Bob Dylan on Hank Williams, Johnny Paycheck and Townes Van Zandt

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 419

  • @otisgibbs
    @otisgibbs  Год назад +164

    I think I screwed up and said Bobby instead of Eddie Cochran. I was so worried about pronouncing Alis Lesley's name correctly that i completely blew the easy one. All apologies to the 700 comments I'm gonna get about this over the next 10 years.

    • @joeurbanowski321
      @joeurbanowski321 Год назад +1

      Ain’t that always the way..! Yikes.!

    • @edwardgordon4309
      @edwardgordon4309 Год назад +3

      Excellent review. Makes me want to buy the book for sure 👍
      Otis, we all knew what you meant to say, no worries and I'm sure Bobby would tell you it's happened before 🙂

    • @brucegwynn8509
      @brucegwynn8509 Год назад

      I caught it but I knew that you knew better

    • @markmeyers7184
      @markmeyers7184 Год назад

      no worries, but I had a moment where I thought "man, I need to check out Bobby Cochran"

    • @joev4483
      @joev4483 Год назад +3

      Ha! LOVE this channel ... thank you so much ...

  • @olebubby
    @olebubby Год назад +29

    “The beauty of simplicity will never be surpassed…”~Earl Scruggs

  • @rosssoutherland8118
    @rosssoutherland8118 11 месяцев назад +11

    I was fortunate enough to play “the old Violin” with Paycheck many nights for the month of October 1993. John sang it differently every night & each time nobody else could touch him! Our band was John,Jeff Little,myself, Dean Townsend,Hank Miles,Dennis Russell & the great Walter Haynes. We also did “in memory of a memory” each night. I’ll never reach that high again on stage in this life!

  • @jackbucholtz6855
    @jackbucholtz6855 Год назад +56

    Bob Dylan is a living national treasure. Enjoy him while he is still with us.

  • @WillyPDX94
    @WillyPDX94 Год назад +7

    I've had a long and full life. I've even have a few experiences that make for a good story. But when I listen to you I feel like I don't know nothin' and ain't done a thing worth talking about. I guess that's because you followed your passion while I chased the almighty dollar. I did the sensible thing, I guess. But sensible only gets you so far. Most of the real joys I've had in life came from going against the grain. I only wish I'd done it more often. Thank you for sharing your stories, your friends, and your music. You're the real deal and I love you for that. ✌❤

  • @kennyg63
    @kennyg63 Год назад +34

    Johnny Paycheck needs to be in the Country Music Hall of Fame.

    • @turdferguson2982
      @turdferguson2982 Год назад +7

      He doesn't need them. Let the people who don't have this kind of a legacy fight for wall space.

    • @elizabethheyenga9277
      @elizabethheyenga9277 Год назад +14

      He's like Guy Clark and others, overlooked and possibly too good for the system!

    • @Derrick1762
      @Derrick1762 6 месяцев назад +1

      Absolutely

    • @cdavidlake2
      @cdavidlake2 Месяц назад

      He's not already in there?!

  • @lesm2373
    @lesm2373 Год назад +24

    The 100 plus songs written and performed by Townes Van Zandt have no equal. A master who's birthday and death day still spawn tribute nights at music venues nationally and internationally.
    Life changing.

    • @elizabethheyenga9277
      @elizabethheyenga9277 Год назад +1

      I showed my musician son Miss Carousel and told him to hold that against "Like a Rolling Stone". Which doesn't hold up and seems petty and mean. And I loved that song until I heard MIss Carousel, now it sounds like a wannabee

  • @devonfulton1759
    @devonfulton1759 Год назад +12

    I love when Bob talks about Townes. He revered him. Thanks for the book tip Otis. Copy on the way.

  • @mandymine4963
    @mandymine4963 Год назад +20

    Awe, what a gift-to find out Bob Dylan "got" Johnny Paycheck and realized who and what he was and is sharing him with the rest of the world. Thanks, Otis, I ordered the book from the digital library as you read.

  • @odhutch5806
    @odhutch5806 Месяц назад

    I watched this a year ago, and immediately bought the book, read half, then fell into other things. Just came across this vid again. It sent me back to listen to the live cut of Old Violin Bob mentions. Now I'm back into the book. It forces me to listen to each song with different ears. Thanks, Otis.

  • @devinmillermedia
    @devinmillermedia Год назад +4

    I have sent that version of Old Violin to friends and posted on email years ago. It is so heartfelt. I'm glad I share that opinion with Bob, he would know. Paycheck was the real deal.

  • @williamcochell9889
    @williamcochell9889 Год назад +8

    Wow! first of all I had no idea that Bob Dylan appreciated country music old artists! secondly not only an all-time great poet and songwriter, but also listening to this an Author/writer as well! Pulitzer Prize winner and truly iconic gifted piece of Americanna!

    • @elizabethheyenga9277
      @elizabethheyenga9277 Год назад +1

      He always wanted to work with TVZ who never seemed interested. Must have driven Dylan nuts

    • @curmudgeon1933
      @curmudgeon1933 9 месяцев назад

      Listen to some of his 'Theme Time Radio Hour' episodes here on RUclips. Bob plays loads of country songs, as well as many other types of music. Over 100 episodes and all of them gems.

  • @Doctore_Robert
    @Doctore_Robert Год назад +9

    Thanks for this video. Dylan is a true American genius. He continues to give everything he can to the world. Can’t wait to find the book…

  • @lbshore
    @lbshore Год назад +6

    Great stuff. I had no idea about Johnny Paycheck. Dylan sure deserved that Nobel Prize.

  • @AbqRealDeals
    @AbqRealDeals 10 месяцев назад +3

    I've been following you since you first showed up on YT. I thonk this episode is one of your best. I like look of you sitting in your living room and the door and window behind you. Your commentary of what Dylan says about Jones, Paycheck, Nelson and Williams is excellent. You have really grown and matured in your delivery on YT. Keep up the iconic work!

  • @NVRAMboi
    @NVRAMboi Год назад +1

    Thanks for another great story Otis. I don't know Steve Earle, but I can tell you he's never stood on our coffee table.

  • @ralphdavis9670
    @ralphdavis9670 Год назад +1

    Time well spent listening to Otis.

  • @bigmonmagoomba9634
    @bigmonmagoomba9634 Год назад +6

    At the first Buffalo Chip in 1982 Johnny Paycheck was in the RV next to ours drinking whiskey and snorting cocaine the entire night before. When it was time for him to play the festival organizers were worried that he would not be able to navigate the very steep stairs leading up to the stage and had ‘spotters’ posted every couple of feet ready to catch him if he fell. Johnny came staggering out of his RV (which was in a roped-off area behind the stage) as wasted as I’ve ever seen another human being who was still conscious. He stood at the bottom of those stairs for a solid minute before running up them like a squirrel up a tree and played a flawless show. I still don’t know how he did it.

  • @steveharvey1876
    @steveharvey1876 Год назад +3

    Bob is a master wordsmith. Hank could bring a tear to a wooden eye. Cheers!

  • @damonhines8187
    @damonhines8187 Год назад +5

    One more copy sold as soon as I can afford it. Thanks, Otis, for a relaxed, thoughtful, informative and entertaining journey through the musical mind of this genius

  • @michaelquinn5824
    @michaelquinn5824 Год назад +2

    Bob insightful as ever. Thank you.

  • @robertobrian1993
    @robertobrian1993 Год назад +2

    Hey, Otis: How come I'm almost and not even almost moved to tears hearing Bob talk about Hank Williams, the Johnnys and Pete Townshend, too? And Willie Nelson! There's something very moving about all this.

  • @michaelwisner4941
    @michaelwisner4941 Год назад +6

    You did a great job with that book review, I enjoyed your show , as I do most of them , thanks Otis !!!

  • @bassmangotdbluz3547
    @bassmangotdbluz3547 Год назад +77

    I remember seeing Townes many times walking around on 6th Street in Austin in the late 80s-early 90s. He was usually completely unapproachable because he was so effed up he was barely able to talk and unable to walk without either his wife or David Fuller aka Blaze Foley propping him up and babysitting him. He was a very sad, tortured soul with an incredible body of work. He was an immense talent.

    • @NJ-os3rn
      @NJ-os3rn Год назад +13

      Blaze and Townes are some of my favorite songwriters. Thanks for the story.

    • @bassmangotdbluz3547
      @bassmangotdbluz3547 Год назад +3

      @@NJ-os3rn Blaze was a trip.

    • @Noitisnt-ns7mo
      @Noitisnt-ns7mo Год назад +3

      Townes was probably a case of , "the road to hell is paved in good intentions". People set a backburn and walk away feeling good about themselves.

    • @waterfordrs22
      @waterfordrs22 Год назад +2

      @@andrewbowen6875 that best song from the movie Young sang, if I had to guess was him singing a Guy Clark tune.
      Townes was a legend for a reason, he was a tremendous songwriter for sure.

    • @snowinonraton
      @snowinonraton Год назад +1

      Wow, the humanity in this is beyond the pale. Thank you for this whole thread, & I do NOT often say that about RUclips comments.

  • @damohanson5393
    @damohanson5393 Год назад +48

    Bob was dead on when he said no one else comes close to Hank Williams. Very very few singers make me feel/ experience the emotion and feelings the song and singer are trying to convey like Hank. When Elvis said I’m so lonesome I could cry was the saddest song he’d ever heard was exactly what I had thought from the first time I heard it. I can visualize him sitting home alone with time crawling by no radio or TV just that train whining low and I can hear that train and his feeling so lonesome and wondering where the woman he loved was and when and if she was even coming home. You can feel his deep deep pain that can only be understood if you’ve experienced it. No other song I’ve ever heard that when I listen to it it’s like a movie playing in my head and the emotional pain that accompanies his loneliness. That song is more about the misery, pain , betrayal, sadness and heartbreak than being alone. I can see that moon and the robin and the darkness when he sees that shooting star. A masterpiece from in my opinion the greatest singer/songwriter that ever lived. As great a singer that he was it’s his writing that is even more brilliant. I marvel that anyone can express so many different feelings and emotions and situations with such simplesity and minimal amount of wording.His brilliance is his ability to use short simple words in such a way as to communicate to the listener a story with simple and and minimal amount of our language. And he died at 29.
    I feel privileged to have lived during a time of phenomenal events. Man on the moon, polio vaccine, technology beyond comprehension not 100 years ago thought impossible etc. I put Hank Williams on that list and there are great singers and writers but Hank, to me, just seems on a different level than anyone. Thanks for reading from Dylan’s book . It brought back so many memories. I guess it’s the mark of greatness and very few have/ had that ability.

    • @DJBuglip
      @DJBuglip Год назад +3

      I commented separately, but yeah, I say that's the best country song ever written.

    • @sydneyevans2637
      @sydneyevans2637 Год назад +1

      I walked into my favorite neighborhood bar one day and was in kind of a mood.
      I asked Sally, the bartender, to play some country blues on the jukebox. She played several Hank Williams songs. She absolutely got it.

    • @BoomerMcBoom
      @BoomerMcBoom Год назад +2

      “The silence of a falling star lights up a purple sky
      and as I wonder where you are, I’m so lonesome I could cry.”
      Perfection

    • @kelvinkloud
      @kelvinkloud Год назад

      Agree… hank crafted frost and Blake like lyrics. What seems simple becomes deep and symbolically resonant when crafted and connected in between the notes and words like hank. Density meets economy, no easy trick. Hank sr performed breathing poetry. When I hear don’t think twice, esp the live renditions, the first image Inget in my head is a young hungry Bob finding his first love with music as he was listening to live hank being blasted across the plains on the airwaves out of Shreveport. Young Bob leaning on the radio on quiet Hibbing nites while hank sr was a living pulse is what launched the ship we know as Bob Dylan.

    • @damohanson5393
      @damohanson5393 Год назад

      @@BoomerMcBoom that verse in my opinion is the greatest of any music I’ve ever heard. We all know those words and can communicate using them but how anyone can use so few and such simple ones and put them together in a way that communicates so much more .is like looking at the stars in awe. I remember thinking I know these words and many more so why can’t I do that. 50 years after hearing that song and thinking that I now realize very, very few in history had that ability. I still marvel at his greatness

  • @kerryfranklin7950
    @kerryfranklin7950 Год назад +6

    Thank you Otis. The brilliance of Paycheck has never been brought to life like you and Dylan did in this clip. I hope we all learn to appreciate the master that Paycheck was. Definitely one of the greatest to ever do it both writing and vocals.

    • @jaywalsh6422
      @jaywalsh6422 9 месяцев назад

      Well said. My favorite lyric of JP is from Dont Take Her She's All I Got..."she could kiss the ground in the "winner-time" ...(long pause)...and make a flower grow". I tell my wife this one's for you honey

  • @leecrowell3198
    @leecrowell3198 Год назад +8

    Dylan has written some of the most breathtaking love songs out there. Townes Van Zandt wrote many himself. Never seen Dylan but I have sat on the curb with Townes on Congress Ave. and listened to him ramble. He was friendly but I looked around and he had wandered off.

  • @chrisandrus689
    @chrisandrus689 Год назад +1

    .... We all know how great Bob is, but this gentleman is really a smart, cool, well-spoken and highly-informed guy too...

  • @russellmetzger1499
    @russellmetzger1499 Год назад +4

    Excellent. I generally don’t watch stories about famous people anymore. Dylan’s music has always touched my soul, and this video explains who touched his. Thank you!

    • @jgwire
      @jgwire Год назад

      me either -- every "rising start" story is a template: They struggle young and get famous with good music. They get money and go crazy. Then they get strung out on drugs and the whole thing eventually falls apart and they lose the record deal. Someone usually dies, but several will go to rehab.... .it's especially "good" when its the actual star drops dead. .....I'm being sarcastic -- but people love these tragic stories-- Judy Garland? -- At least Dylan is honest with himself - and now, us. Thanks for the upload. Great stuff. JMHO

  • @TheHarvChannel
    @TheHarvChannel Год назад +1

    New to your page, Otis. I love all the stories. I've got a lot of catching up to do. Bravo!

  • @vmcelvis
    @vmcelvis Год назад

    The Old and In The Way is a somber and real reflection of growing old in the 2000's . A great read all the way through. Thanks for sharing

  • @billhillyer334
    @billhillyer334 Год назад

    Pay check was one of the first bands to play at Buffalo Chip in 82 or 83 he had missed his plane in rapid city,
    .but because he was wanted in a state next door. That's another story.. are cousin sent his number to him, on stage, they met a year before, became good friends.. John had gotten it, so he called em telling em he needed help they went got em brought em back to there home in Sturgis.. an Sturgis was still going on.. so i rolls up and he's has a joint in his mouth a beer in his hand and a bottle of jack in his left was singing camp fire songs.💥 Talk about blow your mind is a great memory one I'll never forget love your vids Mun major good👍 ..

  • @otisgibbs
    @otisgibbs  Год назад +5

    Become a member.
    ruclips.net/channel/UCYX2...
    www.patreon.com/otisgibbs
    Tip jar for anyone who wants to help support this channel.
    paypal.me/otisgibbs?locale.x=...
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    Paypal: @otisgibbs
    Venmo: @OtisGibbs

  • @jussiniemi9560
    @jussiniemi9560 Год назад +3

    hatt amazes me about Dylan is that for me he is the greatest, yet he embraces and idolises these guys and their tales like i embrace every tale I hear about dylan.

  • @randyadams3542
    @randyadams3542 Год назад +1

    My dad, Eddie Adam's AKA Grizz Sawbuck worked with Paycheck on and off for many years. The old Violin was actually produced or being produced as early as 1983. My dad had the copy off the master duplicated on a cassette in 1983. Only the foundation of the cut was on it at the time. Keyboard, bass, drums, and guitar were on the track at that time. Another cut, I'm a Survivor was on it as well. It wasn't until he was in prison it was realesed by Mercury Polygram. Paycheck was a unique individual. The Edgar Allen Poe of Country Music. Little Darlin cuts were his best. My family worked with him and George Jones. Paycheck and all my family grew up in Greenfield/ WCH, Ohio area. He is well deserved to be in the Country Music Hall of fame . Not only Dylan, but George Harrison liked him as well. Elton John , and even Elvis. Yes !even Elvis invited him to dinner in Vegas. Wayne Newton never had a night off, one night he just happened to not be working for some reason , he immediately went over to hear Paycheck and wanted to listened to his band. Paychecks band was amazing. Gary Adams lead, Don Adams front man and bass, Steve Marple on drums, Dave Grey trumpet, Doug Jernigan steel, and Paul justice on fiddle. Paycheck was a singers singer. I'm glad he is finally getting the recognition he deserves.

  • @davidhoptman8594
    @davidhoptman8594 Год назад +3

    Thanks for your insights…Dylan never stops inspiring!

  • @alleyoop9099
    @alleyoop9099 Год назад +20

    Amen on Bob Dylan. Best song writer who ever lived.

    • @tomstiel7576
      @tomstiel7576 Год назад +4

      you got that right

    • @DJBuglip
      @DJBuglip Год назад +1

      Concur, although I say Joni Mitchell and Neil Young are both running a close second.

    • @saginawdan
      @saginawdan Год назад +2

      ​@@DJBuglip I agree on both points

    • @randykandle8622
      @randykandle8622 Год назад +2

      @@DJBuglip And Prine. And Kris . And hank Sr. And others. But all second to Bob

    • @THEBANDIT7979
      @THEBANDIT7979 Год назад +4

      Kris kristoferson is up there as well. Brilliant songwriter.

  • @sundownsigns
    @sundownsigns Год назад +5

    Bob is right on mentioning Hank Williams singing Cool Water. I've heard a multitude of versions but Hank brought out things no one else even touches.

  • @NickTubeless
    @NickTubeless 10 месяцев назад

    Very enjoyable & from the sound of it I'm completely with Bob's philosphy on what makes music & artists great. Looking forward to getting the book.

  • @jamesodonnell1934
    @jamesodonnell1934 Год назад +1

    that was a great 17 minute watch !
    thank you
    I read the audible
    now reading the book text
    then may listen one more time
    it’s that good

  • @PennySmyrk
    @PennySmyrk 10 месяцев назад

    Really happy I came across this video Otis. Great job!👏👍

  • @otisgibbs
    @otisgibbs  Год назад +8

    Here's the Paycheck video Dylan mentioned. It's pretty damn great.
    ruclips.net/video/vX_Z_fStWmg/видео.html

  • @alpinestyle1
    @alpinestyle1 Год назад +14

    Thanks so much for reviewing this book, Otis. I really enjoyed “Chronicles, Vol. 1” and was looking forward to volume 2. The man writes prose as well as song. Looking forward to digging into this one. Thank you for all the videos you’ve posted this year. Your channel is one of the rare gems of RUclips.

  • @joyceb.sachsesachse1242
    @joyceb.sachsesachse1242 Год назад +3

    Great book , I like that this great artist , that is some what mystical in his privacy, write s a book on his favorite artist songs , it makes him human and accessible on his views of other song writers. I was amazed on how my favorites are the same as his and how this artist views makes me love his song writing a lot more special and puts him in a light of a regular guy , like the rest of us .

  • @patrickreninger5044
    @patrickreninger5044 Год назад +9

    I love Dylan, his songs, his individualism and his willingness to experiment, but I was a little skeptical about another rambling coffee table book of an icon's opinions. Social media has made everyone a critic, and I prefer an intriguing story to someones greatest hits list. After listening to your reading, I was surprised on the strength of his prose. Bob is a story teller at heart and the word play and passion that makes Blowin In The Wind and Highway 61 seer in your brain works as well with his description of Johnny Paycheck. Thanks Otis sharing your musical life.

    • @brucewales5965
      @brucewales5965 Год назад

      One of my originals………..I JUST WANNA BE BOB DYLAN
      BruceWales ©️1/17/22 9:00pm
      (Spoken)
      Small thing I ask
      My emptiness needs fillin’
      I just wanna be
      Bob Dylan
      CHORUS (sung)
      G. D. Em
      I just wanna be Bob Dylan
      G. D. C
      Prob’ly ‘cause I’m tired of bein’ me
      G. D. Em
      I just wanna be Bob Dylan
      C. D. G
      Maybe folks would like me
      1.
      C. G
      Like Bob, I was raised in Minnesota
      C. G
      But from there our common paths diverged
      C. G
      Playing guitar and harmonica
      C. D. G
      Since the sixties, H’made six decades merge
      CHORUS repeat
      2.
      Singing Folk or Gospel music or r rRock
      Standard tunes of real America
      He can make Pop music with a pleasing pop
      Influence culture with poetic dra-a-awll
      BRIDGE
      C. G
      He can take one word and make it - mean somethin’
      C. G
      He can break your thought - and make it sing
      C. Em
      He can make you question - while you’re hummin’
      C. D. G
      He shakes out the feelings - livin’ brings
      INSTRUMENTAL
      3.
      Even other Players throw the question out
      How a man like him so long endures
      Finding reasons why day in, day out
      He still plays The Never Ending Tour
      BRIDGE
      CHORUS
      I just wanna be Bob Dylan
      Prob’ly ‘ cause I’m tired of bein’ me
      I just wanna be Bob Dylan
      Many generations could love me
      I just wanna be Bob Dylan
      Many generations might love me
      I just wanna be Bob Dylan
      Prob’ly cause I’m tired of bein’ me
      TAG
      I just wanna be Bob Dylan
      While he writes AND SINGS-- of me - - just being me

    • @donwalker7487
      @donwalker7487 Год назад

      Perhaps you haven’t read Chronicles then - stunning writing , This one is a classic , illuminating the essence of a songwriters take on the greatest tunes of our time , he knocked it out of the park .

  • @countrymusicguitarclassics
    @countrymusicguitarclassics Год назад +4

    Another great video Otis. I am going to have to check out that book. I am always interested in Bob's takes when it comes to songs and songwriters.

  • @dannymarks988
    @dannymarks988 Год назад +3

    Beauty episode Otis. The way you bring them all together is inspiring. We met Johnny Paycheck once on the Ian Tyson Show. At the time I didn't know much beyond Take This Job. Thank you for previewing the book. It's on the to buy list now. Listening to the whole episode now.

  • @TheZeekgeek1
    @TheZeekgeek1 Год назад +1

    When I was reading that passage about ordering a BLT, I couldn’t help but think how amazing it is to get to read Bob Dylan’s impression of 2022 and how it compares to the past.

  • @Vean-ql2yq
    @Vean-ql2yq 2 месяца назад

    I would love to have this book, Bob rarely talked much to anyone about anything. You never knew Bob except for his music , the greatest songwriter of the era. I had hoped he would write a book one day.

  • @christyfrancis1740
    @christyfrancis1740 Год назад +1

    anything about Bob Dylan, I love

  • @owenwilberforce6138
    @owenwilberforce6138 Год назад +8

    I of course love Johnny Paycheck and cover both him and Blue Bayou so of course the Grand Poobah of song is a great vindication. When Steve Earle praised Townes I am sure Bob would agree while Steve stood on his coffee table. Townes wrote the most unabashedly forlorn songs that gave little resolution, and scant advice. He just let you feel the emotion and that was all. The song of Townes that kills me and I have been playing for a while is At My Window. It spells out a day with another spent just allowing time to pass with no big plan or agenda. Townes did poetry similar to Bukowski in that the language was simple but moved you. Songs to me are like books or stories in 4 to 5 minute journeys. When all there was was radio I think the images of songs had a more stark background. Dylan understood how much the power of song can transport you out of your space into a world you really belonged in. A good song makes any background better.

  • @grendel42ful
    @grendel42ful Год назад +2

    This is why I truly have a love for all genres of music. The greatest songs come directly from the heart. Certain rhythms, sounds, or means of presentation may appeal more to my ears, but genuine feeling shines through.

  • @usg-647
    @usg-647 Год назад

    I feel like a better person having heard this. Thank you!

  • @thestewlaw
    @thestewlaw Год назад +1

    Outstanding video review. Thank you, Otis.

  • @swanval38
    @swanval38 Год назад +3

    Otis, thank you so much for sharing this book. My understanding of the “signed yet unsigned” copies relate to Bob being ill, and he was unable to sing, but his publisher had all these orders for a signed copy. The publisher recommended that he use a machine which essentially allowed him to sigh, and their were multiple “pens” on a contraption, and each one signed a particular page. Dylan found out that these had been sold as “signed copies,” and he is in the process of reaching out to everyone that his people can find. He will send them a real signed copy if they will return their fake.
    People will sell anything on E-Bay, but to sell something that the Nobel Laureate is trying to make right would a sin against Dylan’s body of work, and his deep feelings for his fans who he respects to the point of making this effort to “make it right” to those fans. Dylan has a much dedicated heart to his fans than most of the musicians about whom he has written. This does sound like a great book, and too bad that there no more signed copies available!
    As always Otis, you’ve given us a great story, which includes many sub-stories within. Thanks! 😮

  • @ToddBurge
    @ToddBurge Год назад +2

    I’m gonna grab that book and keep it on my coffee table. Thanks for the killer review

  • @datcolsol
    @datcolsol Год назад +14

    Ottis, your comment about the demo being better than the full studio recording is dead on! That's why going to jam sessions and open mic nights can be so great. Even if you don't play, every once in a while you'll hear and see great talent that hasn't been screwed with and molded

  • @lewhite99
    @lewhite99 Год назад

    Great job Otis. Damo Hanson you are 100% right hearing the hurt in Hank Williams voice. I’ve been listening to music for 50 plus years and a lot of people try’s their best to feel the song and to put the hurt in a song and many have done well but listening to Hank sing Cold Cold Heart is the most real song ever recorded. He was one hurting man and his soul performed it that day.

  • @graylyns
    @graylyns Год назад +2

    Thanks Bob! Maybe now they will give Paycheck his due and put him in the hall of fame.

    • @swanval38
      @swanval38 Год назад

      The Hall of Fame of Country Music will put today’s junk singer’s in, but never Paycheck. They’re arrogant idiots just like the Baseball Hall of Fame refusing Pete Rose’s induction. Which among Eusebia have not sinned, and come short of the glory of God? These Hall’s of Fame should consider the work on the field, on the stage, and in the recording booth, but they won’t. What’s worse is that once the position of Hall has been taken, it’s impossible for it to change. 😢

  • @23coburn
    @23coburn Год назад

    Thank you once again Otis. Bless you sir, bless you.

  • @DirtyWindshieldSeries
    @DirtyWindshieldSeries Год назад

    Bob Dylan is an Absolute Genius. People either get him, or they don't get him, at first. Eventually, even they will come around. He can't be pinned down. The man's knowledge of all things cool, and uncool, is staggering. He's like a living encyclopedia.
    I swear, your OG Channel is 1 of the Very Best out there. Your Interviews, Commentary, Insights are Fantastic! The Production, like your Music, Top Notch!
    May your Channel continue to grow, as it deserves too, and may You continue to find Success!

  • @jamesbradshaw3389
    @jamesbradshaw3389 Год назад

    After a long time working tunneling undergrown I have got to hear some songs by Bob Dylan, i think he is good, and I will listen to more of his music

  • @asharpmajor6740
    @asharpmajor6740 Год назад +1

    Great video. Sounds like a great book. Bob Dylan is the perfect person to write such a book. Will make sure to buy a copy

  • @davemoordigian6807
    @davemoordigian6807 Год назад

    I saw Johnny Paycheck live at a small club that Merle Haggard owned in Southern California called Hags Place.
    Paycheck was amazing!!!
    One of my favorite recordings of all time is the Foster and Rice song "Someone To Give My Love To" by Paycheck.

  • @PeterLindelauf
    @PeterLindelauf 11 месяцев назад

    Good stuff. Got it from my wife for Xmas. Classic Dylan on some of the classics.

  • @AndySalinger33
    @AndySalinger33 Год назад

    Brother Otis, I’d love more videos of you simply reading to us from tomes you treasure. This is wonderful. I’m glad I rewatched this. Come play in Gulf Shores, Alabama! We love you.

  • @mbsnyderc
    @mbsnyderc Год назад +8

    Bob is a real historian of music it's one of the reasons he was so successful.some times to know were your going you have to know were you come from.

    • @egreenbery
      @egreenbery Год назад

      You're right, his studious reading is part of his genius

  • @bradreinhart3183
    @bradreinhart3183 Год назад

    You just introduced me to a great new book to read!! THANKS!!!!!

  • @GodseyKnives
    @GodseyKnives Год назад

    I saw Mr. paycheck live before he passed he played old violin . It was sad to see him in the dump we were in it was the basement of the old Woolworth building on the square in Bedford Indiana it wasn't well let and was dank and smelled moldy from roof leaks and such it was kinda personal with small crowd , His band was excellent and played for a while before he came out they were really good . When he came out he looked around and you could tell what he was thinking . WHAT A DUMP but he put on a great show he was one of my favorites glad i got to see him in my home town none the less As I am the only hell my mama ever raised . When he played old violin in his late years and state of health in such a pitiful place it made my eyes well up with tears . my favorite listen of MR. PAYCHECK is Colorado cool aid . I just love to hear Hank Williams talk you ever hear him? He sounds like family to everyone that draws you to him . IMHO

  • @randym9147
    @randym9147 10 месяцев назад

    That was a particular moving version on this episode, Otis. I really enjoyed it, really special You have a way of telling a story like no other...

  • @ralphdavis9670
    @ralphdavis9670 Год назад +1

    Gotta get the book. Thanks for sharing.

  • @galenbrewer4229
    @galenbrewer4229 Год назад +3

    This book easily qualifies for a prominent spot on my bookcase! Thanks Otis!

  • @keneasum7697
    @keneasum7697 Год назад

    Much Thanks. Good to hear your thoughts on Dylan's word pictures.

  • @Johns1082
    @Johns1082 Год назад +1

    Dudes that’s crazy man, didn’t know Dillion was such a fan 😮Johnny paycheck belted out the hits, I loved the of the Merle songs he did also! R.I.P. Johnny Paycheck, legend! ✌️

  • @bobwerber2984
    @bobwerber2984 Год назад

    Enjoyed your vid so much, and listened to some Johnny Paycheck tunes afterward. Thanks!

  •  Год назад

    Thank you Otis!

  • @dianemurillo6017
    @dianemurillo6017 Год назад

    i enjoy your channel so much. i really love hearing people talk about their jobs or passions and sharing that. i could talk about my job (an interesting one to me) all day with stories of people and the jobs we do so when i hear others i find it captivating. people are so interesting . you do a great job so thank you. you have a wonderful way of speaking and your love comes through. thank you again.

  • @michaelgregory2231
    @michaelgregory2231 Год назад +8

    Johnny figures in one of my favorite Nashville stories. Brent Mason tells of a 10:00 AM Johnny Paycheck session where the band shows up and there's no Johnny. The producer comes in and says: "Guys, come back tomorrow. Johnny flew in from Dallas and forgot to pack his false teeth, so he can't form words clearly. They're FedExing them in overnight."

    • @joemarshall4226
      @joemarshall4226 Год назад +1

      @@lotharroberts5978 You think it was true...that he forgot his teeth...or was the guy just covering for his hangover?

  • @tonybaker2968
    @tonybaker2968 Год назад

    Excellent. Thank you

  • @gillygil8747
    @gillygil8747 Год назад

    Thanks for the word. I've been looking for something to read.

  • @julieannemooreedwards9909
    @julieannemooreedwards9909 Год назад +1

    I’m putting this book on my Christmas Wish List! I hope Santa comes though!! 😍

  • @kevinfaris4840
    @kevinfaris4840 11 месяцев назад

    Fun time, like I’m talking to my brother. A great look at the greats.

  • @onemat2000
    @onemat2000 Год назад +1

    This was great and I'm looking forward to reading the book. Thanks Otis!

  • @specialrider54
    @specialrider54 Год назад +2

    I have been reading this book myself, and the experience thus far have been uneven. To my mind, there are several stream of consciousness swings and misses. Your video encapsulates some of the home runs. Watching it has given me a fresh perspective on the chapters relating to Townes and Hank, and I now look forward with great anticipation to reading the chapter about Johnny.

  • @maggiebryan2355
    @maggiebryan2355 Год назад +1

    Love book I have just finished reading it think there is a lot of bob in this

  • @DanielinLaTuna
    @DanielinLaTuna Год назад +1

    I didn't even know Hank when I heard Linda Ronstadt sing "I Can't Help It (If I'm Still in Love With You)". But I was so taken with the lyrics, I just had to find out who wrote it. This was before the internet, so I had do some real digging. The credits said "H. Williams", that's all I had to go with.
    By the way, she's no slouch either. Whatever Hank said, it moved her too.

  • @sgriffett541
    @sgriffett541 Год назад +1

    love me some essays on songs... thanks...

  • @drybayoudan5429
    @drybayoudan5429 Год назад

    Great show !! So much heartfelt quotes & information. I, typically, enjoy your content with a cup of coffee. Today, this afternoon, I enjoyed a good bourbon & coke with a good smoke. Thanks !!

  • @boojum402
    @boojum402 Год назад +12

    I am with Steve Earle on this and I would without hesitatiion "stand on Bob Dylan's coffee table in my cowboy boots and shout Townes Van Zandt is the best songwriter in the whole world!" True story, I just bought a few copies as holiday presents for my music friends. Thanks for all this Otis, as always.

    • @kylebookout1789
      @kylebookout1789 Год назад +2

      Now you can stand on his coffee table book. 😆

    • @jmeinoff4555
      @jmeinoff4555 Год назад +4

      I like Townes too but he's never ever written anything like this: Darkness at the break of noon
      Shadows even the silver spoon
      The handmade blade, the child’s balloon
      Eclipses both the sun and moon
      To understand you know too soon
      There is no sense in trying
      Pointed threats, they bluff with scorn
      Suicide remarks are torn
      From the fool’s gold mouthpiece the hollow horn
      Plays wasted words, proves to warn
      That he not busy being born is busy dying
      Temptation’s page flies out the door
      You follow, find yourself at war
      Watch waterfalls of pity roar
      You feel to moan but unlike before
      You discover that you’d just be one more
      Person crying
      So don’t fear if you hear
      A foreign sound to your ear
      It’s alright, Ma, I’m only sighing
      As some warn victory, some downfall
      Private reasons great or small
      Can be seen in the eyes of those that call
      To make all that should be killed to crawl
      While others say don’t hate nothing at all
      Except hatred
      Disillusioned words like bullets bark
      As human gods aim for their mark
      Make everything from toy guns that spark
      To flesh-colored Christs that glow in the dark
      It’s easy to see without looking too far
      That not much is really sacred
      While preachers preach of evil fates
      Teachers teach that knowledge waits
      Can lead to hundred-dollar plates
      Goodness hides behind its gates
      But even the president of the United States
      Sometimes must have to stand naked
      An’ though the rules of the road have been lodged
      It’s only people’s games that you got to dodge
      And it’s alright, Ma, I can make it
      Advertising signs they con
      You into thinking you’re the one
      That can do what’s never been done
      That can win what’s never been won
      Meantime life outside goes on
      All around you
      You lose yourself, you reappear
      You suddenly find you got nothing to fear
      Alone you stand with nobody near
      When a trembling distant voice, unclear
      Startles your sleeping ears to hear
      That somebody thinks they really found you
      A question in your nerves is lit
      Yet you know there is no answer fit
      To satisfy, insure you not to quit
      To keep it in your mind and not forget
      That it is not he or she or them or it
      That you belong to
      Although the masters make the rules
      For the wise men and the fools
      I got nothing, Ma, to live up to
      For them that must obey authority
      That they do not respect in any degree
      Who despise their jobs, their destinies
      Speak jealously of them that are free
      Cultivate their flowers to be
      Nothing more than something they invest in
      While some on principles baptized
      To strict party platform ties
      Social clubs in drag disguise
      Outsiders they can freely criticize
      Tell nothing except who to idolize
      And then say God bless him
      While one who sings with his tongue on fire
      Gargles in the rat race choir
      Bent out of shape from society’s pliers
      Cares not to come up any higher
      But rather get you down in the hole
      That he’s in
      But I mean no harm nor put fault
      On anyone that lives in a vault
      But it’s alright, Ma, if I can’t please him
      Old lady judges watch people in pairs
      Limited in sex, they dare
      To push fake morals, insult and stare
      While money doesn’t talk, it swears
      Obscenity, who really cares
      Propaganda, all is phony
      While them that defend what they cannot see
      With a killer’s pride, security
      It blows the minds most bitterly
      For them that think death’s honesty
      Won’t fall upon them naturally
      Life sometimes must get lonely
      My eyes collide head-on with stuffed
      Graveyards, false gods, I scuff
      At pettiness which plays so rough
      Walk upside-down inside handcuffs
      Kick my legs to crash it off
      Say okay, I have had enough
      what else can you show me?
      And if my thought-dreams could be seen
      They’d probably put my head in a guillotine
      But it’s alright, Ma, it’s life, and life only

    • @jamesodonnell1934
      @jamesodonnell1934 Год назад +4

      steve earle himself walked that back knowing how ridiculous it was in a literal sense

    • @1stjohnchapter2
      @1stjohnchapter2 Год назад +1

      @@jmeinoff4555 And that's just one of numerous excellent examples!❤

    • @joemarshall4226
      @joemarshall4226 Год назад

      @@jmeinoff4555 Damn......

  • @adco
    @adco Год назад

    Always appreciate what you have to share. 🏆

  • @glmccomb
    @glmccomb Год назад

    Hank Williams Cool Water is hauntingly beautiful.

  • @johnnysnowbird826
    @johnnysnowbird826 11 месяцев назад

    Great vid. Bring back the mystery in art. The space.

  • @anotherjoshua
    @anotherjoshua Год назад +6

    very true. how many times have we heard the demo version of a song, and thought "why the hell didn't they just release that?" it's so much more honest and it makes you feel something

  • @toddgreenwood9631
    @toddgreenwood9631 Год назад

    Dear Otis Gibbs. Your music is wonderful and I love your video production of course, but MAN, your voice reading Bob Dylan's writings, I'd so love to hear you read the whole book. When I get the book, the voice singing the words to me in my head are going to be yours. So beautiful. Great job man.

  • @2packs4sure
    @2packs4sure Год назад +2

    Johnny Paycheck at his best was as good as anyone who ever lived and often better.
    I remember hearing Motel Time Again for the 1st time at a record store in Houston and I immediately bought it and wore it out..

  • @vinceleone3952
    @vinceleone3952 Год назад

    Wow.I must get that book.Superb job giving us the breakdown.

  • @joemarshall4226
    @joemarshall4226 Год назад +2

    I've been working on a project called, "The Hundred Magic Songs of the 20th Century". I gathered them up from all sources.....show music, country, jazz, pop rock and roll, etc. Then Bob came out with this book, and I shook my head...he's always one step ahead. Anyway, the point of my little thing was to make a list of songs that the young 'uns shouldn't let die, and to examine some of the tricks the songwriters used to make the songs come to be, and any other interesting backstory. I'm trying to concentrate on SONGS, not performances....the kind of song that, of its nature, can move you to a different place...any sincere singer could make them work.......tell the truth about life, help you escape to reality, etc Most of the songs are well known, but some aren't. It's a personal list, of course. I haven't heard nearly as many songs as other people, but most of the music I listen to is live music, so maybe that gives me a different slant on things.....If anyone knows of a song that should be on the list that I probably don't know, let me know...thanks.

  • @mdshack6371
    @mdshack6371 Год назад

    Very much enjoyed your video, especially your voice work, reading dynamic, subject matter speaks for itself. Thanks

  • @-elijahriggs-
    @-elijahriggs- Год назад +1

    Townes is the greatest of all time. Our mother the mountain didn’t suffer like the rest of his studio albums but Townes’ magic is live. And yeah, here in my lonely bedroom tonight townes lived on before I watched this video. From 15 years old to 20 I would’ve said bob was the greatest. From then on it was always be Townes. And yup, I was trying to type this out when you said it.

  • @jimgrove3853
    @jimgrove3853 Год назад +11

    Best part of the coffee table story is afterward, some one told Townes what Steve Earle said. Townes said, "If Steve really thinks that, he's never met Bob's security." Supposedly, when asked about it, Dylan said, " I don't even own a coffee table"