was surprised (pleasantly) that I'd not heard it

  • @shyphyre
    @shyphyre 5 лет назад +8

    Karen Carpenter’s passing also affected me because I grew up when the carpenters were cbeginning to become famous.

  • @wpollock1
    @wpollock1 5 лет назад +11

    I like the way the strings come in first....just when he sings "I can hear you in the wires" the strings SOUND like the wires....nice touch. 60's songs are always 2-3 minutes long. "By The Time I Get to Phoenix" and "Gentle On My Mind" and "Galveston" are some great songs by him.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  5 лет назад +3

      Didn't even notice; nice little touch!

    • @MarkMcLT
      @MarkMcLT 4 года назад +1

      @@JustJP Notice also just after "the Wichita lineman is still on the line," there's a subtle high-pitched rhythm that some suggest evokes the morse code of the telegraph.

  • @kennethlund9825
    @kennethlund9825 5 лет назад +14

    John Lennon's death affected me the most, just so shocking that he was murdered like that and to hear about it immediately through Howard Cosell on Monday Night Football, of all things.

  • @Queserasera_LaLaLa
    @Queserasera_LaLaLa 3 года назад

    I'm almost 50 years old. It's amazing me how so much music is lost on younger generations. I have always enjoyed many different types of music. I lived out in the country and didn't have cable TV as I was growing up. I had the radio and records. Now I have an Amazon Echo and can listen to whatever I want whenever I want.

  • @OronOfMontreal
    @OronOfMontreal 5 лет назад +9

    I despise most C&W music but Glen Campbell's version of Jimmy Webb's song is one of the all-time great Pop songs.
    "I need you more than want you
    "And I want you for all time" is sheer poetry, intense and desperate, like Romance fiction should be.
    Jimmy Webb also wrote "MacArthur Park". The most famous version of that was sung by actor Richard Harris, of "Camelot" fame and also the original Dumbledore in the "Harry Potter" movies.

  • @floorticket
    @floorticket 5 лет назад +5

    John Bonham was the first rock star death where I was an active fan, bought albums, saw the movie, talked about the band with friends. We all owned In Through The Out Door, we were all waiting for word on where Led Zeppelin was going to play when the tour came to the Bay Area ... and then Zeppelin ended ... boom ... done. Crushing.

  • @tomschmitz5745
    @tomschmitz5745 4 года назад +2

    ANYONE WHO LOVES MUSIC IN ALL IT'S FORMS OF COURSE OF COURSE should have heard of and know of glen campbell!..among the greatest if not THEE greatest male country superstars of all time...

  • @cathyk9302
    @cathyk9302 4 года назад

    Grew up with this song on the radio and have loved it all of my life, still on my playlist under favorites; a true classic. Back in the day this was a crossover hit because country wasn't big in our home.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  4 года назад

      Tha is for watching Cathy!

  • @sgtBelson
    @sgtBelson 4 года назад

    Just came across this one, Justin. Glen’s songs are most of my earliest musical memories, as my grandfather would have me put his records on the turntable in his room when I was about 5 years old (he was bedridden with emphysema by that time) and we would just listen all day. I’m 56 now, and listening to Glen still brings tears to my eyes.
    He was a virtuoso on guitar. Listen to his ‘Classical Gas’ (live), or ‘Ghost Riders in the Sky’ with the equally talented Roy Clark for some incredible licks.

  • @shyphyre
    @shyphyre 5 лет назад +3

    This is crossover country circa, 1968. Thus the folk vibe you mentioned. And back in the day, most song had to be short to be guaranteed air time on the radio.

  • @justintime42000
    @justintime42000 5 лет назад +4

    I think of this as mid-60s pop with a little country vibe. I always liked it. You can feel that longing he has for the woman he loves in the lyrics and the melody. I think the chord progression is more complex than most country songs so I’m glad you recognized it as being more than a simple country song. Great reaction, as always! Glen Campbell’s big country song, “Rhinestone Cowboy,” came later, in 1975.
    Jimmy Webb also wrote the classic “MacArthur Park,” which a lot of people have said they hated, mostly because they have interpreted the lyrics literally (instead of a metaphorical ode to a dying relationship as it was meant to be thought of) about a “cake [left] out in the rain.” It’s an absolutely gorgeous chord progression and melody. I like dramatic melodies a lot, and most of Jimmy Webb’s hit songs fit that category. I think he’s a melodic genius. If you decide to review “MacArthur Park,” look for the original Richard Harris version. It’s long, and there are other great versions, with Donna Summer’s being my favorite, but because it’s sped up to be a dance tune, the drama is mostly lost. Her voice is so spectacular it doesn’t matter though. Her death shocked me. What a talent!
    What is missing from this song for me is a bridge, and because of this it always feels a little incomplete to me. You said you thought it was short. I think Jimmy Webb purposely kept the song short to conform to strict 2-3.4 minute AM radio song limitations. The Beatles broke that boundary with “Strawberry Fields Forever” in 1967, but they were one of the only artists who were permitted to push the limits of the AM radio time constraints at that time. “MacArthur Park” also pushed those boundaries at over 7 minutes! It’s actually got a section that you could call progressive rock in it toward the end! ruclips.net/video/iplpKwxFH2I/видео.html
    Dolores O’Riordan’s death was terribly sad. She was so talented, and much too young to die.
    The deaths of Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison and even Kurt Cobain were shocking because they were all so young (27) and all were at the top of their professions. John Lennon’s and George Harrison’s deaths have been the most devastating for me, so far. Since John Lennon was murdered as a fairly young man, there have always been feelings of anger accompanying the sadness and loss. I couldn’t feel any anger when George Harrison died in 2001. It felt like our whole generation died that day, and of natural causes. I couldn’t stop crying for days. Much of George’s solo music was so spiritual. He was an unfairly underrated musician and songwriter because of being in the shadows of Lennon and McCartney.
    There have been so many great rock icons who’ve died in the past 5 years who didn’t make age 70, it’s tragic. As the late great Jim Morrison famously said, “Nobody gets out of here alive,” but thankfully these iconic musicians have left the world an incredible legacy. The large number of musicians’ and actors’ deaths since 2014 makes people my age and older painfully aware of our own mortality. It hurts to witness the musical and film heroes and heroines of our childhood, teens and 20s pass away. We are now always thinking, “Who’s next?” 😪 There are many still with us, fortunately!
    Please do The Moody Blues song “Question” (the album version - ruclips.net/video/l2lIbp1XYpM/видео.html). It has a great melody and timeless socially conscious lyrics plus a very cool bass line in addition to being a great mix of tempos, which is a lost art today.
    Sorry to run on so long ... you know how I am by now! 😂

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  5 лет назад +2

      Never apologize for long comments; I appreciate them and always take the time to read through them!
      I see a lot off comments about John Lennons death and the effect it had on fans, and I can totally understand that. Such a senseless act.

    • @justintime42000
      @justintime42000 5 лет назад +1

      JustJP Thanks, JP! Yes, John Lennon’s death was so sad and shocking it felt like it stopped the world from turning. Everyone who was affected can tell you exactly where they were at the moment they heard the tragic news. The same was true for JFK’s assassination in 1963. I didn’t move to NYC until 3 months after JL died. We didn’t have any kind of gathering in the DC area like there was in NYC so all we had were friends, radio and newspapers to feel the shared loss. One of the first places I visited after moving to NYC in 1981 was The Dakota. I’m no psychic but it felt like his spirit was still there. The next time I walked past the building a few months later, I didn’t get that feeling. This week is the 40th anniversary since he started recording his last album after a 5 year hiatus. I have pictures of it on my FB page. I often think of his songs. The messages in so many were universally relatable. “All You Need Is Love” is just one of them.
      The Dakota building at West 72nd Street and Central Park West was where the horror film “Rosemary’s Baby” was filmed in 1969. Its gothic architecture is like no other building I can think of in NYC. You can watch the film free on Hulu if you have it. It was banned by the Catholic Church at the time it was released. Scary stuff!
      Every year on John Lennon’s birthday (next Wednesday) musicians, singers and fans gather in Central Park (across the street from The Dakota) to celebrate his music. I’ve been to several of the gatherings. Some of the musicians are friends and they’re pros. It’s always a good time. They come on Lennon’s death anniversary too, but it’s often too cold on 12/8. Yoko asked everyone to stop commemorating his death anniversary and to focus on his birthday instead. For October 9th, would you please consider a Lennon penned Beatles or solo song to cover (if there are some songs you don’t know yet)? I think it would mean a lot to your followers. If you need any suggestions let me know. “In My Life” (Beatles) is one of his most poignant songs. No pressure intended though. We can all play his music that day.

  • @luannkelly5071
    @luannkelly5071 3 года назад +1

    I grieved for a month when Glen Campbell died. His music was a huge part of my upbringing.

  • @sonnyjames8922
    @sonnyjames8922 4 года назад +2

    Karen Carpenter, her passing had the most effect on me. She was so beautiful in the 1975 HORIZON album photo and "Only Yesterday" video. Gone 8 years later. Still bothers me. Glen Campbell was love at first hear. Really like this one. When you listen to the albums you realize he had about 100 great songs. I recommend his 1975 song "Rhinestone Cowboy".

  • @Ignats75
    @Ignats75 5 лет назад +6

    Artist's death that afffected me? That's easy; but it has a little bit of backstory. As I've previously mentioned, my alltime favorite band is The Band. They are famous for their musical documentary of their final concert called The Last Waltz. Their lead songwriter, Robbie Robertson was tired of the drugs and drama and life on the road and wanted to quit. They went out with a bang serving Thanksgiving dinner for 5,000 people and then an all star concert in 1976.
    Fast forward a few years and The Band reformed without Robbie and started touring again. Fast forward almost 10 years and I was excited to see them live at a now long gone venue here in Cleveland called he Front Row theater. It seated about 4,000 and was theater in the round with a rotating stage. The concert on 2/22/86 was amazing. To this day, I've never seen a crowd that into it. Its one of only two times in my life I've seen a venue turn the house lights back off because the crowd refused to leave. Now The Band was famous for NOT doing encores, so this was remarkable that the houselights were turned back off. Levon Helm came out (in a down jacket as though he was on the bus) and said, "Damn, we've already played everything. DO you want us to play it again?" And the crowd went wild. It was like they knew this was a special watershed night. They reprised about 4 of their songs including my personal GOAT song "The Weight".
    Tragically, it was. The Cleveland show was the last northern concert of their tour before they headed to Florida. Ten days later, on March 6, 1986, in Winter Park, Florida; pianist and singer Richard Manuel committed suicide in his hotel room. He spent most of his career battling alcohol and drugs and I guess something pushed him over the edge. I remember reading the story in the newspaper and getting nauseous. That one hit me.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  5 лет назад +1

      Man, such a tragic story, but what an amazing experience you were left with at that concert.

  • @jaybird4093
    @jaybird4093 5 лет назад +2

    My dad is a fan of Glen Campbell. He would listen to GC when I was a child. The only song I can remember is Rhinestone Cowboy, the rest was just part of the background. This song reminds me of my dad. I need to sit down and listen to his music with him before he's gone.
    Like you, musician deaths haven't affected me; that is until recently, since I’ve likely passed the halfway point of my own mortality. The death of Chris Squire from Yes, is the one that's hit me the hardest.

  • @baronofgreymatter14
    @baronofgreymatter14 3 года назад +1

    One of the greatest guitar players of all time

  • @delorangeade
    @delorangeade 5 лет назад +7

    I always felt there was something surreal, and maybe spiritual about this song, without really knowing how the effect is created. Death affects us in different ways at different times in our lives, so, although Phil Lynott is the rock star of greatest personal significance to me to have died, somehow the younger me was more insulated against death and the process of dying, than the older me hearing the news that David Bowie had died.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  5 лет назад

      Totally understood. Deaths affect us differently at different times in our lives.

  • @shyphyre
    @shyphyre 5 лет назад +7

    Minnie Riperton‘s death really affected me because she was so young at the time. It was so unexpected and she left behind two children. Marvin Gaye’s Death also affected me because I grew up listening to his music and the circumstances leading to him being killed by his dad were so tragic. John Lennon’s death was also sad because I was just starting to get more to him in the Beatles music, and at the time he was going to come back with his music.

    • @Bikebrh
      @Bikebrh 4 года назад

      Also, with Minnie Riperton, it always gets me to know that when she starts singing "Maya, Maya, Maya" in the fadeout of "Lovin' You", she is putting a memory down for her then baby daughter, Maya Rudolph. (That's why Maya Rudolph is such a good singer, she's half Riperton)

  • @robertbassham8514
    @robertbassham8514 4 года назад +3

    Always loved watching the Glen Campbell TV show back when I was a kid. Being 61 I have seen so many talented souls pass away. Yes many artists are from the US like Karen Carpenter with her warm voice or any of the other idols I grew up listening to, many mentioned in the comments of this thread. Having an older daughter I have listened to many artists I might not have heard otherwise and so when we are experiencing music together and then hear of their passing it hurts a lot. I am referring to Jonghyun from the K-pop group Shinee. We were both SO saddened by his death. This dramatic performance of the Spanish song Y si fuera Ella almost moves this old man to tears knowing he has passed. ruclips.net/video/BDb02isPFc0/видео.html

  • @michaelsullivan4213
    @michaelsullivan4213 4 года назад +1

    This was his best song. It's so beautiful.

  • @bethdealmeida6789
    @bethdealmeida6789 11 месяцев назад

    Love this! Have never known Wichita, much less, a lineman but every single time I hear this one, feel like, yeah, I have!

  • @lindazee
    @lindazee 4 года назад +1

    Just came across your reaction to this haunting song. Jimmy Webb's songs have a way of taking me on an emotional ride. Glen Campbell was so incredibly multi-talented, especially his guitar skills. Did you ever react to By the Time I Get to Phoenix? Would love to check it out.

  • @thedocofrock1890
    @thedocofrock1890 4 года назад

    glen was an off and on member of the surf group the beach boys a lot in the 60's as an occaisional player and fill in musician. and even though he had a definite country sound he crossed over very successfully to main stream radio because of his unique sound.truly gifted singer and guitarist. miss him greatly as i grew up listening to him even though i was a hard rocker of the highest order! great tunes are great tunes!

  • @Ferretbomber
    @Ferretbomber 4 года назад +3

    Frank Zappa's death impacted me the most, and also Prince. And now Ian Anderson has spoken about having an incurable lung disease ... he's my favorite artist, so that is really hard to hear. Neil Peart was also very difficult. We're in an era where so many of the great artists of the 60s-80s are passing, or reaching an age where it is an impending reality.

    • @hipster818
      @hipster818 3 года назад

      I agree. Zappa and Miles Davis were two artists that really hit me hard.

  • @halcyon289
    @halcyon289 5 лет назад +2

    Buddy Holly. Although he died a few years before my birth, i always felt sadness when I listened to his music . My dad's Buddy Holly album was the first music I really got into. Who knows what Buddy could have done. His songwriting was just stellar. His influence universal.
    Without him, I wouldn't even be here on your channel.
    A song recommendation for you by Buddy Holly is ..... Peggy Sue. Great playing and a superb recording of the drums.

  • @christinelegate8137
    @christinelegate8137 4 года назад

    I love Glen Campbell. He had a huge amount of hits crossing over to pop and and wrote some amazing songs. Saw him live in Canada once and he was fantastic. Great guitarist too.

  • @Umbrella2
    @Umbrella2 4 года назад

    Another all time favourite, love his voice.

  • @sidecardog5244
    @sidecardog5244 5 лет назад +3

    Thanks Harry! One of my all time non rock favorites. Glen Campbell was an excellent guitarist and a true entertainer.
    It’s interesting that you thought about the “strain” in terms of relationships. I always thought about the snow weight pulling down the telephone lines.
    There’s a bunch of sixties pop artists that I put in a playlist I call Guilty Pleasures: Petula Clark, Dionne Warwick, Tom Jones, Herb Alpert & TB, Harry Nillson, etc. This was stuff my parents listened to. I would never admit to my friends (Not cool) but I secretly enjoyed.

    • @sidecardog5244
      @sidecardog5244 5 лет назад +3

      Ps, easy answer to your musician death question. John Lennon. I was in college studying for finals. Immediately started crying like a baby. Went outside and everyone else was crying and hugging. Thousands gathered for a candlelight vigil, playing Beatles songs and getting stoned. As children of the sixties, we all knew this was the end of an era. What a bummer.

    • @justintime42000
      @justintime42000 5 лет назад +2

      Woody n’ Sidecar Dog I love all those artists! I grew up with them! Burt Bacharach and Hal David wrote all the Dionne Warwick hits. Absolute musical genius. You have nothing to be embarrassed for. I see so many younger people at older artists’ concerts these days. A lot of them are very hip to the songs their parents grew up with. These are all pop icons (rather than rock icons, who are generally considered cooler by younger people), but a good song defies category, time and age. Dusty Springfield was pretty great too, right? Adele totally copied her stage moves and was very inspired by her voice and style.

  • @dctbass
    @dctbass 4 года назад +1

    A song of such love and yearning;
    "And I need you more than want you, and I want you for all time......"
    One of the reasons the song is so short is that the writer Jimmy Webb sent it to Glen as something to be worked on, a starting point for a full song and found out later that they had just cut it exactly as written.

  • @lsbill27
    @lsbill27 3 года назад

    Always loved the musical composition and choice of instruments for this tune. Not to mention his vocal styling.

  • @Largeagegaplove
    @Largeagegaplove 5 лет назад

    Keith Green was a pioneer in contemporary Christian music. He was a child prodigy having a recording contract at age ten, and recorded records at this young age. He later having not become famous like contemporary Donnie Osmond, spent years searching to find out about life. He gave his life to Christ and created a great catalog of music in a short period of time before dying in a plane crash in the early 80's. Two of my favorite songs "Grace by which I stand & Asleep in the light". As a new Christian at the time of his death, his music meant a lot to me, and still does to this day.

  • @iamstevec1656
    @iamstevec1656 5 лет назад +6

    "Where's the Playground Suzie" and "Dreams of the Everyday Housewife", 2 more real good ones by Glen Campbell.

  • @doplinger1
    @doplinger1 4 года назад +2

    He has an incredible past, part of the Wrecking Crew, and they don't give a prime time TV show to just anyone!

  • @personalcheeses8073
    @personalcheeses8073 4 года назад

    An all around beautiful composition

  • @stpnwlf9
    @stpnwlf9 4 года назад +1

    Artist's death that shook me: Roy Orbison. My brother is 10 years older than I am and in the 60s, I was a bratty little brother and he was in high school and he was a big fan of Orbison. I always appreciated his music but his career faded in the 70s. Then in the 80s, he had a comeback and was part of the Traveling Wilburys - and I was so happy that he was being appreciated again. And at the height of that, he died suddenly. It really hit me hard.

  • @GjpgrD
    @GjpgrD 4 года назад

    Thank you so much for reviewing this most beautiful of all adult contemporary songs! Both Jimmy & Glen were geniuses at their crafts & complemented each other like Bacharach & David did with Warwick. There is a wonderful documentary about Glen's life & struggle with Alzheimer's called "I'll Be Me" which I think premiered on Netflix. You should also check out his film with John Wayne, "True Grit", which is an iconic western & an overall great movie. (He used to joke that he was so bad in it that they gave Wayne an Oscar!) He had the voice of an angel, the guitar licks of a country pop Hendrix, movie star looks & was just a genuinely nice guy. I had a huge crush on him when I was in grade school during his TV show! My dad would make fun of me & then say, "I'm just glad you like someone with actual talent & not one of those hippie freaks." Not long after this period I became obsessed with the Beatles & the Who in my teens - haha, Daddy! So the deaths of Keith Moon & later John Lennon were devastating, & much later George Harrison & John Entwhistle.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  4 года назад +1

      Thank you Gj for watching!

  • @sanddab
    @sanddab 5 лет назад +13

    You must do his other classic "By the Time I get to Phoenix".

  • @MissAstorDancer
    @MissAstorDancer 5 лет назад +1

    I will ask for your patience with me, for this ridiculously long comment!
    It was the "Summer of Love", and while this song is not what one would think of in that context, it WAS part of that summer!
    I turned 15 that summer. My birth family had fallen apart, my Mother had moved out, and I now had a new family (stepmother and step-siblings). I would begin my first year of High School that fall.
    My oldest step-brother (who was 4 years younger than me) was the love of my life BEFORE my Dad married his Mom in May 1968. (His family and mine were neighbors, until our families fell apart).
    We spent several years during the 60s sharing our love of music together, starting with The Beatles. But Summers were the best! On blankets on summer nights, or just sitting on the curb on Summer evenings, with the transistor radio playing the fantastic music of the time. "Wichita Lineman" was one of those stunning Summer Songs. For me, it will always be on my "Spring/Summer Tunes" playlist!
    I must comment that the song talks about this:
    "Similarly, the electronic sounds a lineman might hear when attaching a telephone earpiece to a long stretch of raw telephone or telegraph line, i.e., without typical line equalization and filtering ("I can hear you through the whine") are represented by a repeating "Morse code" keyboard motif.
    In all versions of this song on youtube, you just cannot hear the "morse code" effect in the mix, but when the song came out, and you heard it on the radio (even the cheapest transistor radio and AM radio stations), the "morse code" effect was PROMINENT! It was just ONE of the unique things about the instrumentation in the song. But somehow, it seems lost today. I wish I had a copy of the original release of the album!
    -----
    Regarding the deaths of musicians during my life:
    The first one to really affect me was John Lennon. I had just gotten into bed that Monday night, and had reached over to set my clock radio alarm for the next morning. When I turned on the radio, they were reporting the news about John. They had not yet pronounced his death at that point. I jumped out of bed, and went to the TV, but found nothing yet. So with both the TV and the radio on, I was up the entire night listening to the coverage. Strangely, I remember that I went to the TV, but I don't remember anything much about the rest of the night. I truly think I went into shock. I barely made it to work the next morning. I really don't remember much about that next day. In fact, I don't remember much about that week, except constant coverage, and nothing but Beatles on the radio.
    I do remember 6 days later, going to a memorial gathering in Tulsa to honor John. "On 14 December 1980, millions of people around the world responded to Ono's request to pause for ten minutes of silence to remember Lennon.[63] 30,000 gathered in Lennon's hometown of Liverpool, and the largest group-over 225,000-converged on Central Park, close to the scene of the shooting.[63] For those ten minutes, every radio station in New York City went off the air.[64].
    It compared only to the assassination of JFK, in terms of world-wide impact.
    Less than 4 months later, John Hinkley tried to assassinate Ronald Reagan. Somewhere during that period between John's death and Reagan's attempted assasination, my own Father had a heart attack, and I immediately flew home to see him. But strangely, I don't remember the date of my Dad's heart attack.
    The next musician death to hit me hard was that of Stevie Ray Vaughan. I had just discovered him at a time when I had just gotten "clean and sober", and I was truly heartbroken at his death.
    The next death of a musician that really hit me HARD was that of Chris Squire, bassist for Yes. Yes was my #2 favorite band, second only to The Beatles. I was really crushed by his death.
    I was also very affected by the death of David Bowie! I had only been a "casual" fan of Bowie before that, only familiar with his biggest hits, which I loved! But his death caused me to dig even deeper into his legacy, and so it was very hard to be learning how much I had missed of his body of work.
    This might be the longest comment in youtube history, so I won't go into any of the other musicians' deaths and how they affected me.
    Thanks for listening, and thanks for your heartfelt reactions!

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  5 лет назад +1

      That was a great read Astor, thankbyou for sharing. I live reading about what music means to different people

    • @MissAstorDancer
      @MissAstorDancer 5 лет назад

      @@JustJP Thank you, Justin, for reading it, and for commenting!
      ;)

  • @renlessard
    @renlessard 4 года назад

    Wonderful singer. Incredible guitarist. RIP

  • @lynne5322
    @lynne5322 2 года назад +1

    This is an exquisite love song by one of the best (Jimmy Webb) sung by one of the best (Glenn Campbell / Wrecking Crew}. ("And I need you more than want you.... And I want you for all time...") (Oh my gaawwd. An unequalled lyric....)

  • @direnova6284
    @direnova6284 5 лет назад +8

    Freddy Mercury's death hit me quite hard, which is strange, because although I think he's great and I like quite a lot of Queen's stuff, I'm not a massive fan. I do however feel that we lost something when he died. David Bowie was also a big hit cos I was a big fan in the 70's and it seemed to be the end of my era.

    • @AW-yj6md
      @AW-yj6md 4 года назад

      Thats how I feel whenever someone dies from that era we all grew up in, I didn't cry, but was sad when Johnny Carson died, it was just like you said, it's like our era is gone, thats why I love watching these young people discovering all this old music, it cracks me up when they ask all of us to give them suggestions on what "new" music
      to listen to next., new, wow, but then,..its new to them, they don't hear music like this now, can't remember what song it was, but there were horns, saxophones, trumpets, and one kid on here was reacting, listening to the song was like "what's that sound"?, and I thought my God, they're just not use to hearing that,.and that's sad, I mean I know if they were into jazz they'd hear horns and know what they sound like,but doubt many young people listen to jazz, hopefully there's hope they'll start to appreciate that too., Peace ✌

    • @direnova6284
      @direnova6284 4 года назад

      @@AW-yj6md Thanks to recording, good music will never die. It won't be mainstream but it's there for people with the will to seek it out. I was and still am a Prog fan who knows that Jazz is at the root of all intricate excellence that relies on feel as well a virtuosity in music. Anyone with a hunger for interesting, non-formulaic music that has invention and melody will find those bands we love and keep them alive forever, just like Bach :) .

  • @johnbattles1002
    @johnbattles1002 4 года назад +4

    Glenn Campbell's "Galveston", "Dreams of the Everyday Housewife," and "By the Time I Get to Phoenix" would be very worthy of checking out. The singer's death that is most memorable to me is Elvis Presley (1935-1977). You should react to some of his. WARNING! Once you listen to him -- and especially if you both listen to AND watch him perform, you may be entrapped for life! :)

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  4 года назад

      Ty John!

  • @steve55sogood16
    @steve55sogood16 2 года назад

    " and I need you ,more than want you" what a line (man)!

  • @MarkMcLT
    @MarkMcLT 4 года назад

    The first album I ever owned was Glen Campbell. So many great songs... Gentle on My Mind, By the Time I Get to Phoenix, The Everyday Housewife, Galveston...

  • @tomschmitz5745
    @tomschmitz5745 4 года назад +2

    actually i believe when he sings about "and if it snows that stretch down south won't ever stand the strain" , he's NOT talking about his relationship, but he is LITERALLY talking about the telephone lines won't stand the strain and might go down.

  • @MarkMcLT
    @MarkMcLT 4 года назад

    One of the all time greats. The first album I ever owned was Glen Campbell. Other favorites - "Gentle on my Mind", "By the Time I Get to Phoenix", "Galveston", "The Dreams of the Everyday Housewife"

  • @robinhood4830
    @robinhood4830 4 года назад +1

    Had to be Elvis I thing I was 13 or so...Still remember it to this day where I was and what I was doing

  • @tonyt6481
    @tonyt6481 5 лет назад

    I really like the way you react to different songs and videos because you tend to explain why you liked didn't like it or the parts that you did like you go in to detail about different parts of the song do you like or music parts that you liked I liked it but you analyze this song. great job!!!!!

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  5 лет назад

      Thank you Tony 🙏

  • @peppernagre3126
    @peppernagre3126 5 лет назад +3

    I assumed he was more country also. This was easy listening. Which is fine with me. It reminded me of John Denver a bit.

  • @genebrega5642
    @genebrega5642 4 года назад

    Well done. Bringing back the classics.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  4 года назад

      Ty Gene!

  • @johnandrews3151
    @johnandrews3151 4 года назад +1

    When John Lennon died, it dashed all hopes people had for the Beatles to get back together again. Everyone who was a Beatles and John Lennon fan were all devestated. Jim Croce was another artist lost too soon in a plane crash. Also Stevie Ray Vaughn. Michael Jackson. Whitney Houston. Harry Chapin. Janice Joplin. Many more also. They are all a great loss. Let's never forget the late, great Karen Carpenter. RIP to all of them.

  • @DurandCompton
    @DurandCompton 5 лет назад +4

    Hey now, line man for the county is an important job. He keeps the lights on when the strong winds blow.

    • @DurandCompton
      @DurandCompton 5 лет назад +3

      Also, Glenn Campbell rocks.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  5 лет назад

      Very very true Durand.

  • @richard-yz6cz
    @richard-yz6cz 5 лет назад +2

    a great guitar player too.

  • @IllyaLeonovMorganFreepony
    @IllyaLeonovMorganFreepony 4 года назад

    Most people do not know what an incredible guitar player Glen was. One of the best ever.

  • @terriwallismeeks9166
    @terriwallismeeks9166 3 года назад

    Glen and his wife loved that line JP. And I want you more than need you and I need you for all time.

  • @danmcconnell5941
    @danmcconnell5941 4 года назад +1

    My favorite Glenn Campbell songs are this one, Galveston, Southern Nights, and Gentle on my Mind

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  4 года назад +1

      Thanks Dan!

  • @paulpenczner8291
    @paulpenczner8291 2 года назад

    Around the time that this song first came out, a Goodyear Auto Service location put out a commercial which had this tune, but with the following change to its lyrics : "I Am Alignment For The County - Let You Drive The Main Roads" !!:):)
    Please also check out the most famous (nationwide and worldwide) song of Glen Campbell, which is named "By the Time I Get to Phoenix" - the lyrics evoke a fictional trip on I-40 from Campbell's adopted hometown of Los Angeles to his original hometown of Delight (pronounced "DEE-Light"), near Texarkana in (Southwest) Arkansas - in real life, that is a trip Campbell doubtless undertook many times; however, in real life the purpose for such trips was not to "Escape" (Rupert Holmes/Pina Colada Song-style) from a lady in California that he was "tired of". This song was well-known and loved world-wide, but particularly in Phoenix, in Albuquerque and in Oklahoma !!:):)

    By the time I get to Phoenix
    She'll be rising
    She'll find the note I left hanging on her door
    She'll laugh, when she reads the part that says I'm leaving
    Cause I've left that girl, so many times before
    By the time I make Albuquerque
    She'll be working
    She'll probably stop at lunch,
    And give me a call
    But she'll just hear that phone keep on ringing
    Off the wall, that's all
    By the time I make Oklahoma
    She'll be sleeping
    She'll turn softly and call my name out low
    And she'll cry, just to think, I'd really leave her
    Though time and time I've tried to tell her so
    She just didn't know,
    I would really go

  • @Fuphyter
    @Fuphyter 4 года назад +1

    One of the most beautiful song ever written done to perfection by Glen 💜 Losing Tom Petty, Prince was so hard, losing Chris Cornell crushed me.

  • @JohnWesleyDowney
    @JohnWesleyDowney 6 месяцев назад

    That high pitched repeating note (I'm not sure of the instrument) gives the song a feel of a telegraph line message, or electrical pulse. Very creative in sync with his profession.

  • @floorticket
    @floorticket 5 лет назад +1

    After Bonham, Kurt Cobain was unexpected, although we had that pre-cursor episode in Rome. Prince was a shocker and Bowie. Saw both of them back in the 80s. Brent Mydland of the Grateful Dead in July of '90. I remember where I was when I heard the news on the car stereo. But the most devastating of all for a Deadhead like me was Jerry Garcia's passing in '95. We still bemoan it to this day in GD facebook groups. And of course concert promoter Bill Graham's helicopter death in '91. Tom Petty!! That one was brutal too ... saw him twice in '99 in San Francisco at the Fillmore.

  • @dougnelsin1480
    @dougnelsin1480 4 года назад

    Thanks for the reaction. I have liked this song since the first time i heard it some 50 years ago.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  4 года назад +1

      Ty for watching Doug!

    • @dougnelsin1480
      @dougnelsin1480 4 года назад

      @@JustJP No problem. Keep up the good work.

  • @mikeschweinsberg1565
    @mikeschweinsberg1565 2 года назад

    Thank you thank you thank you for posting this.

  • @williamcabell142
    @williamcabell142 4 года назад

    A very talented artist. This was a special time. You could hear this song on the radio followed by say the Beatles or some group like Zeppelin, the Beatles, Motown, etc.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  4 года назад

      Thank you for watching!

  • @narlycat
    @narlycat 4 года назад

    when he sings "if it snows down south that stretch won't stand the strain." It can have a double meaning. The casual meaning is that that line is an interruption to his emotions by his job. The immediacy of his job distracted his thoughts for a moment. It may be meant to be a throw away line, but showing how his attention is bouncing back and forth between his feelings and the necessities of his job. The stretch down south is the power line they strung up and he knows it wasn't a very good job and it is vulnerable to bad weather. Kind of like the singer, he sounds emotionally vulnerable as well. Glen Campbell was a guitar session musician for the Wrecking Crew. Just about every hit song to come out of Los Angeles in the 1960s was performed by the Wrecking Crew. They were studio musicians who played in the back ground to the famous acts of the day. Elvis Presley once teased Glen for wanting to become a front act. Glen played guitar on Elvis' Viva Las Vegas for example. And Sony & Cher, the Monkees, just about every hit act from LA back then.

  • @katequick3602
    @katequick3602 4 года назад

    This takes me back to 5th grade. One of the few birthday parties I had with other kids (my mom was great but didn't love those kinds of things).
    Anyways, a girl I barely knew since she was new to the neighborhood had come to the party ( I had invited her to meet the other kids) and my gift from her was a Glen Campbell Greatest Hits album. Pretty certain her mom had forgotten about the party, never bought a present as they were still unpacking and just gave me hers because what 5th grader picks this for someone they don't know? Although truthfully I had another friend with a crush on Barry Manilow at the time so maybe the girl did but it was odd gift. I still enjoyed it even though I never became a country fan.
    I do remember when Dolores died. I was a Cranberries fan. It was a shock. Probably Freddie Mercury and John Lennon were other ones.
    I like your explanation about the not overlooking the people we just pass by. I sometimes will look at people in cars or parks and just imagine how they have this whole life I know nothing about but here we are intersecting for just a minute.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  4 года назад

      Love the story Kate, and thank you so much for watching and your thoughts as well

  • @mcee8634
    @mcee8634 4 года назад

    Pleasant surprise you doing this. Good review. I always liked this song since I was a kid. "Yesterday Morning," by Lorraine Lee, on "Beloved Awake." Any chance? Beethoven's 5th, 1st movement? Matt

  • @drhust1955
    @drhust1955 3 года назад +1

    Glenn best Beautiful and haunting

  • @johnk9385
    @johnk9385 2 года назад

    This song was written by the wonderful songwriter Jimmy Webb. He has written so many good songs and died a few years ago.
    With regard to this song, there is a version which has Michelle Shocked singing the backing vocal and it is quite sublime

  • @downesy68
    @downesy68 5 лет назад +5

    Jimmy Webb masterpiece sung by an amazing vocalist, probably only surpassed by “By the Time I Get to Phoenix” which you should have a listen to as well.

    • @justintime42000
      @justintime42000 5 лет назад +2

      Love Jimmy Webb’s songs. I’m glad to see you agree!

    • @sukie584
      @sukie584 4 года назад

      Definitely not surpassed, but a beautiful song too.

  • @kestrelhill
    @kestrelhill 2 года назад

    Living on Long Island in the late '70s/early 80s, Harry Chapin was a regular. Free concerts, benefit concerts, get-out-the-vote concerts, he played 'em all. I was heading home from work July '81 planning to head to Eisenhower Park in Hempstead to see him that evening, and I heard the news on the radio. He had been killed in a car crash on the LIE.
    John Lennon had been murdered six months before, and that felt… huge. Like an era had died. But Lennon was a Beatle, a public figure, while Harry was a guy who hung around before and after concerts, signing autographs, trying to get you to volunteer, to care as passionately as he did. I felt a much more personal loss.

  • @harripalomaki8796
    @harripalomaki8796 5 лет назад +1

    Thank you, Justin, for fulfilling my request as well as your thoughtful review. I always thought the line "and I need you more than want you" meant that the hot flush of carnality in the relationship has been replaced by a deeper connection. But I'm a romantic, I guess.
    Since I'm here, I'll drop a request for something completely different:

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  5 лет назад

      Of course Harri; thank you so much for being here in the first place.

  • @floorticket
    @floorticket 5 лет назад +6

    "Easy listening" perhaps even "lounge music", but not the Sinatra-type lounge. Anyway I hate using the word "must" so I won't, but I concur on the "By the Time I Get To Phoenix" suggestion ... which ... man ... that's one of the best songs ever as you'll find out when you read the wiki page for it. Glen Campbell was the type of music my grandma, your great grandma, would spin on the home stereo console in the living room. Bakersfield, California in my case. The "Bakersfield sound" has a wiki page too. Bakersfield was sorta a mini Nashville of the west for a number of years. I suppose Merle Haggard would be the most notable star to emerge from Kern county, California.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  5 лет назад

      Thanks David, sounds like its a "must" listen!

    • @myopia2020
      @myopia2020 3 года назад

      @David Ryder Lol. Sinatra is highly esteemed by musicians and critics alike as one of the great pioneers of popular music in the 20th century. Check out his albums "Songs For Swingin' Lovers" or "Sinatra Sings For Only The Lonely". Definitely not lounge music. His voice could be every bit as soulful as Glen Campbell or anyone else :) He even covered "By The Time I Get To Phoenix" (It's okay, not his greatest)