1960s Rebels: Country Joe McDonald - Musician, Country Joe and the Fish

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  • Опубліковано 12 жов 2016
  • The late 1960s saw progressive ideas emanate from the countercultural underground and revolutionise society. Challenging oppressive, outdated norms and expectations, a small number of individuals brought about far-reaching changes as they sought to attain a better world. Their idealism and actions helped mobilise a movement which continues to inspire modern activists and shape how we live today.
    A child of communist parents, ‘Country’ Joe McDonald spent a lot of time around Berkley, California in the early sixties - a hotbed of student activism later in the decade. There he played music with a number of groups before writing "I Feel Like I'm Fixin' To Die Rag", an anti-Vietnam song which symbolised the feelings of his peers toward the War. Performing at Woodstock Festival in 1969 he opened the song with a ‘fuck cheer’ - a moment and a word which unified the crowd in their frustration around their country’s politics.
    You Say You Want a Revolution? Records and Rebels 1966 - 1970
    10 September 2016 - 26 February 2017
    vam.ac.uk/revolution
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 609

  • @astrorad2000
    @astrorad2000 2 роки тому +68

    When I was courting my wife, our first official date was to see Country Joe and the Fish, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. That show sealed the deal for our relationship. It will be 52 years for us in June. Thank you Country Joe!

  • @thelakeman5207
    @thelakeman5207 2 роки тому +18

    Country Joe's performance at Woodstock, not only captured the essence of the Viet Nam era, but also was one of the highlights of the festival. I was fascinated to hear the story behind the music that day he played. Joe, thanks for the memories.

  • @terrydotson6859
    @terrydotson6859 Рік тому +30

    I was in Viet Nam in an 82nd Airborne Infantry Company and your song was "banned" there but I have always enjoyed it immensely. I enjoyed hearing it again before finding this interview. I salute you, Joe.

  • @stevenhanson6057
    @stevenhanson6057 Рік тому +16

    Saw the movie 3 or 4 times summer of ‘70 at drive-in Vegas
    Was 15 but my older brother was 16
    That cheer was a true milestone in the history of mankind and that performance was phenomenal. The energy must have been indescribable. Thank you Country Joe

  • @sixbladeknife44
    @sixbladeknife44 2 роки тому +24

    It was absolutely an important moment, but I think a lot of people only remember Joe for that particular performance. But the fact is that he and his band had some truly great records, very underrated.

  • @oxxnarrdflame8865
    @oxxnarrdflame8865 2 роки тому +18

    I was in ROTC when I heard the song and loved it, spent 9 years in the AF. I still love the song.
    Most young men join the military for all of the right reasons but the politicians use them for all the wrong reasons.

  • @rmis32
    @rmis32 3 роки тому +71

    I was at Woodstock to hear his performance. With all the major rock stars who gave great performances, Country Joe gave perhaps the most rousing one. The "fuck cheer and the Fixin' to Die Rag" that followed was a cathartic experience. To hear a few hundred thousand people belt it out at the top of their lungs was incredibly energizing.

    • @ANDROLOMA
      @ANDROLOMA 2 роки тому

      I was nine years old at the time. I envy your experience.

    • @ericw3229
      @ericw3229 2 роки тому

      Then y'all went out and began destroying America.

    • @ANDROLOMA
      @ANDROLOMA Рік тому

      @@jg6698 The dude deleted his post. As shall I.

    • @brucewayne3602
      @brucewayne3602 Рік тому

      absolute truth ... Merci Joe !!!

    • @michaelmoore2802
      @michaelmoore2802 9 місяців тому +1

      That would have been really cool to experience that...I was 6 years old at the time, but I have vague memories of hearing my parents talk about it. ❤ peace

  • @grahamewebber4038
    @grahamewebber4038 2 роки тому +30

    I heard Country Joe in the Woodstock era but never realised until about 20 years ago just how good CJ & the Fish were. So many great albums and songs. From my personal perspective they were so under appreciated or acknowledged here in Australia during the 70’s . ✌🏾

  • @Harleyever
    @Harleyever 2 роки тому +9

    I was headed to boot camp in 1970...our company would sing "come on mothers throughout the land , pack your boys off to Vietnam "

  • @themichaelcantrellband1516
    @themichaelcantrellband1516 2 роки тому +8

    It was the best part of Woodstock, Joe, you nailed it!

    • @bigtime2413
      @bigtime2413 2 роки тому +1

      Santana 2nd best then jimi

    • @curbozerboomer1773
      @curbozerboomer1773 Рік тому +1

      Hendrix was the best performer...he said with his guitar, what Joe said with his lyrics!

  • @williamurban7358
    @williamurban7358 6 років тому +196

    Country Joe had it together and still does... He may be laid back now, a little, but remember, He's still a Hero to a lot of us old guys... "Rock On Country Joe!!!"

    • @joe54b93
      @joe54b93 5 років тому +1

      right on guys ...thanks for the replies....pretty koooool to see how well he looks......'scusa, but can't help myself: RIGHT ON, JOE.....GIVE ME AN M...GIVE ME A C...GIVE ME A D...GIVE ME AN O...GIVE ME AN N,....ETC., ETC., ETC...............JOE'S BLUES, MY FAV. AIR ALGIERS..........THEN A FOLLOW UP LP LIKE 'HOLD ON, I'M COMING'...GREAT TIMING FOR THOSE ALBUMS BACK THEN.....HANG TUFF & KEEP THE FAITH...ONE AN ALL!

    • @user-xj2sm3xd5l
      @user-xj2sm3xd5l 5 років тому +8

      Hey man, he’s a hero to young people too! At least he is for me lol

    • @jgrayersqueen
      @jgrayersqueen 5 років тому +4

      And still pretty good looking too!

    • @joannehack7588
      @joannehack7588 Рік тому +1

      ☮️

  • @dougleisy6220
    @dougleisy6220 6 років тому +306

    joe, saw you playing solo in a bar in berkley in early 70's... offered to buy you a beer and you said "thanks for coming, i'll buy you a beer"..we talked for awhile and life has never been the same...thanks for the inspiration..not often someone we think is cool.. is cool.

    •  5 років тому +18

      This is my favorite story of a rock n roller ever thank you.

    • @sammyscotch9945
      @sammyscotch9945 5 років тому +3

      @ I like it alot too

    • @ethaneyles8666
      @ethaneyles8666 5 років тому +10

      Don't know why but this put a little tear in my eye. Thank you for this comment!

    • @outonthetiles
      @outonthetiles 4 роки тому +1

      Nice one. ✌️

    • @johnmcquilkin
      @johnmcquilkin 2 роки тому

      What a great experience you shared Doug!

  • @tobyblake851
    @tobyblake851 6 років тому +238

    I was in Vietnam in '68 and we had an underground of 8 tracks that were censored from the Armed Forces Radio Network, and I remember I found an 8 track of Country Joe and the Fish and use to lay down after work and put the headphones on and listen to his band, and I had never heard of them; I remember on convoys we'd sing Alice's Restaurant and I'm Fixin to Die Rag. It was a gas. This music had a subversive effect on us troops. I cherish the memory.

    • @ecuadorexpat8558
      @ecuadorexpat8558 5 років тому +8

      +Toby Blake my husband went to Vietnam and I think that the music was the only solca for the troops there.. However since these were mostly draftees I bet a bunch of them sided with Joe here on the Vietnam debacle.. Thank you for your service !! God bless you !

    • @Scrapla1
      @Scrapla1 4 роки тому +5

      My pops was in boot camp during Wood Stock

    • @johnmcquilkin
      @johnmcquilkin 2 роки тому +5

      Thank you Toby for your service and incredible memories!

    • @goutvols103
      @goutvols103 2 роки тому +4

      Thank you for your service and if I may ask, where did you serve in country - branch and MOS? Thank you in advance.

    • @anthonyfoutch3152
      @anthonyfoutch3152 2 роки тому +1

      What did you do in Vietnam? I think you are one of the few that thought Nam was a gas. lol I was USAF 72-78.

  • @michaelhenshaw258
    @michaelhenshaw258 2 роки тому +6

    I grew up listening to you and the fish, while on acid, thanks for the memories

  • @3lullabies
    @3lullabies 2 роки тому +42

    Country Joe and the Fish perfectly encapsulate Woodstock era sound and soul. Love to you Joe for all the fine tunes you gave us.

  • @joe54b93
    @joe54b93 5 років тому +43

    still got fans Joe............and still love ya!!!! Great job then and NOW!

  • @66block84
    @66block84 2 роки тому +10

    As a freshman in college, 1970, saw the Woodstock movie. Wanted to play drums but didn't own a set. Took some of my student loan money, bought a used set & played in a few bands through most of the 70's. Thanks for your story.

  • @MovieMakingMan
    @MovieMakingMan Рік тому +3

    I played this great song to 400-500 cheering troops!
    I served in the army stationed at Fort Bliss, El Paso. I was still in my room on the third floor of the barracks because I slept late. Several hundred fellow soldiers lined up in formation between the three story barracks buildings for roll call. I got two speakers and put them in the open windows and played Country Joe’s song at the highest volume. All the soldiers immediately recognized the song and started singing, “gimme an F, gimme a U” and so on and then started to cheer so loud it almost drowned out the music. It was bedlam!
    None of the army brass could figure out where the music was coming from but they had their suspicions. They looked all around at all the buildings around them but were clueless. The music reverberated between the buildings so they couldn’t tell who was playing that song or where it was coming from.
    That was one of my highlights being in the army. Guys talked about that day for a long time. I told a few of my army buddies I did it but I never got caught.
    I had a lot of great times in the army. I pulled so many stunts like having girls in the barracks and using M-80s from Juarez to blow up all three floors of the barracks. The army brass had a good idea who the culprit was but could never prove anything.
    Oh yeah, in spite of all the things I did I ended up being the honor graduate of an international class in the Nike Hercules missile program.
    This song always takes me instantly back to that fantastic day!

  • @0biwan77
    @0biwan77 2 роки тому +11

    Joe, you were a personal hero for me, starting in ‘68, so when you came on stage the first time at Woodstock, in ‘69, it seemed to confirm the miracle of all of our unity, as well as the mystical, chemical brotherhood in which it was first founded. Thank you for your example, Joe.

  • @gopherstate777
    @gopherstate777 2 роки тому +8

    Great to see you, Country Joe. You were a highlight of Woodstock and people did listen to you!

  • @cheshirebowman4465
    @cheshirebowman4465 2 роки тому +17

    I remember this guy and I've sung it at many open mic night. Everybody in UK loves it. Of a certain age that is.

  • @kinky_Z
    @kinky_Z 3 роки тому +14

    Hey Joe, I opened for you for a weekend in a tiny coffeehouse after Woodstock, circa 1972, hired by Music Co-op, Wildflowers, created by Utah Phillips, Saratoga Springs, NY. What a TRIP! Thank you! What a privilege!

  • @noahjuanjuneau9598
    @noahjuanjuneau9598 2 роки тому +3

    My friends asked me if I wanted to go to a party… Of course I said yes… it was in the hills near CSULA and the folkies were throwing you a Going Away Party just before you left LA to move to the Bay Area… I remember your guitar case was decorated with a collage of cut-out magazine ads… the next day I started a project of covering my own guitar case with a collage of ads and stickers as well because I liked yours so much! Thanks for Fixin’ to Die… it was an inspiration - especially when Uncle Sam drafted my ass to go to SE Asia… I told them flat out ‘You don’t want me man… I WILL BE a problem! That’s a promise.’ They told me ‘Go home son… we’ll be in touch…’ And I never heard from them again. (Who knew it was that simple?)

  • @davidhull1481
    @davidhull1481 2 роки тому +3

    I have a story, so forgive me if I ramble. I was 16 in 1966, and my older sister had moved out to Berkeley a year or two before. That summer my dad paid my way to visit her (from Long Island). I wasn’t conservative, but it still opened my eyes and blew my mind. Among the things I did was to go listen to C J and the Fish. I bought their record (an ep maybe) and played it for all my friends after I got home. Thanks for opening me up, Joe.
    I have to add that I also scammed a fake ID after reading an article about this little San Francisco brewery that was on its last legs. I went over to the city and got into a topless bar where it was served. The brewery was saved by Fritz Maytag, and you might know the beer- Anchor Steam.

  • @Albert-Mag...
    @Albert-Mag... 6 років тому +82

    My Dad was a WWll vet and I played this song for him in 1970 ..I remember him telling me how much he could relate to this song ...I'll never forget that so long ago ..Thank you Country Joe

  • @timsan55
    @timsan55 6 років тому +64

    Never tire of watching his Woodstock performance !

    • @michaelworse6034
      @michaelworse6034 2 роки тому

      It‘s been one of the magic moments for sure , when Country Joe yelled 'gimme an 'f' !

    • @timsan55
      @timsan55 2 роки тому +2

      @@michaelworse6034 Yes ! And "There's 300,000 of you xxxxxxx out there..." lol !

  • @sunnavailable
    @sunnavailable 2 роки тому +4

    The fixing to die rag made me happy because I could start making sense of the Vietnam war. Politicians cared so much about their jobs that the deaths of soldiers were not on their minds. Good for you Joe you set a lot of people in the right direction

  • @wolfil8019
    @wolfil8019 3 роки тому +3

    I had the good fortune of seeing Country Joe play in a tiny venue in the northern suburbs of Chicago sometime in the mid-1970s. He was playing with a band called the "Save the Whales Band". The place had only a few chairs, and I was sitting near the front with a friend. The bass player was bald-headed and wearing a sailor's cap, and was so clearly stoned out of his mind with the most joyful and loving smile on his face the whole time. And his bass-playing was brilliant. As was Country Joe's performance. That memory sticks with me.

  • @user-xj2sm3xd5l
    @user-xj2sm3xd5l 3 роки тому +27

    I’m in my early 20’s and thanks to my dad, I got into CJ Fish and got my friends into it too. I love every album and listen to porpoise mouth, silver and gold, rock coast blues, and here i go again at least weekly

  • @Fknstud833
    @Fknstud833 5 років тому +28

    Joe you were our hero back in the day, and still are, tks man,peace

  • @markgustavson9222
    @markgustavson9222 4 роки тому +4

    Driving home from college in 1968, down Ashby Ave just passed Shattuck, I say Joe with a sign reading "End the damm way on the side of the road."
    The best part was the big smile on his face.

  • @martinfoss3894
    @martinfoss3894 Рік тому +2

    F'n eh Joe! Saw Joe in SLC, the night Jimmy Hendrix died, ~ a year after Woodstock. I remember Joe & Santana only sing'n Jimmy's songs all night. 1st concert I ever attended. What an evening! Best $5 I EVER spent!

  • @Pittie21
    @Pittie21 2 роки тому +2

    GR8 Story. Awesome Moment...Bless You, County Joe. ✌️

  • @brucewayne3602
    @brucewayne3602 Рік тому +2

    undefined unbridled brilliance ... absolute truth spoken word & lyrics !!!

  • @BarnebyWilde
    @BarnebyWilde 6 років тому +26

    When I was young, college 67-71, everyone knew Country Joe and everyone knew this song.

  • @beeamerica5024
    @beeamerica5024 2 роки тому +3

    Thank you sir this is what I came home to in 68 as a vet we love that song

  • @glennmorris3370
    @glennmorris3370 3 роки тому +10

    I grew up with you Joe-
    And have honored you and your music - your contribution should never be forgotten.

    • @johnmcquilkin
      @johnmcquilkin 2 роки тому +2

      I agree with you Glen... Joe's musical contribution should never be forgotten.

  • @johnmcquilkin
    @johnmcquilkin 2 роки тому +11

    As every year that passes Country Joe McDonald becomes more and more the most relevant performer from the Woodstock Music Festival and is the most poignant and memorable part of the Woodstock Documentary by Michael Wadleigh.

    • @ANDRESR2
      @ANDRESR2 Рік тому +1

      I have seen their presentation at Monterey Pop Festival 1967 and it was incredible, more psychedelic, with The Fish quite young.

    • @johnmcquilkin
      @johnmcquilkin Рік тому +1

      @Andres Rodriguez I have seen parts of Monterey Pop Festival but I haven't watched Country Joe McDonald's and the Fish performance. I will check it out.

    • @ANDRESR2
      @ANDRESR2 Рік тому +1

      @@johnmcquilkin ua-cam.com/video/PK-URq0h7ek/v-deo.html&ab_channel=TheQuicksilverdog

    • @johnmcquilkin
      @johnmcquilkin Рік тому +1

      @@ANDRESR2 this was awesome. Thanks for sharing it!

  • @thejoker2000
    @thejoker2000 5 років тому +76

    What are we fighting for NOW? We need a new "Country Joe."

    • @MsPrincesspaulina
      @MsPrincesspaulina 4 роки тому +16

      @The Joker:
      "What are we fighting for NOW?"
      Don't ask me. I don't give a damn. Next stop is Afghanistan.

    • @royspicer468
      @royspicer468 4 роки тому +1

      You aint seen know fighting yet,just live long enough.,you will.

    • @LittleLargeMouth
      @LittleLargeMouth 4 роки тому +3

      Next stop is I-ran

    • @lastnamefirst4035
      @lastnamefirst4035 4 роки тому +2

      Same old joe, just another cheer

    • @FredTheLutinoCocatiel
      @FredTheLutinoCocatiel 3 роки тому +2

      Fuck Joe Biden 😇

  • @antonleimbach648
    @antonleimbach648 2 роки тому +4

    Great interview and a historic piece of American culture.

  • @ffrederickskitty214
    @ffrederickskitty214 4 роки тому +18

    That song was the highlight of the movie for me. It captured the spirit of a generation

  • @barbarajohnson9050
    @barbarajohnson9050 2 роки тому +10

    Hey Joe… I was a part of the anti war movement back then in the SF Bay Area, and I will NEVER forget this F cheer! I also cheered…
    You are a big part of music history! Glad I was a witness to it

  • @Tonetwisters
    @Tonetwisters 2 роки тому +2

    Country Joe and the Fish. What a unique sound ...

  • @catanyasaltzman7982
    @catanyasaltzman7982 6 років тому +18

    Always loved Country Joe and I still do. One of the Greats!

  • @toshibautoob
    @toshibautoob 6 років тому +47

    Love ya Joe. You and the Fish band were important to me. Thank you for your part in it all!

  • @janeysiegrist5061
    @janeysiegrist5061 4 роки тому +8

    I think your message is just as pertinent today Joe. Thank you for your contributions to this country

  • @chipblock2854
    @chipblock2854 3 роки тому +4

    In 1970 I was riding my bike down the street listening to the newly released Woodstock tape on my new cassette player when all of a sudden the Fish Cheer came on. I was playing the music quite loud and immediately realized what he was spelling out. I didn't turn the sound down. I just let it play out for all to hear. What a thrill it was to hear the word F**k play out like it did. I raised my right arm and gave the world my middle finger! I felt like I was somehow protesting the Vietnam war with that song and my middle finger. That's how music can affect our lives. I was barely fifteen and didn't give a damn!

  • @ecuadorexpat8558
    @ecuadorexpat8558 5 років тому +16

    I love you Joe Mc Donald.. you were the best at Woodstock and your poetry is awesome.. God bless you and grant you a long Life!!

  • @augustinecerronejr7968
    @augustinecerronejr7968 2 роки тому +4

    I was 13 when Woodstock occurred. My friend bought the album. Cost $25. at a time you could buy a #1 album for $4.99 but it had 4 records and 8 sides of music . And I remember hearing FUCK and County Joe his song was Iconic in the movement against the WAR.

  • @thomaskauser8978
    @thomaskauser8978 4 місяці тому

    The old man gave me his Woodstock album when I was eleven and I wore out all three records!
    All around greats ! Country Joe ( McDonald) + the fish!

  • @nednobody3253
    @nednobody3253 2 роки тому +3

    Electric Music For The Mind And Body by Country Joe And the Fish is one of my all time favorite albums. I've had a copy of it since it come out. Probably the best STONER music out there when your on really good LSD or Mescaline. With headphones of course. It's like an electric tonge licking your mind. In my humble 70 year old opinion of course. Alot of top shelf hallucinating substances came thru the student union of the U of O back in the late 60s. Straight up from the Bay on its way to Portland and Seattle.
    It's great to see him still kickn it. What a Cool Individual.

    • @bigtime2413
      @bigtime2413 2 роки тому +1

      Section 43 - best song ever

  • @factorylad5071
    @factorylad5071 2 роки тому +1

    Some knock country Joe's songs you will never hear.
    You Messed Over Me So I messed over you.
    Satisfactory Again.
    Dr Hip
    Jesse James

  • @GnomicMaster
    @GnomicMaster 6 років тому +7

    OMG, if I didn't know this is Country Joe from the title of this video I would never have guessed it. Aging is merciless. I was a high school senior in 1967 when I first heard Not So Sweet Martha Loraine, and I was instantly a fan. I ran right out and bought the album the song was on. But hey, I don't look like I did 50 years ago!!

    • @mitchgawlik1175
      @mitchgawlik1175 2 роки тому +2

      I was knocked out by "Electric Music For The Mind And Body" so when Joe's solo record "Tonight I'm Singing Just For You" came out
      I didn't hesitate. Yeah, it's country tinged but I still enjoy it. I had wanted to address the aging of our rock heroes like Joe, Jesse Colin
      Young and Grace Slick but not in a demeaning way. You did it for me. I'm not disappointed in what I see, it's really just a reality check.

    • @fastnbulbouss
      @fastnbulbouss 2 роки тому +1

      it's patina........😎

    • @curbozerboomer1773
      @curbozerboomer1773 Рік тому +1

      I have kept my hair long--although my genes have allowed most of it to recede!...still have the same attitude and swagger that I had in the late 60s and 70s....David crosby nailed with the tune, "Almost Cut My Hair"......."I feel like I owe it, to someone."...my thoughts, exactly.

  • @billh4121
    @billh4121 5 років тому +16

    Great interview. Thanks Joe for all the great music. Still a hero of mine!

  • @revagreen2303
    @revagreen2303 2 місяці тому +1

    Wow so happy to hear from you! The anthem of my life! I wasn’t in Vietnam but was at Kent State! Glad we both survived! 🙏🙏🙏✌️✌️✌️

  • @willwigmore9075
    @willwigmore9075 Рік тому +1

    The song Who AM I....meant a lot to me and my friend when we were working our way out of the maze ...it suppose it's an endless maze...that song helped...also loved those ballads about Dolphin dreams

  • @tigvi3429
    @tigvi3429 7 років тому +29

    Have always loved Joe's vision, politics and his music. A truly innovative band.

  • @liamkelly8834
    @liamkelly8834 6 років тому +17

    Country Joe is the only person to make me cry, fixing to die rag, Thank you Joe,

  • @dell177
    @dell177 2 роки тому +2

    I remember an AFKN DJ getting in hot water for playing Country Joe on the air one night, that was not army approved contact. He paid a pretty high price for playing the Fixing to Die Rag but the soldiers all loved it, it was the anthem of that era.

  • @tommymutz9197
    @tommymutz9197 2 роки тому +1

    Holy sweet Jesus. First off, Joe your such an inspiration to me and my childhood and growing up. My dad was Sargent at Arms for the biker club The Banditos (a Colorado chapter) and my parents threw A LOT of parties when I was growing up. And I couldn’t wait till he played “Paradise with an Ocean View! Typically the song “Oh Jamaica.” Still to this day one of the very best songs EVER EVER EVERRRRR WRITTEN! Hands down there no competition! I used to love that song when I was a kid. I used to sneek that album up to my room when I was a kid. That and George Carlin A Place For My Stuff and I would listen to those two albums all night long then sneek them back downstairs and put them back before he would get up in the morning. After my dad died in 2006 my mom gave my sister the whole album collection. I WAS SOOOOOO PISSSED OF AND I STILL AM. I couldn’t believe she did that. I was the music lover in the family. Still to this day I’m “ALWAYS” on the lookout for an original copy of that album and I can NEVER FIND IT! But the song Oh Jamaica will forever be inbeded into the fabric of my being on planet earth! Thank you so much for writing such a great song! And maybe if you have an extra copy of that album weather it be a Record or a CD please sign it and send it to,
    Tommy Mutz
    62356 Bennett Road
    Roseland, La. 70456
    And I would forever be grateful! This the one album I don’t have in my collection of probably 3000 cd’s. Thank you sir! Thank you for being a part of my life! (((Huggs)))

  • @Wildlonesome77
    @Wildlonesome77 2 роки тому +2

    " Give me a F" The fuck cheer was awesome. A whole different Era back then. All those beautiful people. I miss those days,and the people.

  • @angelmatos9143
    @angelmatos9143 2 роки тому +2

    The best & coolest protest song/performance in history.

  • @robertcampbell1838
    @robertcampbell1838 5 років тому +8

    Holy fuck, it was almost 50 years ago exactly that I saw Country Joe and the Fish open for Steppenwolf in Cleveland. Was my first rock concert!

    • @jimspencer5746
      @jimspencer5746 5 років тому

      Lol Cleveland rocks! Where was this radio city music hall??

    • @robertcampbell1838
      @robertcampbell1838 5 років тому +1

      Cleveland Public Music Hall is downtown, close to the lake. Its still there @@jimspencer5746

    • @jimspencer5746
      @jimspencer5746 5 років тому +1

      @@robertcampbell1838 yeah i knew it was something like that..i think radio city is Chicago... at Public Music Hall, people used to climb on the dumpsters and get dragged in for free thru the bathroom window lol..

    • @robertcampbell1838
      @robertcampbell1838 5 років тому

      @@jimspencer5746 Ha, funny/ good story

    • @libertariantranslator1929
      @libertariantranslator1929 2 роки тому +1

      I watched them in Dallas with The Mothers. Joe was Flying High and Zappa, straight. Joe kept forgetting the lyrics and waiting for the stanza to come around on the guitar again. It was dee-lighful. I never missed a CJ or Fish gig in Austin after that.

  • @terryhanready5068
    @terryhanready5068 6 років тому +19

    Love you Joe. We the people of the Woodstock Generation and the true calling are still out there. We're just waiting for a leader to finish the prophesy.
    Love and peace is the way. Was a little much for the US to absorb in'69. Weidleigh is teaching at Harvard now.

    • @bobbob2890
      @bobbob2890 5 років тому +1

      No Wall , Abolish ICE, disarm the Police, recall Trump, end the Fascist State, and give a 5 year visa to anyone who requests one.
      Tripolar out.

    • @sammyscotch9945
      @sammyscotch9945 5 років тому

      @@bobbob2890 okay sounds better than what we got now but thats not hard to beat

    • @sammyscotch9945
      @sammyscotch9945 5 років тому +1

      @@bobbob2890 and may all guns be disabled

  • @yori4666
    @yori4666 2 роки тому +3

    Hey Country Joe. Enjoyed the interview. I was in my early collage years in the San Francisco Bay Area when the song came out. My friend that did 2 tours in the war and was injured twice used to get up in the morning, fix a cup of coffee and stand in his kitchen and sing 'fixin' to die rag' every morning.

  • @castlebravo1467
    @castlebravo1467 6 років тому +32

    This guy is The Legend.

  • @ronaldlevao8251
    @ronaldlevao8251 2 роки тому +2

    Loved this guy's bad attitude for nearly 60 years. Great interview--bemused, joyous, modest, confused, grateful, and even a little half-seriously resentful at the end (a human reaction!) Electric music for the Mind and Body: the album is an indispensable part of the era, and his later stuff's not bad, either. "Well the one with the Fez, he turns his head and he sez,/ We'd like to help you make your trip." Perfect.

  • @laberlaban
    @laberlaban 6 років тому +11

    I saw Joe and Fish 3 times and Joe solo once here in Denmark way back when. Still great memories from a wild youth.

  • @frederickgreen3665
    @frederickgreen3665 5 років тому +6

    I first heard this song when I was at Phuoc Vinh listening to AFVN. I loved it! It became my anthem for my time in RVN.

  • @davidmathiesontait4653
    @davidmathiesontait4653 9 місяців тому +1

    ABSOLUTLY SPLENDID WELL DONE THAT MAN

  • @nanasirinabimai1440
    @nanasirinabimai1440 4 роки тому +2

    Saw you one night in BKK. long time ago.
    That was in the Indra convention hall. You played with the guy can't remember his name. "To night too many old hippies". That was words you chated to many old hippies in the room. Still remembering the night you drove your old beautyful Martin on stage. Loving you Joe.

  • @nancyhooper7715
    @nancyhooper7715 3 роки тому +3

    You were a big piece of the evolution of music. Your psychedelic rock still stands up today as one of the most innovative styles ever. I once worked in an airport and watched you walk past me with your guitar case, and it was such a big moment for me I couldn’t say a word or move. I just loved that we shared a second of time and place.☺️

  • @188American
    @188American 19 днів тому

    I love this guy, I was born in 1968 and I grew up with this guy especially the F song, sweet Loraine etc. humble genius…love this guy

  • @garyonderisin8338
    @garyonderisin8338 2 роки тому +2

    country joe: is a true musical treasure.

  • @svendbosanvovski4241
    @svendbosanvovski4241 4 роки тому +2

    I used to play Country Joe and the Fish on my $80 portable stereo until the grooves wore out way back in 1971 or thereabouts. I then bought Joe's Woody Guthrie tribute album, too. The rag: "Well its one, two, three, what are we fightin' for? Don't know, and I don't give a damn..., " seemed to capture the mood when you had just receive your call-up papers I(we had the draft here in Australia as well). My mates sang that over and over. There I was, just out of my boyhood, facing the abyss, and country Joe letting me know I had a right to get angry.

  • @gregoryk1092
    @gregoryk1092 Рік тому +1

    It was the anthem of our anti-war generation. Those of us in the anti-Vietnam War movement and counter culture movement knew exactly what the song meant politically, socially, and generational. As he was a veteran, he was a part of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War.

  • @CecildeMille1
    @CecildeMille1 6 років тому +6

    So, one of the most famous songs in Woodstock happened by chance !!! I saw him on stage, about 1976, at the very first Paleo Festival of Nyon in Swiss and he begun the show with "gi'me an F..."

  • @ratlips4363
    @ratlips4363 4 місяці тому

    Kudos to you Joe. I was in basic training when you were on stage. I didn't get a chance to see/hear you for about a year once I was stationed to a permeant barracks. It was a jelling song for many of us. We used it along with Cheech and Chong's one liners to help us pass "code" to know if someone was cool, or not. Now I'm 74 and I can so appreciate your words. Thanks for this video!

  • @markzwilsky3509
    @markzwilsky3509 6 років тому +1

    Classic performance... Never gets old. Stands up 40 years later.

  • @strat8333
    @strat8333 7 років тому +45

    Joe you always made sense and still do apparently. American Sanity is a microcosm. Peace

  • @spiderpromos
    @spiderpromos 7 років тому +45

    Joe's last appearance in Europe was at The Isle of Wight Festival in 2007 - mainstage before The Rolling Stones headlined. I was delighted to play with Joe on the very last song - "Feel Like I'M Fixin' To Die Rag" - on spoons, with Dave Allen was on washboard!

  • @Mindokwin
    @Mindokwin 2 роки тому +1

    I remember Joe at a free concert at Otis Spann memorial field in Ann Arbor 1973. He did the F cheer and the fixin' to die song.

  • @psalc1
    @psalc1 6 років тому +8

    part of the chorus, used to listen to it at least once a day in those times.

  • @111oooo
    @111oooo 5 місяців тому

    Three iconic moments for Woodstock IMO. Goin' Up The Country, Feel I'm Fixin' to Die Rag and I'm Going Home

  • @sideshowbob5237
    @sideshowbob5237 3 роки тому +4

    A truly great song and performance at the exact right place and point in time. The best protest song ever - by a margin.

  • @On_Dust
    @On_Dust 3 роки тому +1

    We love you Mr. Joe. I am a big fan. I learned 'Not so sweet Lorraine', 'Rock & Soul music', 'Love' and 'Feel like i'm fixin' to die rag' on guitar. And i am about to learn much more. 🙂.

  • @briangalvin9493
    @briangalvin9493 2 роки тому +2

    Thank you Joe for your music.

  • @23igna
    @23igna 7 років тому +58

    Guys like country joe are national heroes. Its a shame most americans dont know about him.

    • @FreestarRanger75
      @FreestarRanger75 6 років тому +4

      23igna national hero? he was just some hippie who sang against the vietnam war

    • @Arsan4
      @Arsan4 6 років тому +5

      yeah i'd like to see you in front of 300 thousand people, you would just shit your pants, show some respect kid

    • @dylanromus8663
      @dylanromus8663 6 років тому +5

      Well he did serve in Vietnam that was where he got alot of his inspiration to make his famous song.

    • @philbrown9764
      @philbrown9764 6 років тому +1

      23igna
      NATIONAL HERO??? National ZERO. And that's why no one knows him.

    • @peterer1960
      @peterer1960 6 років тому

      He did serve in the US Navy from 1959-62, but not in Vietnam. He was based in Japan but, does admit to having a fascination with Vietnam. A decent fellow but not a National Hero...

  • @frankmackey2419
    @frankmackey2419 2 роки тому +1

    Gimme an F. Gimme a U gimme a C gimme a K. What's that spell...what's that spell. Meant boat loads to one impressionable young man listening to the Woodstock album.

  • @pamelaturnbull4344
    @pamelaturnbull4344 7 років тому +8

    Always been a fan, even though I've always lived in the UK ....... went on the Vietnam march in 1969 ! crazy x

    • @leapinglouie5908
      @leapinglouie5908 4 роки тому

      Wish I could have marched with you, Pamela Turnbull

  • @AndreasRiesebeck
    @AndreasRiesebeck 7 років тому +35

    Great man Great musician

  • @weirdo-hio2724
    @weirdo-hio2724 6 років тому +2

    Country Joe used to visit the commune where I worked during college. He would put on a show for us at harvest time.

  • @stevekeetertheloathlydaddy6636
    @stevekeetertheloathlydaddy6636 4 роки тому +1

    Country Joe is as eloquent as he ever was, older but still the same... and we still love the guy, and what he meant to us and to our country-- and that's not an overstatement. He had a great influence with that simple, charismatic performance. And yes he was breaking down barriers. But not specifically because used the dreaded "F" word, it's just that he was telling it the way he saw it. And a whole generation understood immediately, he spoke a language that we all understood. And he did it with humor and intelligence, he did it in a way no one had ever seen or heard before.

    • @curbozerboomer1773
      @curbozerboomer1773 Рік тому

      He knew a bout the military...he did a stint in the Navy...so did I, butrJoe was out of the service before Nam hit the fan big-time.

  • @hublocker849
    @hublocker849 4 роки тому +2

    I bought a Yamaha FG 150 acoustic guitar in LA in December 1970. It only many years later I found out that it was the Country Joe "Woodstock " model.

  • @paultanner2007
    @paultanner2007 3 роки тому +2

    Thank you for sharing this!! Awesome

  • @gortbot7748
    @gortbot7748 2 роки тому +2

    I came home on leave in '68, and slipped. At the dinner table I asked somebody to pass me the fuckin' salt. An everyday phrase in the Navy. My parents were horrified.

  • @garthkolbeck8674
    @garthkolbeck8674 2 роки тому +1

    Joe, I was 7 when I got a copy of the Woodstock album handed down to me in 1973... I bought the E.P. of the original jug band recordings later on, I found the Fish albums in the used record store and in the public library they had a copy of your Robert Service album War, War, War... I wrote school papers on all of that stuff!

  • @chesterlee6508
    @chesterlee6508 2 роки тому +1

    A great human being . God bless.

  • @libertariantranslator1929
    @libertariantranslator1929 3 роки тому +1

    Joe, I never missed a gig in Dallas or Austin, and remember your wooden music solo act with the drizzle coming in through an opening in the roof. Thanks for being yourself; Fish Intergalactic Fan Club 4-ever!

  • @swede910
    @swede910 2 роки тому +2

    Great interview, thanks for this! 👍