I was noticing how many TV commercials use late 60’s to early 80’s music! So many cover bands out there today playing large venues, young teenage musicians playing music from this era. I don’t know who any of the modern stars are or what they sound like, it seems the rest of the world is still stuck in the 70’s?
@@billd.6684 ... Lynyrd Skynyrd, Bob Seger, REO, Jackson Browne, Robin Trower, Ted Nugent, Grand Funk, Bachman Turner, Nazareth, Fleetwood Mac, Aerosmith, Led Zeppelin, eagles, pink floyd, Steve Miller, Heart, Black Sabbath, WHO, ZZ top, the Doors, Boston, Blue Oyster Cult ... All great rock bands in the 1970s. mix in a little beer and pot and you made some great memories
I was 16 and this was my first concert: Pablo Cruise, Journey (pre perry), Robin Trower. It was absolutely spectacular. My father drove us down, parked out front, and waited in the car. Thanks dad! RIP.
What a great dad! They don't make them like that anymore... Early journey and trower in the 70s were pushing the hardrock horizon at this time. No pop culture. No limits from record companies demanding what to play. Unfortunately journeys early passions were destroyed when they fired Ansley Dunbar because of prettyboy Perry.
Very cool, my first concert was Trower on this tour about 10 days later in Columbus OH, The opening act was The Image or something like that and had an Iron Butterfly member in the group, never heard of them afterwards.
28 year old, reporting in to you old geezers. Discovered this song a couple of nights ago after being obsessed with “Alethea” and “Bridge of Sighs” for months. Trower and his band are an inspiration. Cool headed dudes with great musicianship. Wish I were alive back then. Thank you, ye old fucks.
Incredible albums…my daughter gave her friends my Trower collection as a birthday present way back, but it was a few years later that they got down and listened to it…they got straight on the phone. Blew their minds…
Robin was one of my earliest inspirations. A drumner since 6 years old, inspiring music to my soul. Lost james dewar to cancer some many years ago. Trower, henrix, purple, santana, and early journey were the early influences which was happenjng at the time to make original, tasteful, rock and roll with progressive direction. Never stopped listening.
James Dewar sounds like James Dewar, a uniquely talented singer/bassist, who was just as important to the success and popularity of The Robin Trower Band as Trower himself.
Maybe it's a gritty recording, but...you know the guy's a virtuoso when he's happy to give it so much distortion- given that he can summon the sweetest tone on the planet when he chooses to. Trower plays spectacular blues/hard rock electric guitar. It isn't popular any more, and may never be again. But genius never gets old...
No brother, it will never die out. I'm 65 and my sons will listen to Trower, Hendrix Santana and they get the LED out of the local Zepplin. And as long as there is some good pot, good blues will be musical god.
People are to dumb nowadays to appreciate any of the great value of fantastic music. In the U.S.A. we are on the 3rd generation of the dumbing down of America. The schools are a tragic scene. I've been around long enough to witness this. I went to college in the 70s to study engineering. I don't even know how some of the young people survive day to day.
@@gangoffour6690 That's just absurd. In the early 80's I was accepted to UC Berkeley with only two years of Algebra, Biology and Chemistry 1 and two years of foreign language under my belt. By contrast, it will be all my kids can do to distinguish themselves from the pack with AP Trigonometry, Calculus, Chemistry AP Lit and a full 4 years of French, German Spanish or Mandarin. As for the Social Sciences? My girls were being asked to read Vietnam memoirs such as Tim O'brien's 'The Things They Carried' and Philip Caputo's 'A Rumor of War' as high school freshmen. I spent more than a decade as a wire service photographer in SE Asia - covering civil conflict in Burma, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Laos. I know EXACTLY what I was being asked to read in terms of 20th Century historical texts at the same age, and you can be damned sure it wasn't the likes of David Halberstam, Peter Mathiessen or Sy Hersh. I don't think you have a clue how sheltered the average 1970's high school student was in terms of being asked to confront much of the history of the Post WW2 America - not just the widespread surveillance regime of COINTELPRO that was inflicted on MLK and the SCLC, but also Studs Terkel's oral histories of organized labor, the HUAC hearings, Leonard Peltier, Wounded Knee and the American Indian Movement. I'm not remotely suggesting that every student today is better equipped to grapple with My Lai or Iran Contra than my late Boomer cohort was. Or is today - as supposed adults 60 something years along. Pathetic, really. But at least there's a faculty (and administration) enlightened enough - and non condescending enough - to put it on the table for evaluation - at a minimum. The idea that American public education in my time had the stomach for allowing 10th graders to take an unflinching look at, say, the implications of an imperial Presidency in the immediate aftermath of Watergate... or the two year long secret, illegal bombing of a neutral Cambodia that had just given rise to the 3 1/2 year genocidal reign of terror of the Khmer Rouge? That's just laughable. I know - I was there.
I was at a concert in Seattle in 1973 when Robin Trower opened for Jethro Tull. I knew it was special at the time, but I didn't know that this kind of talent and quality of music in the world of rock would disappear over time.
This is just reall talent.. Anderson is still recording with a new version of Tull,and as far as I'm aware Robin Trower still tours..so it can never die👍
@@bobratcliffe3599 I was a junior in high school that year...such a thrill for me. The year before I had moved to Olympia from West Australia. Where I was from, we rarely had access to talent like this back then.
@Joe Blow yea me and 2 buddies went at the time we didn't know who he was he was opening for sha na na (mistake) lol anyway I believe he opened with Too Rolling Stoned and that was it. We saw trower every time he played SF for about 5 yrs after that. I never felt he was copying Hendrix just one of many influences. One of the best guitarists I ever saw live.
@@mk-cx7ov yes that wasthe show so it can't be our memory but one of the rare times the internet was wrong. At the time the best guitarist I'd ever seen. I was at Tower records the next day buying Bridge of Sighs. and besides procol harems nights in white satin I'd never heard Trower. A night I won't soon forget. lol
I remember when this album was released, it sold out so fast that it took 5 months to get it in stock again, I heard it was a national shortage, but it was so worth the wait. Awesome musicianship and vocals!! Never ever gets old!
Robin's smile during the intro seems to say "holy shit! Can you believe I can make this awesome sound???" He almost seem to be surprised at how good he is
Hammer Head I remember seeing the Dead, and Mahogany Rush there. Between bands they would show the video they had of all the different bands they had played there and I distinctly remember seeing this video of Robin Trower. It’s too bad you can’t hear James Dewar’s voice a little more.
When I first heard Robin Trower I was stoned out of my head. And fell in love with the sound of his playing the guitar. I still in joy listening to him to this day. And back then I was in the military. And that was thirty years ago. I got the chance to see him live in Lafayette LA I will never forget it. Was fantastic.
We had a local radio station that did a thing call vinyl for Vets. Do I donated 150 dollars to the Veterans for them to play Day of the Eagle for my 22 year old uncle that came back in 68 in a steel coffin with a 101 airborne Eagle patch on his shoulder along with all that ever served . I have always used the saying that you will never soar with the Eagles if you work with a bunch of turkeys!
I had the pleasure of seeing Trower live in concert on several occasions. My ears rang for two days. The band sold out stadiums and Coliseums back in the 70's.
That was Bill Graham introducing Trower. This was my favorite concert venue growing up. He used record all the shows and these would be shown on a big projection screen above the stage while we were waiting for the show we were actually there for to start. It was great. I really do miss Winterland...
I saw him in Portland the following year on the For Earth Below tour. God, wasn’t the old Paramount Northwest Theater a great place to see concerts??!!
@@jeremyhayden2878 🎵 SAW JOURNEY OPEN 4 THIN LIZZY\POCO .. LEFT AFTER LIZZY .. SHOUILD HAVE LEFT AFTER JOURNEY .. RUSH 1ST CONCERT IN THE US WHO OPENED 4 RORY GALLAGHER .. WEST BRUCE LANG .. FUNKADELICS MAGGOTBRAIN WAS MY FAVORITE SONG AT THE PARAMOUNT NW .. JEREMY 🎵
@@beachcomber3036 Those were the days BC!! One of my most memorable was a triple bill of: Stories (“Brother Louie”) followed by Mott the Hoople and the headliner was Joe Walsh’s and Barnstorm. I still have the ticket stub tucked away….$4.50!!! We were so lucky to have lived in that time. Now it’s just disposable Pop stars, posers and recycled riffs (jeez, now I REALLY sound like an old geezer).
@jeremyhayden2878 THANKS 😃 .. MY 1 ST CONCERT AT PARAMOUNT WAS RARE EARTH IN 1973. SAW SOME SATURDAY AFTERNOON CONCERTS .. 4 FOUR DOLLARS AND FIFTY CENTS. AROUND 73-74 .. OUTLAWS TWICE .. TROWER IN 75 .. LATER .. KISS TWICE .. IAN HUNTER BAND .. ZAPPA .. TODD .. THE FUNKADELICS ..ETC .. 2 MANY 2 REMEMBER ...... 😁
Man, this brings back some memories. I saw Robin back in Philly at the Spectrum about a month after this video was filmed...and right before I came to know Jesus. I can still remember standing there and thinking...this is nice...but there has to be something else. Like, if you get high, that passes, and you have to get high again. I just thought, there must be something that lasts. 48 years later, I can testify. Jesus lasts...today and forever...through whatever comes your way. "Whoever has the Son has life; whoever does not have the Son does not have life." ! John 5:12
Saw Robin Trower back in the early 80's at the Syria Mosque ball room in Pittsburgh... Small venue only about 1000 seats fantastic show and a great guitarist
Me too. I was 15 and had my brother (21) took me as the babysitter... never baby sat so much... we only had to go back to JP so it was not so bad. The shit they put out now, know wonder we have global warming, pure ass gas...
Seen the RT Band Way Back and 2012 Yes Robin in my top 5 Guitarists of All Time & Hes Still Rockin ! Also James on Bass Right behing Jack Bruce vocals & playing ability & thats a true compliment Those two are 1 & 2 with Paul M Beatle and Whos Entwistle 3 & 4 But seriously Trower is amazing Such A Gifted Guitarist
Studio album "Bridge of Sighs", 1974, was so well produced. Wiki: "The album was produced by organist Matthew Fisher, formerly Trower's bandmate in Procol Harum. Acclaimed Beatles engineer Geoff Emerick was this album's sound engineer."
I did this song in the last copy band I played in. Bridge of Sighs was one of the greatest albums ever released. Robin my man, you have one of the greatest guitar tones going.
Was there for this one, it was frickin loud you testes would shake. A special thanks to Bill Graham (Wilhelms Vault) for recording every concert he promoted.
The 70s. The best classic rock ever!!!! Purple, Floyd, Zeppelin, Crimson, E,L&P, Sabbath, Trower, Gallagher, Heep, The Who, Rainbow, Genesis, Tull, Chicago, Foreigner, Slade, Badfinger, ZZ, Sweet, Grand Funk, and many more!!!!!
Saw trower at ford auditorium 1974 Detroit Mich.opening for king crimson who I was unfamiliar with.trower put on a hypnotising show.I was a fan and saw him 3 other times
Robin came into my life at a great time...and thats why i had a 72 Red stratocaster....I lived and breathed Trower.. . This is after i leard all the Hendrix...Trower had a better band ...the singer Sir James Dewar.
Man, what a great video! My first 2 albums when I was a kid, Robin Trower Bridge of Sighs, and Jimi Hendrix Are You Experienced. My brother gave me both of them for Christmas when I was 111 years old in 1981. Those albums become the foundation of where I developed my own guitar style from. Thanks for sharing the video, really great getting to have a good blase from the past tonight.
James Dewar, a one of a kind voice? Smooth as butter. Robin never really could replace him after his early demise.
So glad I was growing up in that era. We had the best music and no subsequent generation has even come close.
I was noticing how many TV commercials use late 60’s to early 80’s music! So many cover bands out there today playing large venues, young teenage musicians playing music from this era. I don’t know who any of the modern stars are or what they sound like, it seems the rest of the world is still stuck in the 70’s?
The first half of the 90s was good.
But 1969-82 🏆🥇was IT
@@JAMESGANG-f5ubut the 70s was just disco! Not so much.
@@billd.6684 ... Lynyrd Skynyrd, Bob Seger, REO, Jackson Browne, Robin Trower, Ted Nugent, Grand Funk, Bachman Turner, Nazareth, Fleetwood Mac, Aerosmith, Led Zeppelin, eagles, pink floyd, Steve Miller, Heart, Black Sabbath, WHO, ZZ top, the Doors, Boston, Blue Oyster Cult ... All great rock bands in the 1970s. mix in a little beer and pot and you made some great memories
The late 70s was disco@@billd.6684
Goosebumps still for this 65 year old. 🥹
63 myself 😂
Bridge of Sighs one of the best albums of the 70's, and live Trower's guitar prowess and Dewar's whiskey soaked smooth vocals were great!
a VERY, VERY RARE " NO CLUNKER " ALBUM!! cheers
Robin Trower used to play in Clearwater Florida at a bar called Jeffries on Missouri and Highland in October around my birthday great guitarist
Yes. Thanks for the post. Bridge of Sighs is absolutely epic.
I concur!
I was 16 and this was my first concert: Pablo Cruise, Journey (pre perry), Robin Trower. It was absolutely spectacular. My father drove us down, parked out front, and waited in the car. Thanks dad! RIP.
What a great dad! They don't make them like that anymore... Early journey and trower in the 70s were pushing the hardrock horizon at this time. No pop culture. No limits from record companies demanding what to play. Unfortunately journeys early passions were destroyed when they fired Ansley Dunbar because of prettyboy Perry.
🙏
Cool dad!
Very cool, my first concert was Trower on this tour about 10 days later in Columbus OH, The opening act was The Image or something like that and had an Iron Butterfly member in the group, never heard of them afterwards.
Bridge of Sighs is still one of my favorite albums ever...…..
Mine too!
I concur.
That's a great song also
Mine as well!!
Oh, fifty years ago it came out. I heard it on WQDR FM in NC. Had to have the album.
The 70’s sure were great. I was a teenager back then and when I look back things sure were great. The music the cars the parties. Good times.
Yep, I couldn't agree more !!
You are so right,great memories
Well said...and so true!!
"The best of times"!!!!
Yep, we had it so much better than where the world is today.🤘🏼
28 year old, reporting in to you old geezers. Discovered this song a couple of nights ago after being obsessed with “Alethea” and “Bridge of Sighs” for months. Trower and his band are an inspiration. Cool headed dudes with great musicianship. Wish I were alive back then. Thank you, ye old fucks.
Trower never had a lead singer with sex appeal to the ladies....that was his nemesis to big success, because the music was great. Obviously.
Incredible albums…my daughter gave her friends my Trower collection as a birthday present way back, but it was a few years later that they got down and listened to it…they got straight on the phone. Blew their minds…
On behalf of "old fucks" everywhere, you're welcome!
Robin was one of my earliest inspirations. A drumner since 6 years old, inspiring music to my soul. Lost james dewar to cancer some many years ago. Trower, henrix, purple, santana, and early journey were the early influences which was happenjng at the time to make original, tasteful, rock and roll with progressive direction. Never stopped listening.
You’re welcome youngster! This album blew me away the first time I heard it.
Robin Trower is the best in this trio,
and James Dewar is a great vocalist who sounds like Paul Rogers.
He deserves more recognition.
James Dewar sounds like James Dewar, a uniquely talented singer/bassist, who was just as important to the success and popularity of The Robin Trower Band as Trower himself.
Have you heard James' solo record Stumbledown Romancer? It's *superb*.
@@thedevilinthecircuit1414
I did not know this song. Thank you very much for sharing it with us.
@@1Phepsi but he does kinda sound like Rogers
@Rocky Click, I don't think he does, but people hear what they hear, and it's certainly not an insult to be compared to Paul Rodgers.
This Bass Player has to be in Top 10 and His Vocals are Legendary takes me back
This is badass.
Maybe it's a gritty recording, but...you know the guy's a virtuoso when he's happy to give it so much distortion- given that he can summon the sweetest tone on the planet when he chooses to. Trower plays spectacular blues/hard rock electric guitar. It isn't popular any more, and may never be again. But genius never gets old...
Never. ✌🏼
If it never again recreates it’s (hard Blues based rock) glory days that’s fine. I have all his albums and have a great memory for stuff like this!!
You should check out Eric Steckel.
No brother, it will never die out. I'm 65 and my sons will listen to Trower, Hendrix Santana and they get the LED out of the local Zepplin. And as long as there is some good pot, good blues will be musical god.
The gritty recordings are the best.
If this song was released exactly like this in 2024 it would be fucking massive.
People are to dumb nowadays to appreciate any of the great value of fantastic music. In the U.S.A. we are on the 3rd generation of the dumbing down of America. The schools are a tragic scene. I've been around long enough to witness this. I went to college in the 70s to study engineering. I don't even know how some of the young people survive day to day.
gangoffour
EXACTLY
@@gangoffour6690 That's just absurd.
In the early 80's I was accepted to UC Berkeley with only two years of Algebra, Biology and Chemistry 1 and two years of foreign language under my belt.
By contrast, it will be all my kids can do to distinguish themselves from the pack with AP Trigonometry, Calculus, Chemistry AP Lit and a full 4 years of French, German Spanish or Mandarin.
As for the Social Sciences? My girls were being asked to read Vietnam memoirs such as Tim O'brien's 'The Things They Carried' and Philip Caputo's 'A Rumor of War' as high school freshmen.
I spent more than a decade as a wire service photographer in SE Asia - covering civil conflict in Burma, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Laos.
I know EXACTLY what I was being asked to read in terms of 20th Century historical texts at the same age, and you can be damned sure it wasn't the likes of David Halberstam, Peter Mathiessen or Sy Hersh.
I don't think you have a clue how sheltered the average 1970's high school student was in terms of being asked to confront much of the history of the Post WW2 America - not just the widespread surveillance regime of COINTELPRO that was inflicted on MLK and the SCLC, but also Studs Terkel's oral histories of organized labor, the HUAC hearings, Leonard Peltier, Wounded Knee and the American Indian
Movement.
I'm not remotely suggesting that every student today is better equipped to grapple with My Lai or Iran Contra than my late Boomer cohort was.
Or is today - as supposed adults 60 something years along.
Pathetic, really.
But at least there's a faculty (and administration) enlightened enough - and non condescending enough - to put it on the table for evaluation - at a minimum.
The idea that American public education in my time had the stomach for allowing 10th graders to take an unflinching look at, say, the implications of an imperial Presidency in the immediate aftermath of Watergate...
or the two year long secret, illegal bombing of a neutral Cambodia that had just given rise to the 3 1/2 year genocidal reign of terror of the Khmer Rouge?
That's just laughable.
I know - I was there.
@@chriscoughlin9289 Give it a rest dude
@@optimus163 Oh ,hey - look everybody!
It's the self appointed YT ombudsman!!!
On yer bike, fecking whiner.
I was at a concert in Seattle in 1973 when Robin Trower opened for Jethro Tull. I knew it was special at the time, but I didn't know that this kind of talent and quality of music in the world of rock would disappear over time.
Also at this show. Both Trower and Jethro Tull came thru Seattle every year.
As long as You Lived it '' It Will Not Disappear '' Rock will Never Die ''''
This is just reall talent.. Anderson is still recording with a new version of Tull,and as far as I'm aware Robin Trower still tours..so it can never die👍
@@bobratcliffe3599 I was a junior in high school that year...such a thrill for me. The year before I had moved to Olympia from West Australia. Where I was from, we rarely had access to talent like this back then.
@@ranjitverdi5702they don't make em like at anymore!Ol Skool rockers do it for the love
James Dewar looks so relaxed singing and playing bass at same time must be the hardest thing to do RIP!
The vocals aren't loud enough
I was there and I was blown away. The first of many times seeing Robin Trower
@Joe Blow yea me and 2 buddies went at the time we didn't know who he was he was opening for sha na na (mistake) lol anyway I believe he opened with Too Rolling Stoned and that was it. We saw trower every time he played SF for about 5 yrs after that. I never felt he was copying Hendrix just one of many influences. One of the best guitarists I ever saw live.
Yeah is 👍👍👍
@@mk-cx7ov yes that wasthe show so it can't be our memory but one of the rare times the internet was wrong. At the time the best guitarist I'd ever seen. I was at Tower records the next day buying Bridge of Sighs. and besides procol harems nights in white satin I'd never heard Trower. A night I won't soon forget. lol
I was there too! Lost some hearing permanently. But the memories were worth it!
@@DarbyF The Moody Blues did "Nights in White Satin", not Procol Harum.
Such a classic!! No one makes music like this anymore!!
Sadly so true. But so happy it lives on RUclips!
No no body dose music today sucks it's bad when a guitar player feels that it's just not the same
What you have said is a fact. I'm grateful to have been alive back then.
Patricia you are so right.
The vocals are too low in the mix!!!!
Rip James dewer . U played with the one of greatest guitarist ever .your haunting vocals b remembered dearly
Fact!
Never seen them
In concert
When I first heard this singer...I was vitally impressed.Still am.
still play'in 45 years later ...and plays as great as ever
I remember when this album was released, it sold out so fast that it took 5 months to get it in stock again, I heard it was a national shortage, but it was so worth the wait. Awesome musicianship and vocals!! Never ever gets old!
Robin and Terry Kath are unsung heroes of the guitar. Damn, so awesome
Tobin?
@@philwright2480 yeah, not sure if you've ever noticed it but T and R right next to each other on a keyboard.
Robin's smile during the intro seems to say "holy shit! Can you believe I can make this awesome sound???" He almost seem to be surprised at how good he is
Saw the legendary Trower at the legendary Tower Theater in Philly, 3rd row center! Decades later the memories still give me goose bumps!
I don’t think they played in the sou Louisiana
Saw Robin Trower and Ten Years After at Tempe, AZ in 1974. EXCELLENT!!!
Lucky
That must have been insane. Alvin Lee and Thrower in the same night
My first concert. Pablo Cruise, Journey, Robin Trower. It was a show I will never forget. Winterland was one of a kind. I was 16.
Remember when there use to be 3 bands!? Damn, you took me back. 👍🏼
Hammer Head Good old winter land where are you from I grew up in Gilroy
@@thomasshook1028 Philly girl!
Hammer Head
I remember seeing the Dead, and Mahogany Rush there. Between bands they would show the video they had of all the different bands they had played there and I distinctly remember seeing this video of Robin Trower. It’s too bad you can’t hear James Dewar’s voice a little more.
And it was Journey pre Steve Perry if I remember correctly.
Oh yeah! I remember Robin Trower opening up for the Stones at the Los Angeles Coliseum - loved every second of it.
I was there with my friends, and our ears were burn'in, Thanks for this experience 💥🎸
I was 11 in 1967 when I learned of you, been listening for along time. Thank You
1960s and 1970s the Pinnacle of World Rock Jams!😀
When I first heard Robin Trower I was stoned out of my head. And fell in love with the sound of his playing the guitar. I still in joy listening to him to this day. And back then I was in the military. And that was thirty years ago. I got the chance to see him live in Lafayette LA I will never forget it. Was fantastic.
We had a local radio station that did a thing call vinyl for Vets. Do I donated 150 dollars to the Veterans for them to play Day of the Eagle for my 22 year old uncle that came back in 68 in a steel coffin with a 101 airborne Eagle patch on his shoulder along with all that ever served . I have always used the saying that you will never soar with the Eagles if you work with a bunch of turkeys!
And the great drumming of Bill Lordan
Best line up ever! Just saw him again and he play better than ever!
I had the pleasure of seeing Trower live in concert on several occasions. My ears rang for two days. The band sold out stadiums and Coliseums back in the 70's.
Ok here we go . This is the best band ever .
Today's music doesn't even come close to this.Glad I grew up in the sixties
You are correct.
So many great memories from Winterland. I never saw poop on the street back then. 😮
Look at the joy on that face!!! I feel you Robin❣️💋 And, James, I adore you❣️❣️❣️❣️
YEAH, HE LOOKS PRETTY STRESSED❤
@@RachelWeeping WAKE UP! NO THAT IS YOU LOOKING INTO THE MIRROR . . . THAT THEN CRACKED!
I saw him play this in 1981 in Edinburgh. Loud, loud, loud - such power.
Thank you Robin for the inspiration and years of entertainment. 🎸 👍🤘
The best rock song of all. IMHO. RIP, James Dewar, simply the best!
All of our high school rock bands back in the 70's played a Robin Trower song or two.
What state 👍just curious
Robin Trower is so damn talented, he shut off his amp and makes all those guitar sounds with his mouth....badass!
One of the greatest guitar players of his time.I learned a lot of licks as a kid.🎸🎸🎵👍👿
Steve i agree "SMOKIN"
Saw Robin in Jacksonville, Fl. in 1975 or 76. Those facial expressions are the best.
So cool...one of the best 3 man bands in their prime..thanks for this
That was Bill Graham introducing Trower. This was my favorite concert venue growing up. He used record all the shows and these would be shown on a big projection screen above the stage while we were waiting for the show we were actually there for to start. It was great. I really do miss Winterland...
Right on. We loved Winterland. This was my first concert. I was 16. The black lights in the ceiling and smell of weed in the air.
My first concert. 1973, opened for Edgar Winter Group. Over 50 bands followed my first love of rock - Robin Trower.
Jimmy Dewar will be greatly missed, God that voice !
I say it all the time. Never a better singer.
As the years go by his voice is that much better.
These 3 could kick some sound
He often sounded like Paul Rodgers, which is a compliment.
His voice was unique!! As was John Prine's!! RIP TO BOTH.
What A Time !!!
Love your playing Robin! Loved it in the 70's and loving it in 2021, too! Also, great to see Bill Graham, too.
Saw him at the UCSB feaad house in 75 Bridge of Sighs tour Really Cool !
I Saw Trowers Bridge of Sighs Tour Twice in 1974 at The Paramount Theater in Portland Oregon.
I saw him in Portland the following year on the For Earth Below tour. God, wasn’t the old Paramount Northwest Theater a great place to see concerts??!!
@@jeremyhayden2878 🎵 SAW JOURNEY OPEN 4 THIN LIZZY\POCO .. LEFT AFTER LIZZY .. SHOUILD HAVE LEFT AFTER JOURNEY .. RUSH 1ST CONCERT IN THE US WHO OPENED 4 RORY GALLAGHER .. WEST BRUCE LANG .. FUNKADELICS MAGGOTBRAIN WAS MY FAVORITE SONG AT THE PARAMOUNT NW .. JEREMY 🎵
@@beachcomber3036 Those were the days BC!! One of my most memorable was a triple bill of: Stories (“Brother Louie”) followed by Mott the Hoople and the headliner was Joe Walsh’s and Barnstorm. I still have the ticket stub tucked away….$4.50!!! We were so lucky to have lived in that time. Now it’s just disposable Pop stars, posers and recycled riffs (jeez, now I REALLY sound like an old geezer).
@jeremyhayden2878 THANKS 😃 .. MY 1 ST CONCERT AT PARAMOUNT WAS RARE EARTH IN 1973. SAW SOME SATURDAY AFTERNOON CONCERTS .. 4 FOUR DOLLARS AND FIFTY CENTS. AROUND 73-74 .. OUTLAWS TWICE .. TROWER IN 75 .. LATER .. KISS TWICE .. IAN HUNTER BAND .. ZAPPA .. TODD .. THE FUNKADELICS ..ETC .. 2 MANY 2 REMEMBER ...... 😁
Man, this brings back some memories. I saw Robin back in Philly at the Spectrum about a month after this video was filmed...and right before I came to know Jesus. I can still remember standing there and thinking...this is nice...but there has to be something else. Like, if you get high, that passes, and you have to get high again. I just thought, there must be something that lasts. 48 years later, I can testify. Jesus lasts...today and forever...through whatever comes your way. "Whoever has the Son has life; whoever does not have the Son does not have life." ! John 5:12
Fairies and leprechauns last too; in fairy tales. Like the bible.
what a great album bought it in 75 when it came out i was a junior in high school it was the best era great music and muscle car's
Just as good today as it was back then. We get old , but the music dont
Saw Robin Trower back in the early 80's at the Syria Mosque ball room in Pittsburgh... Small venue only about 1000 seats fantastic show and a great guitarist
I was there too ! B.Y.O.B. 2 six packs & a bottle of Yukon Jack. UNFORGETTABLE ! ! !
Bill Grahm introduced his acts,R.I.P.Bill you were one of a kind,great man and vision
One of the most overlooked figures in classic rock
Although I remember a few tunes from my youth, it's only in my "golden years" that I grew to love RT !
That's too bad !!
I've melted into the couch more than once listening to this song...
Saw him live at the old Music Hall in Boston in 1977. He was incredible. It's criminal that he's not in the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame!
Me too. I was 15 and had my brother (21) took me as the babysitter... never baby sat so much... we only had to go back to JP so it was not so bad. The shit they put out now, know wonder we have global warming, pure ass gas...
The R&R HoF is a pathetic joke!!!!!!!
Atomic 500 the R&R H OF is a pathetic joke!!!!!!!!
He, Uncle Ted, and a lot of other greats, but hey Madonna and Joan Jett are, imagine that
I've seen Robin 10 times, always awesome!
Bill Lordan-formerly of Sly & The Family Stone on drums-oh yeah baby !
This was recorded on 618th birthday!
RIP James Dewar (12 October 1942 - 16 May 2002)
I was there....winterland was Robin's debue in USA..... I picked up a guitar the next day.....and never stopped playing......
Awesome to see Bill Graham introducing them. A legend in his own right.
I'm privileged to have seen Robin Tower twice at a club in south Seattle. Great shows!!
Seen the RT Band Way Back and 2012 Yes Robin in my top 5 Guitarists of All Time & Hes Still Rockin ! Also James on Bass Right behing Jack Bruce vocals & playing ability & thats a true compliment Those two are 1 & 2 with Paul M Beatle and Whos Entwistle 3 & 4 But seriously Trower is amazing Such A Gifted Guitarist
This song reminds me of my Big brother Ron(R. I. P). He loved Trower and this was one of his fave songs.
Studio album "Bridge of Sighs", 1974, was so well produced. Wiki: "The album was produced by organist Matthew Fisher, formerly Trower's bandmate in Procol Harum. Acclaimed Beatles engineer Geoff Emerick was this album's sound engineer."
Robin Trower one of my favorite guitar players, I really like Pat Travers too. both kick ass.
I'm with ya! Pat does a wicked cover of this tune!! Check it out!
Bill Graham. Wow - he brings back a memory or two.
I grew up in the seventies so how did l miss this band?
Don’t know
Don’t know 🤔
3 absolutely always killed it ‼️
Dewar always sounded like a man of color and I love it!!!
Great performance!!! James Dewar is 1 of the most criminally underrated vocalist.
SO good!!
Omg, how good is this.
Enough said 🦅❤
I did this song in the last copy band I played in. Bridge of Sighs was one of the greatest albums ever released. Robin my man, you have one of the greatest guitar tones going.
Oh man, I sure miss Jimmy Dewar. What a massive talent he was.
Perfect BURNING guitar tone!!
Love Trower’s tone. Very cool riff!
f---ing amazing what a riff and james is so great a hugely underated power trio
Takes me back to freshman year in college. Putting Bridge of Sighs on and getting SO FUCKING HIGH. Like a religious experience.
hats off to whomever placed the room mic INSIDE Robin's guitar cabinet.
Was there for this one, it was frickin loud you testes would shake. A special thanks to Bill Graham (Wilhelms Vault) for recording every concert he promoted.
That's my Boy - Robin Trower! TROWER POWER!
First I've heard was in 1977, on a surf movie, "A Meter of Style", with the great Gary Lopez!😍 Imaginne that!
Trower is simply THE BEST!!
Old rock is the best rock!
The 70s. The best classic rock ever!!!! Purple, Floyd, Zeppelin, Crimson, E,L&P, Sabbath, Trower, Gallagher, Heep, The Who, Rainbow, Genesis, Tull, Chicago, Foreigner, Slade, Badfinger, ZZ, Sweet, Grand Funk, and many more!!!!!
I 100 percent agree with you. Nothing beats it.
So so baeautiful. Thänx for shareing
Saw trower at ford auditorium 1974 Detroit Mich.opening for king crimson who I was unfamiliar with.trower put on a hypnotising show.I was a fan and saw him 3 other times
Never gets old.
Love that place seen so many great shows including Robin Trower
Robin came into my life at a great time...and thats why i had a 72 Red stratocaster....I lived and breathed Trower.. . This is after i leard all the Hendrix...Trower had a better band ...the singer Sir James Dewar.
The 70s were great for Trower...luv it
RIP James'Dewar
fantastic !
We used to crank this music in the 70's on huge speaker stereos.
one of my brothers favorite bands.i remember the album he had with robin trower on the cover and remember what big hands trower had.
Man, what a great video! My first 2 albums when I was a kid, Robin Trower Bridge of Sighs, and Jimi Hendrix Are You Experienced. My brother gave me both of them for Christmas when I was 111 years old in 1981. Those albums become the foundation of where I developed my own guitar style from. Thanks for sharing the video, really great getting to have a good blase from the past tonight.
111 years in 1981?😂
@@55102 OMG, damn I must be old. If Only I was just 11 years old in 1980 that would be a lot better! lol!!!!!
Saw him at the caley cinema in Edinburgh February 75' great concert.
so good, wow! all of them, just blasting!
Saw this show in Tampa Florida in 77 with Todd Rundgren. I was floored... Bridge of Sighs excellent album