Jimmy Page The Yardbirds (1968)
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- Опубліковано 9 лют 2025
- The Yardbirds es un grupo de rock y rhythm & blues británico formado en 1963, particularmente activo durante la década de 1960, siendo una de las bandas de la llamada Invasión británica. La banda se separó en 1968, aunque volvieron a la actividad en los años 1990.
Su estilo estuvo enfocado en una especie de versión inglesa de lo que estaban haciendo los músicos tradicionales de blues norteamericanos, y del mismo modo llegaron a trabajar en colaboración con destacados bluesmen como Sonny Boy Williamson II. Aparte de la influencia que tuvo en la época, la cual fue moderada, la razón por la que más se recuerda a esta agrupación es porque de sus filas salieron tres de los guitarristas más importantes de la historia del rock: Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck y Jimmy Page.
i love how Page doesn't wait for the host to finish the intro
me too, all i could think was-- look at me, i'm here to play.
he would be like "shut up is my turn now we need to start the song" but naaah, he just wanted to play after all, damn i like his outfit here, is sooo damn cool, especially the ruffles (or volant as we call them here in italy) they looks sooo fluffy.
Jimmy was born holding a guitar
@The Village Idiot The original 'turntable' musician haha
and how LOUD he is!
Always loved the way Jimmy danced while he played.
ANYTHING with Jimmy Page is gold.
Agreed. He can do no wrong in my book.
Check pages early 80s concerts
Even the puffy shirt
You said it.
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
I saw Jimmy with the Yardbirds, Wellington, NZ early 1967, blown away I was
It's so all aesthetic about Jimmy Page. The way he moves on the stage, the way he dresses himself, the way he plays, the way how he coordinates with other members of the band. This guy must be really cool IRL!
Insightful & pithy…& very well put-U really hit the nail on the head here!! 👌🏼 🙂 👍🏼
I agree, he is really cool
Page is being Page. Absolute Excellence and Power!
I've never seen this footage. Even at this stage of his career, it's easy to see the star quality Jimmy has.
He's an absolute genius, who to this day can hardly read music. You'll never see a picture of him with music pages in front...
Why because of his costume? Hell The Beatles and Paul Revere and the raiders are doing that!
@@garysnow1475 no because he has made some of greatest music ever
@@corkwijk9 🤔
Same!
Thanks Id forgotten that Keith Relf was such a good harp player. Great version of Johnny Burnett Trio classic
TheYardbirds played at my high school prom in 1968.
they were way above that dude.
¡¡ Ostras!! No había visto nunca a Jimmy tocando una Telecaster.
En Led Zeppelin aún la tocó en varias ocasiones, y practicamente todos los discos de LZ tienen algunos temas con el sonido característico de la telecaster.
This piece was in the film Blowup of Antonioni. Iconic.
Love when Jeff Beck was smashing the amp
Saw the “Yardbirds” with Jimmy page and the late great Jeff Beck. Little did I realize back then where these two rockers would go. I even have photos made with my brownie camera…. ✌️❤️
Lucky , lucky you . Did you save your programme ?
Where was that concert? I had a Brownie camera in the '50s.
Wow, theres so little precious footage of the Yardbirds with Jimmy Page...
The yarbirds
Cambiaron para siempre mi consepcion de la música y la vida misma
Gracias a éstos grandes Musicos
This was before my time and am sorry to have missed it! Love Jimmy Page!
lmao not you apologizing for not being born soon enough 😆
Take heart: everybody missed somebody! 🤔😊😎
I saw this same line up at the Michigan State Fairgrounds when the Yardbirds went on a Dick Clark tour with a bunch of other bands. The biggest thing I remember was Page had a bunch of little mirrors stuck on his guitar. LOL I would have loved to have seen Beck & Page together, but I saw the Yardbirds in October 1966 and Jeff quit in June 1966. Had to wait another 7 years until I turned 16 to finally see Beck live....and four years after that to see Page again with Zep in 1977.
Aerosmith's version of this was very good (1975)
Jimmy is really kicking ass all over the place on this one
Phenomenal! Live version is even better. This is the kind of music that changed the world once upon-a-time!
Holy Fuck!!! What an amazing clip. After years as a session man we can see that Jimmy Page was just starting to become the flamboyant showman he'd be in Led Zep. Thanks for sharing this precious vid with us!!
Wow Jimmy was already a dandy, quite the dapper dresser. LOVE
Jimmy Page goes back and forth from dressing like a dandy, a gentleman and a gardening gnome.
@@VixxKong2😂😂😂😂
@@VixxKong2I must say I didn’t expect a kpop fan to be here 😂
@@yasminegkattan
I just love music bands, no matter the country
Folks,
I find it fair to say that the Yardbirds are the most important rock n roll band as a collective group. We witnessed Chuck Berry, Little Richard & Elvis as Front men of rock n roll bands. This band had three lead guitarists that were just…..Legend. And to top it off they had Keith Relf. I rate this band above the Beatles and the stones in regards to laying down the blue prints that rock bands still follow. This band created Led Zeppelin. And the list goes on and on!
Совершенно согласен с Вами!
That’s a lot of ruffles on those blouses man. . Page is the king of riffs
great piece of history here. one thing to mention that I thought was great was Page just starting up since the presenter was taking waaaay to long.
"Just let us play already man" such a legend.
So glad i saved all my mom & dad records i have a few Beatles albums worth a good amount
It's crazy those three guys coming out of this band. And so different later on. Closing in on 60 and Jimmy Page is still it for me.
Jimmy was 79 on the 9th January 2023.
@@AnthonyWilliams-ew3wp 😂😂😂😂 my man was living in the past in a big way.
To Mr. Stewart, yes many of the chord arrangement ideas Page later brought into Led Zeppelin songs .Solo riffs too!
@@AnthonyWilliams-ew3wp I kept saying to myself 60 , 60 ! 😅
That was some incredible power-rock and roll on display by the Yardbirds. All four of the guys played great in this last of the Yardbird iterations!
really?...i thought the whole thing was a bit of a 12 bar dirge, no wonder jimmy left.
The harmonica was bad
Sweet number! This hot tune by The Yardbirds (titled "Train Kept A Rollin") is the same one the band can be seen playing in the cult 1966 film Blow Up, starring David Hemmings. A mod classic!
Page has always been a very dynamic player. He never stays in one place.
The Yardbirds and Led Zeppelin were way before my time. I’m talking, like, a solid 40 years, but they’ll still be in my heart forever, and they’ll always be my favorite bands ever!
What a great band. A really exciting time in music.
Coolness personified.
Great clip of Page and a Telecaster! 🤯
Heard that ... Beck left that tele for Page ..as long time PAL 😊❤❤
The Yardbirds are usually mentioned to give accolades to the 3 different Guitarists that came through the Band, but rarely does anyone mention the fact that the Band itself was so amazing that 3 Guitar Legends ALL wanted to be in that Band.
clapton,beck,paige?
@@scottshorten9962 Yes, and to prove my point, name the rest of the Yardbirds. See what I mean? They were an incredible Band with whichever of those three were with them at the time.
@@thomasmartinscott very true, i prefer jeff beck 's contribution.thanks
@@scottshorten9962 Me, too. Thanks!
@@thomasmartinscott. Do you seriously think real Yardbirds fans don’t know Keith Relf- without whom there would be no Yardbirds- or Jim McCarty who, at 79, is still performing with the Yardbirds?
Saw LZ in concert soon after release of 2nd album. The whole concert was their first 2 albums which are my favorite of there’s with #1 being my absolute favorite.
I saw them at the Boston Garden right as the 2nd album was released, the record stores weren't even stocking it yet. The first time I saw Led Zeppelin was at the Fillmore East in June 1969, they were still promoting the first album. It was their second tour of the US and they were returning to America as rock Gods, still, no one outside of the counterculture knew who Zep was, including most Baby Boomers, who were as straight as their parents! I saw them four more times at various venues but that first Zep concert was outrageous, the energy they created was seismic!
@@geneobrien8907 OMG You saw them at Fillmore East. That could rank as the greatest concert ever. I saw many great bands at F.E. but to see the mighty LZ is amazing. I always regretted and still do not seeing Janis Joplin in the one time she played the Fillmore. The LZ concert I am talking about were at MSG. ROCK ON my friend.
@@countalucard4226 I saw them at MSG also, twice. The Fillmore East and the period in time that it operated was incomparable. Yes, that FE Zep concert made a big impact on my then 18 year old mind, the very good acid I took that night heightened the experience. Still and like you I missed too many great shows there, regretful for sure.
@@geneobrien8907 I must admit that I took acid once and it was not a good experience. Don’t know if it was poorly made or I took too much, it was a half a tab. I got into an opioid problem but for many years I had the greatest time. Especially walking around Las Vegas. I have been on Subutex for years and I don’t see myself ever getting off it. Imagine seeing CCR and Deep Purple at the same show for $5.00. Those were the days.
@@countalucard4226 Yes, I think the tickets for the Fillmore East started at $3.50. Imagine seeing Zeppelin, The Alman Brothers, Procol Harum, Hendrix, etc. for less than $5!!! Those certainly were the days.
Acid could be a great experience but it could also be a reckoning, set and setting are important elements for having a good trip. Besides, the best time to have taken it was in the 1960's when its use was supported by a culture. Whether it was true or not, every time we tripped we felt we were tapping into a collective consciousness that was making the world a better place. That doesn't exist today.
During the days of the counterculture I certainly took my share of drugs, that was what the culture was all about.
I too am addicted, to Buprenorphine. I stopped taking drugs in 1975 and remained clean for 27 years but in 1999 my 16 year old son committed suicide. The emotional pain was so strong I had to escape it, I became addicted to opiates for about 8 years.
I stopped opiates by taking Buprenorphine and now at 72 I have no plans to stop. In any case stopping would be disastrous, my body hasn't produced endorphins naturally for over 20 years and recovery would be impossible without hospitalization.
But that's hardly the point, after my son died the only thing that provided some comfort was thinking about the past, it was a total immersion in nostalgia. I not only relived my days from my youth but I've read over 100 books on that period of time, I've become a bit of an expert on the counterculture as a result.
But part of becoming absorbed by my memories of my past was smoking, again, something I hadn't done for 27 years. I find that every time I light up a cigarette, I'm reliving the past and its the same with the drug. It takes me back to a happy and emotionally pain free time.
So there's the physical addiction and the connection that it provides to the past. The emotional scars are too deep, I couldn't survive without cigarettes and the drug. I live in my own world.
For those who want to pass judgement, all I can say is, some things just don't have a simple explanation.
The number of super stars that came & left that band is astonishing.
You know this Jimmy kid ain't half bad.
He should stick with it, just might be big someday.
You never know..
지미 페이지를 보면 고귀한 영혼의 아우라가 느껴진다. 프로 세션맨으로서 다져온 실력의 아티스트가 레드 제플린을 잉태하기 직전의 모습이라니! 너무도 귀한 영상에 감사합니다...
Great version here. Brilliant!
guys are so cool. Thanks
Hi Felicia💐💐
To me Jimmy was at his absolute best between 1970-1975...especially 1973. The Song Remains the Same is a good example of his greatness live. He was just an explosion of greatness then. He has been fantastic since then with a little lapse there in the early 80's, but he's still great. Jeff Beck is one of those rare ones that just keeps getting better, that man is just phenomenal. Eric peaked in different places over the decades. Eric came out of the gate ahead of them both during the Bluesbreakers and Cream era, and then puffed out a bit after the Dominos. He became very laid back in his approach in a purist sort of way, and held that medal on in to the 80's. The early 90's he started rekindling his fire during the Journeyman tour and especially during the blues album From the Cradle. He played like a beast on that tour. And the Robert Johnson record was killer too. But each three are just different players with different styles as well as approaches, they have been my teachers for the past 40 years now. I'll be forever grateful for everything they've done.🎸🎸🎸
I've never heard anything about Beck in regards to.... I know Jimmy and Eric each went through periods of Heroin use and I'd be willing to bet that their "off" years strongly coincide with their "H" years. I know Jeff probably partied hard with the best of them but H is a different animal. It steals a persons soul.
I'd agree with you about Page. I'd say '69-'75 were his prime years. And yes that Madison square garden footage in '73... He's the top guitarist on the planet at that point. Just amazing.
To me his best moment was between 68 and 73, man he makes the guitar screams
What you said...!! Paige's hi point for me was Led Zeppelin 1....omg
Not a fan of Jimi Hendrix? I think Jimmy Page's work on the first two Zeppelin albums, which both came out in 1969 is just jaw-dropping.
@@Head318Hunter Heroin is death, lucky to be alive and well.
Page, the superstar easily steals the spotlight. This band was great and ground breaking, but Beck and Page brought them to a new level. This was when Page was envisioning Led Zep’s power.
Keith Relf easily stole the spotlight. The camera was on Keith for 75% of the video.
Page still out swaggers everyone on earth. Despite his frailties, he has the magic, the charisma, and most importantly the creativity (folks that say LZ just stole/covered other’s music, see most of their catalog, Presence, Physical Graffiti……….)
@@allthewaylive8665Rock and Roll is all about attitude to begin with, and Page had it in spades along with near virtuoso ability, vision, and recording/producing skills to boot!
Ergo an English music critic had prophesied "The New Yardbirds," were said to fall like a Led Zeppelin.
Jimmy & the band then named themselves the aforementioned moniker, just to fling SHITE in their eye!
The rest is history...
@@straycatttt2766 He didn't 'steal' the spotlight. When the singer kicks in the cameras are obviously going to go to him. Relf's singing and harmonica were fairly pedestrian in this clip. What the other poster meant is that Page stood out against the others, which he did, not just for his playing, but his flamboyance. That the band is famous for three of rock's greatest guitarists being part of it overlooks the fact that the other members weren't any great shakes as musicians, nor was Relf that great a singer.
Only someone like Jimmy Page would have the brass to play this song live! After Beck playing this song, I cannot think of too many guitar players over the years who could pull this off and do it justice...
Aerosmith's version of this song is bad ass!
This song has a long and glorious history beginning w originator Tiny Bradshaw as a piano jump-boogie-shuffle record in '51.
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The Johnny Burnette Trio tore it up (ripped speaker/loose tube) as a rockabilly guitar rave in '56.
ua-cam.com/video/VkZhJJ8sPmw/v-deo.html
Yardbirds followed in '65 with a Jeff Beck studio version
ua-cam.com/video/Cd1gRHk28IE/v-deo.html
Then, of course, the immortalized Beck/Page (never officially recorded as duo Yardbirds - this is it!) vers from Antonioni's Blow Up
ua-cam.com/video/jSJGEn4FDys/v-deo.html , and per above, Jimmy Page kept it alive in '68.
Aerosmith swung for the fences in '74.
ua-cam.com/video/_EvGn22Mplg/v-deo.html
(God bless Joe Perry!)
And Page revisited it live again c '79 w Led Zeppelin & Robert Plant (bit dazed n confused about the song he's expected to sing, but nails the common knowledge quick enuff).
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And then Motörhead (bless Lemmy n Fast Eddie) sets a new bar in '77.
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@@antithug7942 worst ever sorry 😢
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And the train kept a Rollin
Jimmy liked those 18th century costumes from the get-go.
The most amazing thing is how the guitar sound evolves through the song and the solo scale blends in with rhythm. Classic page. The intro to this song is probably the idea that lead to "Sick again" from Phisical Graffiti.
It also sounds like the bridge coming out of the solo from Dazed and Confused.
@@jamesleblanc7437 yes. The yard birds were performing fazed and confused at that period. You are right.
Get it on
While Page was in The Yardbirds, they performed Dazed and Confused, but called it I'm Confused. Page also played White Summer. They even recorded Tangerine, but didn't release it at the time.
I like how Page opens with some chords that sure sound like a transition in Dazed and Confused. With 20/20 hindsight, we can see signs of what was to come in Zep. If I remember correctly, the original Yardbirds recording of this song featured Beck on lead, Chris Dreja on rhythm, and Paul Samuel Smith on bass. The line up here is Beck and Smith are gone and Chris Dreja took over bass, and I believe Jim McCarty on drums. Neat little piece of history here of a band transitioning into something beyond our wildest dreams.
I noticed that intro riff from middle of D&C too.
Yeah I was really confused until the bass kicked in and I realized what song they were playing lol
Sounded like Sick Again
Yeah I caught that. Very eye opening
Caught that too! 😊👍
Muito bom poder ouvir novamente esse maravilhoso som
Amazing how Page gets the guitar to sound like a train, driving and pumping of the engine.
Fantastic the Jymmy's dance.
I can feel jimmy’s frustration 🎼🤘🏻
I'm impressed Page could play so well with those puffy sleeves.
Awesome thanks. For showing this legendary video ‘
Could be a nomination for best thing on the Internet. Ever
it was the time... these guys started some big things.. opened up guitar playing. tone benders. fuzztones.. ect. what a great time for exploring electric guitar.. ya man.. ..i think I had the first maestro fuzztone in town.. lol
Jimmy gets an amazingly ballsy tone out of that Telecaster.
Big fan of the Yardbirds. Keith Relf wasn't the greatest singer, but he did his job well. Great harmonica player. His singing was really good on the Armageddon album, though.
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
His edgy voice works-a Blundstone wouldnt be right (much as I love it)
Armageddon was awesome
This is back when rock still had some form of melody in it’s mix!
Very nice to hear quality music. Thanks.
Real music to my soul !
Un buen rescate musical, gracias amigo.
Relf was an excellent harp player and front man
Started with "Dazed and Confused" but breaks into "Train Kept a Rollin' " with same licks as "Stroll On" in the movie "Blow Up". Doesn't get old.
If you want peace with me it will cost you serenity. My mind is cleared of clouds.
Man his early days with the Yardbirds was very Raw. When he became part Led Zeppelin. Jimmy Page really found his band for sure.
Excellent!! Things were a’changin for sure!
The Yardbirds, grandiosos.
That following Saturday afternoon in a London pub, John Paul Jones introduced Jimmy to Robert 'Percy' Plant. Led Zeppelin's first album soon debuted on 12 January 1969. And the rest is history. Have a listen to the opening track 'Communication Breakdown'. Rock n Roll 🎸
Could never stand Plant.
@@sheilamacdougal4874 show us on the doll where Robert Plant touched you
@@sheilamacdougal4874 The only problem that I had with Plant was that he didn't let the music breathe, he was too frequently interjecting vocal sounds into areas where the song would have been better served if he laid out.
@@geneobrien8907 I didn't care for his entire style and presentation when performing live: 70s far out heaviness. I was never fond of all the psychedelic bullshit that made the "songs" (such as they were) drag on, nor the overbearing drums. The voice and guitar interplay crap may have impressed stoned out 17 year olds, but jazz musicians do improvisational exchanges hundreds of times more sophisticated and musically interesting. If it can be appreciated only when tripped out on good acid, fine, trip out and enjoy, but it's not really music. Apparently also their best songs were plagiarised (there may be some yt clips documenting that). In interviews as old men, mind you, these guys are clearly intelligent and articulate. Which is presumably why they no longer play this dreck, except occasionally for money.
@@sheilamacdougal4874 Comparing jazz to rock isn't a fair comparison. And I disagree with what you say the band's followers but I understand, I have my own strong opinions about some music and musicians.
Greatest guitarist of all the age,
The man with the Les Paul.....Jimmy Page 🎸. Might as well call it a Led Paul. 🎸
Another great 60’s English/British band 🏴🇬🇧
sounds like because Jimmy didn't wait for the hosts intro to finish, the sound engineer turned Jimmy's volume down after a few seconds of opening chords. if only they turned it back up ?
Ever the showman our Jimmy.
That intro is communication breakdown, awesome Jimmy just starts playing with the announcer still talking
Great Video. I wore those Yardbirds Albums out at High Volumes when they hit the American markets.
RE the slagging of Keith Relf in some of these comments: It seems obvious that three of the greatest guitarists that the UK produced wanted to be in a band fronted by Mr Relf. Think about it.
yeah I heard an interview from the early 90s where the interviewer was insulting Keith's vocal ability because of course it doesn't compare to Robert's and Jimmy said he's not going along with any of the Keith bashing.
Old School RULES!!!!
And in less than a year, Page would go on to form the greatest collection of talent ever seen in a band. The man had a plan…
Paige wasn't in Pink Floyd.
@@magna116 Very good point because Pink Floyd was a far bigger success than anyone at that time!
Page wasn’t in Deep Purple or Black Sabbath
@@5tar5z deep purple is a joke lol. thats why everyone hated his work with one of the members. deep purple is nothing its embarrassing how much Coverdale wanted to be Robert plant
@@magna116 who?
fantastic....love it.
Yardbirds can’t even compare to Page’s Zeppelin. People can hate on Zep all they want for “stealing material”, but those 4 were unmatched in rock history.
Love my Jimmy Page!!! Awesome!!!!!
Jimmy so "formally" dressed. So elegant!
If this had been 1964, that’d been great. By 1968, so much better music was already on the scene. You can see why Jimmy Page wanted more - and why he’d want a band with his pal JPJ on bass and organ. The stars aligned when he found Robert and John and the rest is history. Take care and rock on 🤘🏼 🔥🎼🎸🥁🤷🏻♂️😀✌🏼
Well-stated. It's fun to see Jimmy during this period. He's displaying the only Star Power here ... otherwise, this video is boring and irritating.
@@danielmoose1273 It's easy to Monday morning quarterback, but Page is being restricted here. It's more apparent in the "Think About it" video, where he plays the Dazed and Confused solo note-for-note with a different backing band. These guys were good musicians, but they weren't able to support what Page was capable of providing. I also have to wonder why Page's tone is somewhat thin here-- in early Zep videos, he's got a full tone going.
@@Alloy7 👀 Ok 🙂, Lol ...
@@Alloy7 Well, it is a tv appearance so they definitely would keep the amp volume quite low. Plus he’s playing a Tele- not exactly known for a thick tone. I guess he’s fitting the space they wanted for the guitar in the band.
I’d imagine and back in those days I’d think amp volume and guitar pickups characteristics were the only good way to get any real drive and distortion. Probably why he switched to primarily humbucker based Les Pauls in Zeppelin.
@@danielmoose1273ahu8hh😊hh😊
I read that Burt Bacharach was one of the first to hire Jimmy Page as a session guitarist.
Glyn Johns was responsible for Jimmy’s early session work along with shell Tarmy but Bacharach wasn’t far behind in appreciating JPs six string prowess.
@@thekitowl Great information!
The Kinks also .... (hired Page) 😊😂❤❤
Yes. Jimmy Page. Makes everything and anything sound and look incredible. He's a legend. In his own time
Just love the harmonica, page made sure he found a harmonica playing vocalist for zeppelin, we know why dont we
I hate to be negative, but the harp on this song is a waste of valuable musical space. That guy sucked. He should have tossed that harp and just let the guitarists jam.
Well that's your opinion, but I really like it old school
Keith was awesome, RIP Man...
they were just too different. it looks like jack white is up there with his parents. jimmy wanted it loud and rude. not nice and tidy.
@@terrybartak7811 keith is a legend shush
Definition of BADASS! Page best ever!
I love the Trippy Tele. Yup. that's what I call it. It sounded sooo good on late Yardbirds/early Zeppelin...
I had no idea Keith Relf was so short. Helluva harmonica player, though!
The young master Jimmy
この演奏の海賊盤は知られていた 40年くらい前に渋谷陽一が担当していたNHKの16:00からやってた「軽音楽をあなたに」で聞いたことが有る 渋谷自身初めて聞いた知らなかったと言っていた zepのファンを自認していたのに知らなかったとリスナーに謝っていたな その映像が残っていたのは驚きだ
Jimmy Page is always the coolest 😎
So Jimmy's doing the solo (We've all been waiting for!) And where is the freakin' camera? On (The late great) Keith Relf! Pardon me there is exactly 7 seconds of Jimmy's solo out of 20 seconds of solo time. We were robbed of 14 seconds of a Jimmy Page solo! How cruel. :)
There's a special place in hell for camera operators who don't know who don't switch to the soloist during the solos.
How good was Keef Relf on the harp. Sadly underrated. . And sadly missed since 1976. 🥲
I have no doubt at all that Jimmy is perfectly happy and fine with the fact the harmonica was that much higher than his guitar in the mix.
The opening few chords are so good then the sound guy takes Page way down, the harp is great but . . .
@@Jlipnicki Still really cool to see tho man!
communication break down and whole lotta' love combined at the beginning...bring it on home too....
Черт возьми.. вот это.. вещи.. я по молодел на десятки. Спасибо Громадное..
"Dazed and Confused" riff at 0:09.
good catch
I don’t hear it
It's there right from the opening note
Jay P. Never mind I heard it...excuse my noobness
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this is amazing
Cool, thanks for the download.
wow i love that version
Did anybody hear the story about Jimmy's Dragon Telecaster guitar in this video. One of his stupid friends went and thought that they would do Jimmy a favor by repainting the guitar -- they painted it white and screwed up the tone and everything, jimmy said that he threw it in the garbage. lol
Late response, but he kept the neck and put it on one of his guitars..
And if I had been there,I would have dug it out & Hell,probably would sleep with it next to me until the day I die,lol!
Yeah which is especially bothersome because the way Jimmy had painted it was a masterpiece
@@cifkif2186 its on his brown fender B bender...
I just read that everyone was doin' it ( painting different colors) on their guitars.
The host appears to be a part of the band as well. The part that is ensconced behind an embankment of modern, sophisticated technology!