The mighty Jeff Beck and a Les Paul using a pick. Still capturing the energy and mastery without a Strat, without a tremolo arm, and no finger picking. He could do anything.
For those interested this is Carmine ...the tapes that were uploaded here Superstition and Morning Dew as you ca see are in B&W . I had a B&W video recorder in 1972-73. I recorded this show of BBA on that recorder.The recording had all the shaking etc that these videos have. In 1973 my house was broken into in Long Island and the video machine and tapes were stolen. So somehow I believe these Black and White videos ended up on you tube ...i wonder where the person who put it up ended up with these videos. I assume maybe at a pawn shop ...crazy right
Carmine - Sad to read of your loss and the theft. Thrilled to see this video. And yes, crazy that someone had this through some other means than rightful ownership. Thanks for all of the great music. Like you, I'm now many more years down the road. These sounds have rekindled parts of my soul that simply lost track of the grooves of my youth. Damn we had great music during those years when we really needed to feel our freedoms. Superb as always! /Thanks forever ~ Dianne
How many cameras were stolen? I think I counted 6 different angles. Some on stage, some from the audience. Were you like 5 feet away looking down on the drummer then front row looking up at the stage . . . at the same time?
For my graduation present in 1973 I got a killer Kenwood sound system. They also threw in 3 albums with my purchase. One of them was "Beck, Bogart and Appice. I still have that album. My son still has my stereo system.
@J Men He would play at the SM civic constantly, I have seen him at least 4--5 times. He can really play and has covered Hendrix like nobody else! (He still tours as far as I know).
Carmine Appice was, is and will be more than only a drummer. He can sing as well as he plays the drums. And only a few drummers can do that. He is a beast and genious musician. God bless Carmine forever!!!
WOW! Imagine, back in the day when cute girls digged hearing a super talented group of REAL musicians and were actually getting excited over a drum solo! Another time! Another universe!!!
I saw this band in 1973 and was literally thrown against the back wall after the first note from the sheer force of this band, especially Jeff's guitar. That gig still lives on in my mind and l was already a follower of Jeff Beck which remained even until now. We will never see the like of musicians like this again.
In concert !!! In high school my friends and I would set up the stereo speakers on each side of the TV and arrange the furniture then the apartment began filling up with pot smoke and beer cans. Those early "In Concert" shows were ground breaking. We tuned into station KMET and cranked up the stereo. These shows predated Don Kirshner and Midnight special. Those latter two shows were TV studio productions that had bands sometimes play songs over and over to get a good take. Some times soo many times I would hate that song until this very day...I went to practically all of the tapings of the Don Kirshne shows. A friend was program director at our local f.m. station. We got to see a lot of great bands for free.
Attended tapings, nice! I spent many nights siting on the floor with friends in a similarly polluted environment. :) I taped a bunch of the In Concert simulcasts on reel-to-reel (audio only), but when I sold the equipment I stupidly threw in all the tapes. There were also hours of late-night interviews and typical 1970s free-style all-night FM broadcasts, and a bunch of pre-recorded reels. Ah, those were the days..
@@RetNemmoc555 what a coincidence. My friends and I always arrived early ourselves to sit in the front, waited for the camera crews to do all of thier crowd shots and then went about our business. Until the day a particular musician tried to talk his way into a girl I went with pants ! OK she was very pretty but , she was only 14 years old !! We both told him and his roadie/lacking to go fuck themselves and never went back.
Saw Beck, Bogart & Appice @ Pinkpop festival, Geleen, Limburg, the Netherlands, monday June 11th, 1973. Still remember them performing a high energy version of "Superstition". Jeff, Tim and Carmine rocked their sox off. What an amazing band ...
Tim Bogert’s bass tone is reminiscent of Jack Bruce from the Crossroads/ Glad jams on Goodbye. That growl makes the hairs on the back of my neck stand on end!
I was lucky enough to see Jeff Beck a few times. Once, with Rod Stewart doing songs from "Truth " and "Beck-o-La". Then ,saw this iteration of Beck's band. When I think of all the different bands I saw these 3 guys in it's amazing.
@@kathrynvedabogert7114 My heart (as well as MANY others' I'm sure) goes out to you and your son(?), and to your family and friends. (I HATE cancer) We have been so enriched in our lives by Tim's art and passion. All of his work and creativity and teaching. The little bit that I've received through recordings is cherished. He added joy to so many lives. Wishing you peace, comfort and love. Thank You too !!
It’s understandable where Joe Perry’s guitar style was adapted from after hearing as well: watching Jeff Beck’s performance on his own. Aerosmith has always been closer to James Brown meeting The Yardbirds in their earlier recordings, but I know Joe wouldn’t even hesitate to agree with that statement; cuz how could he.? Thanks 🙏🏻 so much for sharing this with all of his fans!
I first saw Vanilla Fudge at my High School in Wilmington Delaware in 1968, I Saw the Power Trio B,B,&A at the Spectrum in Philly in 1973. This concert was epic!
I caught this trio in Pittsburgh with the incredible acoustics of the Stanly theater in early seventies! Lou Reed was the opening act! They had to help him out onto the stage! At one point he picked up the microphone stand and blindly wailed it out into the audience! Art Rooneylll was sitting behind us sipping a fifth of scotch he snuck in! BBA was raw power!To this day it's the best concert I ever saw! RIP Tim!!!
@Robert Krober jr. Bet Buchanan at the Stanly was a great show! Bummer about Beck! Saw him again at Heinz Hall a couple years ago! Heart ❤️ was the opening act sadly without Nancy!
I saw Beck, Bogert & Appice on the East Coast in the mid-70s. It was pure joy. Monumental talent all around. It was the first time I ever heard a drum solo that I loved.
I saw them, too, in 1973 at the Providence Civic Center. Had great seats: 15th row center, on the floor. Boy, were they LOUD!! (But they all were back then, of course!) Did you see them with Wet Willie and Paul Butterfield like I did?
Santa Monica Civic - I was living in a beachfront apartment in Venice CA for 120 bucks a month and I won a radio contest and the prize was a ticket for B B & A and I rode my bicycle to the Civic. They blew the house down.
I First heard this line up in 1973 I won't pretend to say I was a big fan but My Cousin was teaching me to play the drums and it turns out he knows Carmine ,He was from my Neighborhood SO I became a Fan of Carmine and THE GOAT JOHN BONHAM BUT I NEVER SEEN THIS LINE UP LIVE OR ON VIDEO TILL NOW SO THX TO THE GUY WHO PUT THIS ON UTUBE TOTALLY COOL FOR SHITY FOOTAGE 😊😊
i was lucky also summer of 72 i believe little rock, a little ole band from texas opened for them. the of whole of tres hombres. Jesus, how lucky can one man be?
@@1952FMS I saw them, too, in 1973. Wet Willie and Paul Butterfield's Better Days opened up. GREAT show, and fucking loud as hell (as most rock concerts were in those days, of course!). Yup, we're very lucky. They just don't make rock like they used to.
Overlooked is Robin Trower's bands in the mid '70s. With Jimmy Dewar and his earthy vocals and Reg Isidore who was soon replaced by Bill Lordan. I saw them back then and they were the real deal. Not as flashy as Jimi or even Clapton, Trower brought his strat, a few distortion pedals and just blew you away. Some say he is a white Hendrix but he soon developed his own style....
@@anonymusum most musicians back in the day had a great appreciation for him. General public might not have. He was a teacher of mine at MI in 93 and 94. Anyone and everyone who came there to give a concert wanted Tim to play bass for them. Half of the concerts and instructionals given by pros had Tim sitting in on bass. He was and is Legendary in the industry. I got to share the stage with him numerous times. Probably some of my best musical memories.
@@anonymusum any interaction with him should be truly cherished. He is a great person. Had some very interesting stories from his days in the industry and with people he met along the way. That's cool you had email contact with him. He probably didn't have to write you back. He did because he wanted to. With me, I was paying for school, it was his job. Never did I feel resentment on his behalf though. He truly seemed to just enjoy being with people and sharing anything he could.
Nothing about Jeff's playing was stereotypical. It was always surprising. Even this song sounds so much different than the Jeff Beck Group version. RIP.
What a band! Is their ever been a better les paul tone; cleaner than thr marshalla, more like a Hi-watt. Fantastic! Thank you so much. The very best of BBA.
Before the dawning of the “Age of Aquarius,” there were heavy rock drummers like Dino Dannelli of the Young Rascals and Carmine Appice of the Vanilla Fudge. Carmine was the first heavy rock drummer and was the first to do drum solos. He set the stage for Baker, Moon, Mitchell, and Bonham!
Beck on a Les Paul
Magic.
The mighty Jeff Beck and a Les Paul using a pick. Still capturing the energy and mastery without a Strat, without a tremolo arm, and no finger picking. He could do anything.
For those interested this is Carmine ...the tapes that were uploaded here Superstition and Morning Dew as you ca see are in B&W . I had a B&W video recorder in 1972-73. I recorded this show of BBA on that recorder.The recording had all the shaking etc that these videos have. In 1973 my house was broken into in Long Island and the video machine and tapes were stolen. So somehow I believe these Black and White videos ended up on you tube ...i wonder where the person who put it up ended up with these videos. I assume maybe at a pawn shop ...crazy right
Carmine - Sad to read of your loss and the theft. Thrilled to see this video. And yes, crazy that someone had this through some other means than rightful ownership. Thanks for all of the great music. Like you, I'm now many more years down the road. These sounds have rekindled parts of my soul that simply lost track of the grooves of my youth. Damn we had great music during those years when we really needed to feel our freedoms. Superb as always! /Thanks forever ~ Dianne
How many cameras were stolen? I think I counted 6 different angles. Some on stage, some from the audience. Were you like 5 feet away looking down on the drummer then front row looking up at the stage . . . at the same time?
drmmadude Hi, saw you all play at Birmingham Town Hall in the UK, back in the 70s. One of my favourite ever concerts, and I’ve seen a few! Thank you!
Very generous of you Carmine. It was a great band, as these attest to.
Hello Mr. Appice, do you know that you´re the greatest drum basher ever?
For my graduation present in 1973 I got a killer Kenwood sound system. They also threw in 3 albums with my purchase. One of them was "Beck, Bogart and Appice. I still have that album. My son still has my stereo system.
…ah Kenwood…your comment brings tears to my eyes🐝🌹🌈👌🤘(my Mrs acc ) What were the other two albums
What a clip! They don't make bands like this anymore
Helluva vocal Carmine ! Wowza !
Appice's shuffling and triplets.
R.I.P master Jeff Beck
rip jeff, the world will u ! WE LOVE YOU!! john and raebelle.
Besides being a GOAT drummer, Carmine can sing! What a superstar trio.The best guitarist, bassist and drummer of the rock genre. Thanks for the video.
When they say power trio... each of these guys had the power of three musicians within them!
Those were magical days
Carmine Appice blows my mind every time. What a line up. I was just thinking how lucky these folks were to be there. RIP Tim Bogert.
@J Men liked to have been there
@J Men Damn I miss the Santa Monica civic!
@J Men Savoy brown,Spirit,Canned heat, Steppenwolf,,Randy Hanson etc..(not on the same bill though)
@J Men He would play at the SM civic constantly, I have seen him at least 4--5 times. He can really play and has covered Hendrix like nobody else! (He still tours as far as I know).
@@lilajagears8317 Awesome venue, I saw Cream, Johnny Winter and Mountain there :D
Tim BOGERT rest in peace! You are gone but you will never ever be forgotten.
Dear Jeff, we all miss you very much. I learned so much from you and I thank God I had the sense to see you live when I was young.
Carmine Appice was, is and will be more than only a drummer. He can sing as well as he plays the drums. And only a few drummers can do that. He is a beast and genious musician. God bless Carmine forever!!!
Co-wrote some of Rod Stewart's hits, too!
Don Henley, Phil Collins, Taylor Hawkins, Deen Castronovo, etc
Phil Collins is great BUT he is no drum beast technician of HARD Blues influenced ROCK like the great CARMINE APPICE !
@@russelmcknnon9727 Peter Rivera, Don Brewer, Gil Moore, Peter Chris
Hello? Buddy Miles!!!!
Thanks for share. Virtuosos
WOW! Imagine, back in the day when cute girls digged hearing a super talented group of REAL musicians and were actually getting excited over a drum solo! Another time! Another universe!!!
Now they're cute grandmas!
Never thought of that. Good point.
It’s remarkable that even with a pick and a Les Paul (with no whammy bar) that Jeff Beck’s touch on the instrument is instantly recognizable.
Oxblood 1954 Les Paul .. wraptail bridge Gibsons rule 🤘
RIP Jeff-you were awesome & legend. We'll miss you...
When I was in high school I saw these guys . I was seated right in front of jeff Beck . Power trio !
one of the best in the 70s. We really need a band like this NOW.
Did i say ....NOW!!!!!
My first concert was The James Gang,which was awesome with my girlfriend and her mother in Moorhead, Mn., kind of same vibe.
Incredibil how good the guys are.
Strangely, this has been my earworm for the past two days, before I learned just now of his passing. RIP Jeff
I saw this band in 1973 and was literally thrown against the back wall after the first note from the sheer force of this band, especially Jeff's guitar. That gig still lives on in my mind and l was already a follower of Jeff Beck which remained even until now. We will never see the like of musicians like this again.
In concert !!! In high school my friends and I would set up the stereo speakers on each side of the TV and arrange the furniture then the apartment began filling up with pot smoke and beer cans. Those early "In Concert" shows were ground breaking. We tuned into station KMET and cranked up the stereo. These shows predated Don Kirshner and Midnight special. Those latter two shows were TV studio productions that had bands sometimes play songs over and over to get a good take. Some times soo many times I would hate that song until this very day...I went to practically all of the tapings of the Don Kirshne shows. A friend was program director at our local f.m. station. We got to see a lot of great bands for free.
Attended tapings, nice! I spent many nights siting on the floor with friends in a similarly polluted environment. :) I taped a bunch of the In Concert simulcasts on reel-to-reel (audio only), but when I sold the equipment I stupidly threw in all the tapes. There were also hours of late-night interviews and typical 1970s free-style all-night FM broadcasts, and a bunch of pre-recorded reels. Ah, those were the days..
@@RetNemmoc555 what a coincidence. My friends and I always arrived early ourselves to sit in the front, waited for the camera crews to do all of thier crowd shots and then went about our business. Until the day a particular musician tried to talk his way into a girl I went with pants ! OK she was very pretty but , she was only 14 years old !! We both told him and his roadie/lacking to go fuck themselves and never went back.
@@RetNemmoc555 I WEEP FOR YOU! YOU MUST HAVE BEEN STONED!
Tim Bogert is off the chain here.
Wow!
I saw BBA in Oct. 72 in New Orleans...serious power trio! Late 60s- early 70s featured many trios(Hendrix, Cream, etc al.) All good...
The apex of heaviness! Today music just doesnt cut it! Brilliant performance!
Carmine my fav drummer ever Miss you Tim God speed brother......
Carmine appice is a really monster! Killer Trio... Smashes!!!
My generation sure had some amazing and creative musicians. And we all know where this burst of exploration came from. ☮
Carmine unreal he taught them all with his kits and Beck just letting it go. Bogert was great
Saw Beck, Bogart & Appice @ Pinkpop festival, Geleen, Limburg, the Netherlands, monday June 11th, 1973. Still remember them performing a high energy version of "Superstition". Jeff, Tim and Carmine rocked their sox off. What an amazing band ...
Saw them at Winterland San Francisco, they were good 👍 👌
Wow this is a little different , Jeff Beck playing a Gibson Les Paul, great version of Morning Dew too 🎸🎸 !
Tim Bogert’s bass tone is reminiscent of Jack Bruce from the Crossroads/ Glad jams on Goodbye. That growl makes the hairs on the back of my neck stand on end!
I read on Wikipedia that he would over drive his amplifier so that he could cut through the mix.
I never knew Carmine could sing! I’ve admired him for years!
I was lucky enough to see Jeff Beck a few times. Once, with Rod Stewart doing songs from "Truth " and "Beck-o-La". Then ,saw this iteration of Beck's band. When I think of all the different bands I saw these 3 guys in it's amazing.
REST in PEACE , TIM, you were one of the best bass players in the world ! ROCK ON UP IN HEAVEN !!!!
This is Veda, Tim's wife, yes he was so great! Love him to pieces!!
@@kathrynvedabogert7114
My heart (as well as MANY others' I'm sure) goes out to you and your son(?), and to your family and friends.
(I HATE cancer)
We have been so enriched in our lives by Tim's art and passion. All of his work and creativity and teaching.
The little bit that I've received through recordings
is cherished. He added joy to so many lives.
Wishing you peace, comfort and love.
Thank You too !!
It’s understandable where Joe Perry’s guitar style was adapted from after hearing as well: watching Jeff Beck’s performance on his own. Aerosmith has always been closer to James Brown meeting The Yardbirds in their earlier recordings, but I know Joe wouldn’t even hesitate to agree with that statement; cuz how could he.? Thanks 🙏🏻 so much for sharing this with all of his fans!
I first saw Vanilla Fudge at my High School in Wilmington Delaware in 1968, I Saw the Power Trio B,B,&A at the Spectrum in Philly in 1973. This concert was epic!
I caught this trio in Pittsburgh with the incredible acoustics of the Stanly theater in early seventies! Lou Reed was the opening act! They had to help him out onto the stage! At one point he picked up the microphone stand and blindly wailed it out into the audience! Art Rooneylll was sitting behind us sipping a fifth of scotch he snuck in! BBA was raw power!To this day it's the best concert I ever saw! RIP Tim!!!
@Tom lole I saw Roy Buchanan at the Stanley! I miss that place! Good times! 😎✌️
@Robert Krober jr. I saw a few shows at the Syria Mosque! It had really good acoustics too! Saw Springsteen there the first time he came to the Burg!
@@tomiole I saw Stevie Ray Vaughan at the Syria Mosque! What was the place on Bigelow Blvd.? I saw Robin Trower there. I think it was The Graffiti.
@Robert Krober jr. Bet Buchanan at the Stanly was a great show! Bummer about Beck! Saw him again at Heinz Hall a couple years ago! Heart ❤️ was the opening act sadly without Nancy!
Damn this is awesome. One of my most played LPs back in the day.
I saw Beck, Bogert & Appice on the East Coast in the mid-70s. It was pure joy. Monumental talent all around. It was the first time I ever heard a drum solo that I loved.
I saw them, too, in 1973 at the Providence Civic Center. Had great seats: 15th row center, on the floor. Boy, were they LOUD!! (But they all were back then, of course!) Did you see them with Wet Willie and Paul Butterfield like I did?
Actually saw this on TV went to the record store the next day and ordered it as a Japanese import. Cost me 1/3 of a weeks pay. WORTH IT !
Santa Monica Civic - I was living in a beachfront apartment in Venice CA for 120 bucks a month and I won a radio contest and the prize was a ticket for B B & A and I rode my bicycle to the Civic. They blew the house down.
Beck playing the Les Paul!!! Thanks for sharing this Gem.
Santa Monica Civic! I was at this concert.
Wow, I was just thinkin.. that must have been a glorious evening...! Cheers!
Pure rock magic. No auto tune, just uncut passionate talent
Thanks so much for posting.
Excellent. Thanks for sharing
I First heard this line up in 1973 I won't pretend to say I was a big fan but
My Cousin was teaching me to play the drums and it turns out he knows Carmine ,He was from my Neighborhood SO I became a Fan of Carmine and THE GOAT JOHN BONHAM BUT I NEVER SEEN THIS LINE UP LIVE OR ON VIDEO TILL NOW SO THX TO THE GUY WHO PUT THIS ON UTUBE TOTALLY COOL FOR SHITY FOOTAGE 😊😊
I can almost hear that gong reverberating through Maple Leaf Gardens, Toronto
.
Mind blowing, thank you all!
Damn, this is when bands PLAYED Rock and Roll -------(dont know what they do now)
Look up a band called "Earthless" -- they know whats up!
lots of yo yo yo nword repeat.
Crap rap is in now.What a shame.
Theyre all weak
They stare at their shoes and adore Bernie Sanders.. more or less.
Saw them in '73 in Germany, when they started Superstition was just....toooo much!
Excellent drummer and great singer. Superb band!!!
Really love this version!
All these years, never knew Appice sung.
+PapaG Cortellino As we Vanilla Fudge fans know, Carmine is an excellent, soulful singer. Check out VF's People Get Ready - that's him.
What? Are you new? Stay close!!!
Peter Baum - he also wrote with Fudge; I believe he wrote, “Happiness,” on their, “Near the Beginning,” LP.
Me too !! Just figured it out now. Very cool....by the Jesus that is some beautiful soulful rock and roll !!
He is ok.but no rod stewart
In all shapes and sizes it's a small world ... Thank you so much for recording it it's a treasure .... We do live in crazy world
There's the saying : THOSE WERE THE DAYS. In this case, they really WERE.
I was lucky enough to see this lineup one time. I can still remember the show and that in its self is a miracle.
Epic!
i was lucky also summer of 72 i believe little rock, a little ole band from texas opened for them. the of whole of tres hombres. Jesus, how lucky can one man be?
@@1952FMS I saw them, too, in 1973. Wet Willie and Paul Butterfield's Better Days opened up. GREAT show, and fucking loud as hell (as most rock concerts were in those days, of course!). Yup, we're very lucky. They just don't make rock like they used to.
WOW and wonder ZZ TOP then BBA
I saw them in Long Beach with Albert King. Do you remember who played with them at the show you saw ??
The best power trio post Jimi's Band of Gypsys. The drums and bass are like a tsunami, allowing Beck to do his usual magic.
Beck needs to ditch the Strat, use Les Paul and a pick again
Overlooked is Robin Trower's bands in the mid '70s. With Jimmy Dewar and his earthy vocals and Reg Isidore who was soon
replaced by Bill Lordan. I saw them back then and they were the real deal. Not as flashy as Jimi or even Clapton, Trower brought
his strat, a few distortion pedals and just blew you away. Some say he is a white Hendrix but he soon developed his own style....
Band Of Gypsys was a power trio at The Fillmore, but at Woodstock they were a six pack.
How is there a power trio discussion with no mention of Rush, SRV and Double Trouble or early Thin Lizzy?
@@daves4645 Band of Gypsies (Hendrix, Buddy Miles, and Billy Cox) didn't play at Woodstock. They weren't formed until a couple of years later.
Tim's Bass tone, my god, golden age of rock.
+Tom Howland Tim was and is a truely underrated bass player. He blew me away in those days with his extraordinary bass lines.
Seconded !!
@@anonymusum most musicians back in the day had a great appreciation for him. General public might not have.
He was a teacher of mine at MI in 93 and 94. Anyone and everyone who came there to give a concert wanted Tim to play bass for them. Half of the concerts and instructionals given by pros had Tim sitting in on bass. He was and is Legendary in the industry.
I got to share the stage with him numerous times. Probably some of my best musical memories.
@@erikvaldur3334
I bet. Now I feel a bit jealous as I only had a brief email correspondence with him.
@@anonymusum any interaction with him should be truly cherished. He is a great person. Had some very interesting stories from his days in the industry and with people he met along the way.
That's cool you had email contact with him. He probably didn't have to write you back. He did because he wanted to. With me, I was paying for school, it was his job. Never did I feel resentment on his behalf though. He truly seemed to just enjoy being with people and sharing anything he could.
Love watching Beck play a Les Paul! My favorite guitarist ever.
ABSOLUTELY HUGE!! Wow what a different song than The Dead does :)
knew I'd find you here after your superstition vid hahaha that's where I came from
@@brendancarbone7621 exactly :D
Same song, just different interpretations; I like them both. The Dead's version is more emotive; this one a hard rocking cover.
This is ridiculously good! Everyone is incredible in this performance... just wow!
thanks for puting this together man. crazy story indeed.
Thank you so much.that’s a gem in music history for us all to enjoy
And it appears Jeff was coming out of that fender amp yup hell yeah
Real deal. Just how great they were back a days. Lots of creativety. Unlike today
Thanks for Sharing, Incredible 🎶🎶🎶👍
Wow! what a way to end a concert!
JB never thought much of this group...but still might be the best concert I've see. And, I've seen quite a few.
I think you'll find that he's been a little more complimentary over the ensuing years!
This trio did Jeff Beck justice. For me, his style and enormous skill in the time with them, can be better appreciated.
Never heard of this power trio before! Superb! All three on fire! Becks guitar sound masterful
Carmine and Tim were in Vanilla Fudge, most of the reason why they were a great group
Same here, but I know um now.
Don't forget Cactus. Some great stuff as well. "Restrictions" LP a good place to start.
@@NormDPlume-mc5dh Jim McCarty (out of Detroit) is terribly overlooked as killer guitarists from that era
The LP right before "Restrictions" is my fav. "One Way... Or Another ". I had it on 8-track 😁
They cannot be humans to play such heavenly music.
Absolutely incredible! What a gem . Thanks so much for uploading.
Again, I was there. Santa Monica Civic Auditorium. I was 17.
having those credits rolling over the video was a great idea
Nothing about Jeff's playing was stereotypical. It was always surprising. Even this song sounds so much different than the Jeff Beck Group version. RIP.
Thanks so much for this Carmine! Awesome rock !
Finally a drum solo that stays true to the song and isn’t boring.
1st time hearing ' carmine sing', good! met him too', at a drum show', very cool guy',rock on! lovejg
I got to see this band here in New York at a place called Gaelic Park in the Bronx NY. In 1973
Awesomeness wicked sounds great thanks
Morning dew is my all time fav song regardless who’s playing it or version
Just found this ;Jeff Beck one of the greatest guitarist
Man you did us all a great favor. I never though in a million years I’d ever see these three live. Thanks man.
What a band! Is their ever been a better les paul tone; cleaner than thr marshalla, more like a Hi-watt. Fantastic! Thank you so much. The very best of BBA.
The best version of Morning Dew!!!
Love it too, but Long John Baldry.........
never, nazareth version is wayyyy better
Grateful Dead
So Killer! Carmine led the way for Drummers! Jeff was always Killin' It !
Great drumming and vocals Carmine!
Saw them in Brighton many years ago. Great gig and so loud.
My new favorite vintage rock power trio!
Great to see a live video with perfectly synchronised audio!
1973. Just yesterday!!
R.I.P Gênio Jeff Beck
Awesome , thanks
Gotta love credits rolling while history is being made
Before the dawning of the “Age of Aquarius,” there were heavy rock drummers like Dino Dannelli of the Young Rascals and Carmine Appice of the Vanilla Fudge. Carmine was the first heavy rock drummer and was the first to do drum solos. He set the stage for Baker, Moon, Mitchell, and Bonham!
My brother was a drummer, and🌻 Carmine did set the stage
@@Suzanne6336THANK YOU FOR YOUR KIND 👍 RESPONSE! I DON’T GET MANY COMPLIMENTS ON MY 🌞 ☮️ 🥁 ✌️COMMENTS HERE. 🧑🎤 🏁 👩💼👩🎓👩⚖️
Out of this world
🗣 Amazing solo 1:42 with 🎸 *Jeff Beck* R.I.P.