Hip Hop Fan Reacts To Hank Williams - Cold Cold Heart

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  • Опубліковано 18 жов 2024
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 173

  • @raynavarro7997
    @raynavarro7997 Рік тому +18

    The moon just went behind the clouds, to hide it's face and cry.....Sheer poetry

  • @Irockthere4
    @Irockthere4 Рік тому +29

    “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry” is one of the greatest and saddest songs you’ll ever hear.

    • @debrabeck9630
      @debrabeck9630 Рік тому

      My favorite from Hank Williams, and I love so many.

    • @kingmonkey460
      @kingmonkey460 Рік тому

      I'll be honest, it's such a good song, but I don't think it's the saddest he's sang.
      Pins and Needles In My Heart
      I Told A Lie To My Heart
      I Hang My Head And Cry
      Wedding Bells
      Definitely a good one, but in my opinion, these are just a few songs I think are sadder than I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry. Definitely a great song though

    • @bre2581
      @bre2581 9 місяців тому

      @@kingmonkey460alone and forsaken is the one for me that’s the saddest

    • @kingmonkey460
      @kingmonkey460 9 місяців тому

      @@bre2581 you know, I suppose it is all up to one's own opinion Hank's saddest song. Alone and Forsaken is a good one

  • @deselby9240
    @deselby9240 Рік тому +29

    Hank Williams was a poet of small words. Ask Leonard Cohen.

  • @beegee1960
    @beegee1960 10 днів тому

    Hank never rushed his “heartbreak songs” He held ever note to its fullest. Listen to his I’M SO LONESOME I COULD CRY. it is s slow mournful cry of sorrow.

  • @sahewins
    @sahewins Рік тому +25

    Hank had a song called Your Cheating Heart, so not always so squeaky clean. He wrote Move it on Over which was later covered by George Thorogood. A very rocking cover. I always loved I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry

    • @chestrockwell6807
      @chestrockwell6807 Рік тому +2

      Move it On Over is arguably the world's first rock and roll song. Came out in '47

  • @Gort-Marvin0Martian
    @Gort-Marvin0Martian Рік тому +12

    My grandmother knew him. Every time he came to town she would hurry down to Cain's Ballroom in Tulsa Oklahoma to commiserate. That was back in the 40's and yet Cain's is still there in T-Town.
    As we say here in Texas; Y'all be safe.

  • @BrianMihok
    @BrianMihok Рік тому +31

    Hank Williams is worth the rabbit hole. Remember his context and, as you do, appreciate it for what it's capable of. Hank's lyrics won't be pushing too many boundaries, though it is undoubtedly poetic, but his style is totally alive and true. The voice is amazing. Particular favorites are "I Saw the Light" and "Rocking Chair Money." Also, actually towards the late 1960s many pop musicians, including Brits, did get influenced by this country style (see Bob Dylan's Nashville Skyline, The Byrds' Sweetheart of the Rodeo, and The Rolling Stone's song Dead Flowers, among others.).

    • @michele-33
      @michele-33 Рік тому +2

      Many people don't like Nashville Skyline, I love it.
      If you don't know it check out Dylan's country song *Wallflower*...
      Hank was Bob's first musical Idol

    • @Hartlor_Tayley
      @Hartlor_Tayley Рік тому +2

      @@michele-33 Nashville Skyline is a great album as Is his John Wesley Harding album from around the same time.

    • @michele-33
      @michele-33 Рік тому +1

      @@Hartlor_Tayley
      Love John Wesley Harding.
      Out of all Dylan's albums there are a couple albums where his vocal delivery is not to my liking... Time Out of Mind being one.
      But...the outtakes are better than album versions.
      Basement Tapes are excellent - he & The Band had such fun during that period!
      Love Desire too. Bob used so many voices over the decades.

    • @michele-33
      @michele-33 Рік тому +1

      @@Hartlor_Tayley
      The group Judas Priest took their name from the song *Frankie Lee and Judas Priest from John Wesley Harding*.
      Bob's music has influenced countless artists!

    • @BrianMihok
      @BrianMihok Рік тому +1

      @@michele-33 Absolutely love Nashville Skyline. Wallflower is great.

  • @angelatheriault8855
    @angelatheriault8855 Рік тому +2

    Don’t ever underestimate how beloved this man’s music was to a whole generation of people. Many consider him the King of country.

  • @jeremyfagner6808
    @jeremyfagner6808 Рік тому +5

    Hank Sr. Was so influential and left such a huge impact on all music genres in just the very few years he was recording

  • @redbirdjazzz
    @redbirdjazzz Рік тому +3

    Songwriter Harlan Howard said that country music was "three chords and the truth."

  • @cherylwilkinson3228
    @cherylwilkinson3228 4 місяці тому

    I never thought of Hank Williams' songs as sweet. A lot of them are filled with pain.

  • @sandralorenz1796
    @sandralorenz1796 Рік тому +2

    Hank passed away January 1, 1953 at the age of 29. My dad taught me to two-step and waltz to Hank Williams' music. Check out "Your Cheatin Heart", "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry", "Move it on Over and "There's A Tear in my Beer" that technology made it possible for Hank Jr. to record a song with his dad. The music of this era could rip your heart out. Good reaction.

  • @ronstopfer2315
    @ronstopfer2315 Рік тому

    I was watching this on the tv with my dad in 1952. Things were more simple, people had dignity and respect, and real love.

  • @chipjones817
    @chipjones817 Рік тому +4

    Atta-boy Sy, you have a brave spirit of exploration and knowledge of the unknown. I like that. Hank was big. Dylan was a big fan of his growing up.

  • @daisymoses6812
    @daisymoses6812 Рік тому +1

    0:59 you got that right ... and so many today who'd claim to be inveterate Hank fans would have no ABILITY to understand your point. The mighty banjo which originated in West Africa eventually traveled through the 2,200 mile foot migration road we call "the Appalachian Trail" & it somehow managed to connect people unwittingly across all creeds, classes, and colors. I heard even a fox came to be enchanted by the sound of it....but the fox prefers clawhammer style banjo , eschewing Scruggs picking

    • @daisymoses6812
      @daisymoses6812 Рік тому

      ( Fox & Banjo is a True fairytale, not strictly blarney: see Andy Thorn playing banjo, fiddle, etc to a fox family who live nearby)

  • @John-ux8zj
    @John-ux8zj Рік тому +7

    A lot of really great musicians are heavily inspired by Hank Williams. Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash, John Fogerty and even Keith Richards to only mention a few.

  • @chrishowell6549
    @chrishowell6549 Рік тому +10

    I think (for the first time since I've watched, appreciated and respected) many of your reactions, that you are missing a bit here. You're right about the poetry as it is just that. But while this sounds so innocent, it tells a never ending story that couples deal with to the present. The beautiful thing about this performance was first how he didn't rush it as if he'd played it hundreds of times before and just wanted to get through it. Second, that his facial expressions throughout the song help back the story, and third that it was all true. Oh, and you talked about that stoic look, and he doing that, all while suffering from severe spinal problems that no doubt helped assist in the gamble of having any kind of temporary relief for him in exchange for his life.

  • @Pesto2
    @Pesto2 Рік тому +6

    You might also be interested in the amazing variety of great covers of Hank Williams’s songs - including Fats Domino’s version of “Jambalaya”, Jerry Lee Lewis’s version of this song, plus others like “You Win Again” and “Your Cheating Heart”, Linda Ronstadt’s “I Can’t Help It If I’m Still in Love With You,” and Tony Bennett’s version of “Cold, Cold Heart.” You can find them all on UA-cam & you’ll be glad you found them!

  • @Hartlor_Tayley
    @Hartlor_Tayley Рік тому +10

    Love Hank. Brilliant. So much Hank in rock. Hank was basically rock. Maybe check out “Move it on Over”. Hank had some pretty dark songs too like “Lost Highway”

    • @stevedahlberg8680
      @stevedahlberg8680 Рік тому +2

      I absolutely love Lost Highway! It is so fun. It's a classic cautionary tale to younger men, even though he was only around 28 when he wrote it or something, laugh.

    • @Hartlor_Tayley
      @Hartlor_Tayley Рік тому +2

      @@stevedahlberg8680 I found out Hank didn’t write it. Great song though.

    • @stevedahlberg8680
      @stevedahlberg8680 Рік тому +3

      @@Hartlor_Tayley I can't tell you how many times I've played that song with friends sitting around a campfire or bonfire on a front porch drinking whiskey in my younger days. It just resonate so much and it's such a great song for him.

    • @Hartlor_Tayley
      @Hartlor_Tayley Рік тому +2

      @@stevedahlberg8680 same here. It’s one of those songs. If a person were to learn just one song for when the guitar gets passed around, that’s the song. Hank made it his own the way he sang it. There’s a lot of Hank in Dylan in fact when I saw Dylan he played two Hank songs “Lonesome Whistle” and another. CCR the Grateful Dead, the band. Lots of Hank there two.

    • @stevedahlberg8680
      @stevedahlberg8680 Рік тому +2

      @@Hartlor_Tayley Great examples and also, pretty much all of country music even today to some degree or the other, but many others in the biggest example I can think of right off the top of my head is Lynyrd Skynyrd. They were so influenced by Hank Williams and Jimmie Rodgers it is unbelievable.

  • @beegee1960
    @beegee1960 9 місяців тому

    Hank Williams, Sr was affectionately known as THE HILLBILLY SHAKESPEARE because of his beautifully crafted lyrics. His songs are literally poetry set to music. They Pulitzer Prize Committee honored him with a citation for his accomplishments in songwriting, and for moving country music into the mainstream of American culture. Hank was a genius with words.

  • @frankiebowie6174
    @frankiebowie6174 Рік тому

    You don’t often hear someone play one of their greatest hits at such a slower pace than the popular recording. He really brings out his poetic lyrics here.

    • @beegee1960
      @beegee1960 9 місяців тому

      Hand never hurried his words. I once heard someone say that Hank drew every ounce of feeling from every word in a song. And Hank was once quoted as saying about his songs that he wanted a country boy to hear his song on Saturday night and be able to sing it on Monday morning.

  • @kneelneil
    @kneelneil Рік тому +4

    He was actually singing about his wife. It came from his own life. A beautiful song.

  • @iconadams
    @iconadams 3 місяці тому

    With good reason Hank Williams was called "The Hillbilly Shakespeare." GENIUS.

  • @alphajava761
    @alphajava761 Рік тому +3

    Love it! My grandma who used to babysit me a lot used to sing hillbilly and bluegrass songs to me. My grandmother and mother were also in country and western music. I've listened to Country and Rock both my whole life. I'm into the older Country stuff prior to the late 1970s. The Grateful Dead, and bands who came out of Laurel Canyon do a lot of Country and Country flavors. Bob Dylan's music has had a Country flavor since the Nashville sessions. Folk and Country mesh great with Rock. The Byrds, CSNY, Neil Young, The Band, Bob Dylan, Grateful Dead all write Country songs and have Country flavor in a lot of their songs.

    • @rogeebundy6002
      @rogeebundy6002 Рік тому +1

      Liaten to wete still a livin to hear the bars

  • @AjaxCaper
    @AjaxCaper Рік тому +2

    It's going to be harder for this to pull you into the different aspects of country music that appealed so much to us in the 60s & 70s,, a period when music crossed over onto rock stations a lot more. A lot of rock guitarists who you already know, were influenced by the playing of Chet Atkins. Its impressive to watch him play, but for hit songs, his producing came up with more hits and developed many stars of country. One of those was a black country artist, Charley Pride. Check out Charley Pride's cover of an old song, Kaw Liga. But it has to be the one that was recorded live (I think the video shows him in black and white, holding a sweater slung over his shoulder). That version was the vastly improved version that we came to love. Its actually an old Hank Williams song, but feels updated. Then for the country music with a western/horseback flare to the lyrics, hear Marty Robbins' song El Paso (it's first of a series). Trust me. And Bobby Gentry's song Ode to Billie Joe. There are a lot more, but I am a huge fan of the narrative, and these are 3 prime examples of that.

  • @chitownlee
    @chitownlee Рік тому +3

    63 is referred to as the end of innocence. 1952 network tv was only 4yrs old, live tv was a little awkward.

  • @johnandrews3151
    @johnandrews3151 Рік тому +1

    Hank Williams/Setting The Woods On Fire

  • @johnhill762
    @johnhill762 Рік тому

    You're probably the best interpreter of this song I've seen on UA-cam. Most people who try to react to it can't do it. (It's "too aged", they say, or "sounds bad". So they don't even really give it a real shot.) You, however, seemed to appreciate more about what makes it special than most. Great job. (You earned a sub.)
    And yes, the poetry is really the value of the song. The sadness of the partner and her past and how she can't really open up to the new guy is what makes it so devastating and hopeless. And Hank does a great job vocally conveying that sad hopelessness and frustration through his singing.
    (A very similar more modern country hit with a similar theme is Keith Whitley's "Don't Close Your Eyes". It'd be cool give that one a shot... Nice extra reaction content right there.)
    And yes, interesting you picked up on the blues elements of it. Hank clearly knew blues music, as he was taught the blues by a black man named Tee Tot in the south as a boy. His music is literally defined as "country-blues" - a weird hybrid of country and blues. lol
    Also, some of his hits (like "Mind Your Own Business" and "Move It On Over") are considered early proto rock and roll songs. So he had a hand in bringing rock about to some degree. (Buddy Holly - the famous and pioneering rock artist of the late 60s, who went on to influence The Beatles, when then influenced countless acts since - was directly influenced by Hank Williams.)
    Again, very open-minded and thoughtful reaction, man. I enjoyed it.

  • @beegee1960
    @beegee1960 10 днів тому

    Hank Williams, Sr. was awarded a Pulitzer Prize citation by the Pulitzer Prize committee for his contributions to country music.

  • @lewstone5430
    @lewstone5430 Рік тому

    Syed, “Lost Highway” and “I’m so Lonesome I Could Cry” are both great Hank songs to react to.

  • @michele-33
    @michele-33 Рік тому +1

    Hank was Dylan's first musical Idol, he actually loved him.
    Bob sang like him quite well too, check out his song *Wallflower* (privately)
    Ps: some people say that's where Jakob took the name for his group but he denies it.
    Rock on!
    Peace 🕯️

  • @ronreynolds1610
    @ronreynolds1610 Рік тому

    Blues , Folk, Country , Jazz styles of music were beginning to blend together by the 60's , going back to the past and moving forward is musical education. Like roots to a tree and the branches which continue to spread out so is the Evolution music.....

  • @victorwaddell6530
    @victorwaddell6530 Рік тому

    Hank Williams was considered a rebel in the Country and Western music genre at the time . He wasn't allowed to perform at the Grand Old Opry in Nashville , Tennessee until he changed some of his lyrics .

  • @dwdorris3048
    @dwdorris3048 Рік тому

    Great reaction! One love!!!

  • @noelbrown6771
    @noelbrown6771 Рік тому +1

    At last I can say that I wasn't alive when this one came out :)

  • @turtleisasturtledoes6707
    @turtleisasturtledoes6707 Рік тому +1

    This reminds me that I went on my own journey discovering old music of my Grandparents generation. I fell in love with folk music from the 30s to the 50s. I recommend Leadbelly and Woody Guthrie (especially the Dust Bowl Ballads).

  • @clintwalls5217
    @clintwalls5217 Рік тому

    It was 1949,on theGrande Ole Opry,you couldn't say
    F$>^k You!!,on the radio you hooked up to the6volt
    battery from your 1939 model A,invited everyone
    from 5 miles away !!Crank
    up Ole Hank and All the Opry!!🙏😎💯

  • @williamlucas4656
    @williamlucas4656 Рік тому +1

    Keep in mind that this song was a decade earlier than 1963. It was just as rock 'n' roll was starting to emerge from its country roots and blues rhythms into a more coherent theme unto itself. Dance music of the old fashion style wis more popular at this time coming out of World War II one big band music was all the Craze. Country folk music was looked upon his back water unsophisticated music. The rhythms were still very slow but the words are still quite cleverly written and are still around today. One of the major differences between country music and rock 'n' roll is that country is that typically tells a story where is rock and roll tends to make a statement. One thing that a lot of people your age don't seem to realize is that instead of one big river of popular music there were multiple streams of genres and definition of these flowing all at the same time sometimes intertwined and sometimes going their own separate ways but always influenced one way or another by each other. Sadly, in many other ways Hank was ahead of his time because he died from alcohol and painkillers in the backseat of his Cadillac traveling to a gig.

  • @stevedahlberg8680
    @stevedahlberg8680 Рік тому +6

    5:30 I definitely agree with you that things were so different then, but this is just a certain genre and really just one song. Because I mean if you even look at stuff from the Roaring Twenties or any of the 1940s big band stuff, people act all outrageous sometimes. It just depends on the context.
    And for example, I think it's his song Hey Good Lookin', that there might be some short video of as well, and in this it's a much more upbeat song and it's funny, so he's not trying to be all subdued and so forth, but he's really kind of moving around some, at least for this kind of performance idiom, which as you say is generally more constrained, of course, but, he's doing all kinds of funny things with his eyes and he really comes off as this dynamic magnetic character, lol.

    • @Hartlor_Tayley
      @Hartlor_Tayley Рік тому +2

      Some of those 1920s and 30s songs were just incredible.

    • @stevedahlberg8680
      @stevedahlberg8680 Рік тому +2

      @@Hartlor_Tayley I didn't appreciate it as a kid and it was definitely the music of my grandparents generation who were teens in the twenties, in fact I think my grandma wanted to be a flapper girl when she was a tween, laugh. Instead she got married young and raised four children during the Great Depression and WWII. And my parents heard it a lot and their music was a bit later but it was nostalgic for them. But later as I got more mature as a musician and in my study of Music going way back, I suddenly understood why it was a new thing at the time and all the rage and it's just so weird to think about but then I saw that my grandfather had actually written seven or eight songs and had them published that sound just exactly like that 1920s and 1930s music and I learn to play them and then in junior high I started in jazz band on the trumpet and we learned all the old big band stuff, and Count Basie and so forth and everything just suddenly changed and I could understand it.
      So it took me awhile, but now I completely agree with you!

    • @Hartlor_Tayley
      @Hartlor_Tayley Рік тому +1

      @@stevedahlberg8680 we have a similar story. My dad was jazz guy and I played trumpet in band, before I played guitar. It took me a while to come around to Hank and early country/blues but I was basically force fed swing ad Dixieland from a young age so I got that rhythm which paid off as a musician.

    • @stevedahlberg8680
      @stevedahlberg8680 Рік тому +2

      @@Hartlor_Tayley That's so funny, I had wanted to play trumpet since kindergarten but they blackmailed me and made me take classical piano lessons instead, and then in fourth grade when you can take it in public school, I started trumpet and I played it all the way through high school, was usually first chair and won awards at State and so forth. I still use it some today in live performances and in the recording studio, although I mostly play guitar and sing, sometimes keyboards, bass guitar and drums.
      But it was that whole trumpet experience that exposed me to the old stuff and my dad had a 1955 Capitol Records recording from live on Bourbon Street called Midnight on Bourbon Street, Sharkey Bonano and his Kings of Dixieland, and it had such a huge impact on me it was insane. And what I read about it was that those primary figures that were huge at the time in New Orleans, really were young in the 1920s and came into that status over a few decades.
      But your post suddenly reminded me of the early Andrews Sisters. I didn't really hear them for how amazing they were as an adult musician until probably into my late twenties, although of course I heard them a lot in the background when I was younger, because again it was the music of my grandparents generation.
      But the stuff they were doing in the late 1930s and during WWII just absolutely blows me away. And so I read all about them and suddenly it clicked. Those three sisters grew up in a very musical family and apparently their dad had a band and it had a horn section and they heard the trumpets playing those jazzy, raucous horn lines and being so incredibly tight together and with very close harmonies, that that's how they learned to sing! So not only are they super tight because they are sisters, but they patterned off of that sound and that is why their singing is not only astonishing but they're so free with their sounds; they make all kinds of sounds like you would hear horns in a horn section doing; it's fantastic, laugh.

    • @Hartlor_Tayley
      @Hartlor_Tayley Рік тому

      @@stevedahlberg8680 those sibling harmonies can’t be beat. They were super talented. I agree with you, once I started playing in a rock band and writing songs I really started listening to music way outside of the rock genre and I started hearing subtle things and behind the front of it if you know what I mean.

  • @stevedahlberg8680
    @stevedahlberg8680 Рік тому +1

    3:10 I agree with what you're saying about there was a change, but I would definitely say it happened earlier than that. Look no farther than the 1956 Elvis Presley explosion and that is 100% different then Hank Sr.
    And don't be fooled by this; he has a lot of upbeat stuff, like Hey Good Lookin', and Jambalaya, but also one of the most haunting ballads I've ever heard and I have performed this live and it always gives me goosebumps even while it does the same to the audience, because it's just a good song and Hank showed us how to sing it, is called, Travelin Man. It is so powerful it is impossible to explain.
    And he has a lot of hilarious songs too, like I'll Never Get Out Of This World Alive, lol.
    And his yodeling stuff is fantastic, like Long Gone Lonesome Blues and many others.
    This music may sound Innocent but it's not. He was able to reach people because everybody walking this planet can identify with the heartache in his voice or the humor or the uplifting songs. Everyone.
    In addition to Traveling Man, another one that was probably even a bigger hit and has been covered so many many times because it's so powerfully sad, is I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry. Check out the audio of these if nothing else.

  • @korybeavers6528
    @korybeavers6528 Рік тому +1

    This is why seeing Elvis move his hips was so earth shattering

  • @mattdefilippis4625
    @mattdefilippis4625 Рік тому

    Hank wrote some of the darkest songs in American music.
    Rock and Roll is born from all American Roots music. Blues, Country, Jazz and more.

  • @urgemore
    @urgemore Рік тому

    For dark and sardonic old time Country Western, there's always Porter Wagoner, e.g., "The Cold Hard Facts of Life", with, among others, it's song "The First Mrs. Jones".

  • @SueBrash712
    @SueBrash712 Рік тому +1

    But do you hear his pain? Hank lived hard in his short life and it’s in his work. No one can do pain like Hank. “Im So Lonesome I Could Cry” is full of poetic metaphor. Don’t let the simplicity fool you. Hank is deep with experience lived first hand. The woman in this song can’t love because her heart is “shackled to a memory”. That’s not innocence

  • @debjorgo
    @debjorgo Рік тому

    The amazing thing about Hank is he was more or less the first superstar. He had hit after hit. My favorite song from him was Kaw-Liga. Hank died almost 11 years before Kennedy. His songs have been recorded by Elvis, Bob Dylan, Chuck Berry, Johnny Cash, John Fogerty (Creedence Clearwater Revival front man), Red Hot Chili Peppers, The Rolling Stones, Linda Ronstadt, George Thorogood....

  • @claymmore
    @claymmore Рік тому +1

    A big part of why the songs back then were so sweet - it was before the pill. Love, connection, and trust before sex was a much bigger deal.

    • @Hartlor_Tayley
      @Hartlor_Tayley Рік тому

      Check out Hanks song “Setting the Woods on Fire” sexual innuendos galore.

  • @stevedahlberg8680
    @stevedahlberg8680 Рік тому +5

    4:20 I think it's interesting that you hear it as sweet and simple and I can completely understand that of course. But as someone who has heard, studied, and played this era of music my whole life, along with all kinds of other genres, I would say it's because it is so new to you.
    You don't really get all the nuance and subtlety that goes into it. It sounds simple but if you hear just anybody even in a bar band try to replicate it, unless they really get it, it's going to sound awful. There is so much that goes into the feel of it.
    The rhythm of it is not perfectly straight nor is it swing. There's a bit of a hesitation to it. There is all the stuff that happens with his voice with the breaks and all that but more importantly, the phrasing. And the way the few instrumental layers fit together, including that essential pedal steel guitar, which was relatively new at the time, it's really quite something.
    I liken it to someone who is new to hip-hop and they always seem to say that it all sounds the same, which is absolutely ridiculous. Once you listen to it enough and get familiar with it, you start to understand the huge universe that any given genre contains. There can be a lot of crap in it but there's always good stuff and Innovative stuff for the time, and there are always some unbelievable gems.

    • @Hartlor_Tayley
      @Hartlor_Tayley Рік тому +1

      You absolutely nailed it with that comment.

  • @IllyaLeonovMorganFreepony
    @IllyaLeonovMorganFreepony Рік тому

    What happened in the late fifties and early sixties was television. Plain and simple. It accelerated culture. Just like the internet is doing now. You could no longer keep ideas, musical or otherwise, bottled up.

  • @mikefetterman6782
    @mikefetterman6782 Рік тому +2

    Father of country and western music. Kennedy was assassinated 11 years later in 1963. The Beatles came in a few WEEKS later. This is back when Ray Charles was just hitting the charts with the MESS AROUND. Ray is the father of rock, and Hank is the father of country, both branch off of blues and gospel.

    • @mikefetterman6782
      @mikefetterman6782 Рік тому +1

      This was about A YEAR after television was invented (maybe two) Most people were not confident in stage antics. Nobody had seen much yet. There were no Mick Jaggers yet.

  • @dannymoore6886
    @dannymoore6886 Рік тому

    Muddy said it best. The blues done had a baby and they named the baby rock and roll.

  • @cazgerald9471
    @cazgerald9471 Рік тому

    Hank Williams, Hank Williams Jr., and Hank III

  • @hlawrencepowell
    @hlawrencepowell Рік тому

    Ask all the great songwriters and they will all tell you Hank Williams was one of their biggest influences. Bob Dylan included.

  • @kensilverstone1656
    @kensilverstone1656 Рік тому

    This is country music. It took it's own path until the crossover of some of the performers to rock. Country music today is like soft rock.

  • @lorrigaines4902
    @lorrigaines4902 Рік тому

    The change in music really started in the late 1950’s with Elvis, Johnny Cash, Buddy Holly, Ricky Valens, and several others. That’s why the girls screamed so much because music had never sounded so sexy before them.

  • @beegee1960
    @beegee1960 10 днів тому

    I don’t see this song as sweet and innocent. I see it as gritty cry of pain from a soul who sees his love slipping away because she can’t get over a former love. Very sad and heartbreaking.

  • @ziggymarlowe5654
    @ziggymarlowe5654 Рік тому

    Hank Williams' son, Hank Williams Jr. had a pretty good career of his own. His song "Family Tradition' has a line in it that goes "So if I get stoned, I'm just carrying on an old family tradition". Hank Jr. was saying he isn't his Daddy, his songs are his own, but he is proud of being Hank Sr.'s son. It's a good one. I think it's cool you're dipping into these old performers. Sister Rosetta Tharpe is another old school performer who was among the first gospel musicians to appeal to rhythm and blues and rock and roll audiences, later being referred to as "the original soul sister" and "the Godmother of rock and roll", She influenced early rock-and-roll musicians including Little Richard, Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins, Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Eric Clapton.(Wikipedia, so you know it's true 🙄). But she did have major impact way back when. She was especially loved in England, who seemed to appreciate all things R&B.

  • @ronstopfer2315
    @ronstopfer2315 Рік тому

    Very poignant, meaningful lyrics from the heart. Music was different then as people were more reserved. Love abounded.

  • @patswanson2870
    @patswanson2870 Рік тому +1

    He also recorded two albums using the name Luke the Drifter.

    • @stevedahlberg8680
      @stevedahlberg8680 Рік тому

      Pictures From The Other Side Of Life is absolutely amazing.

  • @WMalven
    @WMalven Рік тому

    Just a note, "Beans and biscuits" in America biscuits are very similar to what you call "scones."
    You're right about the blues influence. If you look at music that originated in America, you will find both gospel and blues at the heart of it all. Be it jazz, Country and Western, folk, rock, soul, or what have you--at it's roots lies the music created by American slaves--gospel and blues. Lot of people don't want to hear that fact, but it's true

  • @garythompson1464
    @garythompson1464 Рік тому

    You will be surprised at just how many songs Hank wrote and how many stars later covered them. Elvis said that ' I'm so lonesome I could cry' was one of the greatest and saddest love songs ever written. BTW Cold Cold Heart was written about his wife who he had a more or less toxic relationship with. There is always more to his songs than at first appears.

  • @vincentvancraig
    @vincentvancraig Рік тому

    Holy crap! I just saw it in a below comment, listen to “im so lonesome i could cry” ....if u ever have a break up, get drunk and put that song on, youll weep for a week straight....hanks life kind of sucked, & once u get past the old-timey sound and southern accent youll see that this dude was like a dark poet of depression....he was like andy warhol who always mixed in a tiny bit of black into the bright colors.

  • @alexkx3
    @alexkx3 Рік тому

    "Innocence" is not something one would usually associate with Hank Williams. But I can see how it could seem that way when comparing to post 60s music.

  • @kathyyoung9539
    @kathyyoung9539 7 місяців тому

    Stevie Ray Vaughan live at the El Macambo Texas Flood. ❤❤❤❤

  • @psilocin7268
    @psilocin7268 Рік тому

    Hank might be the greatest American musician ever. Completely self made. Learned guitar from a black man and sang with black musicians for tips, which was ahead of his time considering he lived in Alabama. He made music look and sound how it does today.

  • @griffcrammond6640
    @griffcrammond6640 Рік тому

    1963. JFK. You nailed it.

  • @kevincoleman2092
    @kevincoleman2092 Рік тому

    I think you should really consider diving deeper into the blues. Not only will you see how it influenced pretty much every British and American rock group of the 60s and 70s, but I think it will also show that not all music of that time was so sweet and innocent lyrically. A lot of Led Zepplin's lyrics are taken word for word from old blues songs. If you want a few suggestions: Skip James - Hard Time Killing Floor Blues, Mississippi John Hurt - Cocaine Blues, and a Blind Willie McTell - You Was born To Die all show off that darker edge of blues music that made it so appealing to the revolutionary musicians of the 60s.

  • @michaelthibault6106
    @michaelthibault6106 Рік тому +1

    Don't forget that this was recorded when television was only a few years old. The musicians were probably told not to move because they couldn't refocus the cameras fast enough. Hank has some barn-burners as well as ballads. You will find he has a lot more energy than this song would suggest. Don't look for videos, though. They are all very primitive.

  • @a2zme
    @a2zme Рік тому

    The Real OG ..
    #masters

  • @alfrednyberg6442
    @alfrednyberg6442 Рік тому

    You should definetly dive into some Van Halen (may Eddie reat in peace), like Panama, Ain't talking 'bout love, Eruption, Hot for teacher, I'm the one, Jump etc.
    They really have influenced the rock world with Eddie making the tapping technique popular and they really have their own sound.
    Love your journey so far!

  • @TMMcLeod
    @TMMcLeod Рік тому

    For another artist from that era, try Patsy Cline. Suggestions would include her two biggest hits, "Crazy" (written by Willie Nelson) and "Walking After Midnight". My own favorite is "She's Got You". Hope you enjoy these tunes as much as I enjoy your reactions. 🙂

  • @johnvender
    @johnvender Рік тому

    Check out According To My Heart by Jim Reeves and then listen to a cover of it by an Australian band The Reels in 1978. In 1981 I was a member of a band called The Particles and we did a lot of gigs supporting The Reels. I really love their work.

  • @jackiebinns6205
    @jackiebinns6205 Рік тому

    This is the best video you put up !!! He has a fanous son of course you already know but Hank was what before the Kennedy assination also Snow White Dove is him next best this was probably in the late 40s to mid 50s

  • @sharonsnail2954
    @sharonsnail2954 Рік тому

    @SyedRewinds: You'll have to define what you mean by "sweet and innocent". I suspect you mean "lyrical and non-explicit" which, to me, makes Hank Williams' lyrics the more poetic.
    You'll need to listen to more of his recordings/songs to appreciate how good and influential he was (there's plenty of suggestions in the comments).
    BTW Don't get hung up with "it all changed in 1963". It was the early/mid-50s when it started to change and Hank was part of that.

  • @emeraldcity_
    @emeraldcity_ Рік тому

    If you’re taking suggestions for this genre, a good intro is ‘poncho and Lefty’. It’s a willie Nelson/Merle Haggard song. Great 70s country vibe

  • @markantone7989
    @markantone7989 Рік тому

    MOST OF HIS MATERIAL, IS FROM HIS PERSPECTIVE/EXPERIENCE WITH HIS EX-WIFE/MOTHER OF THEIR SON. HE IS LEGEND 💯

  • @Ape_Shiete
    @Ape_Shiete Рік тому +1

    You should do breadcrumb trail by slint, they're stuff is stellar as hell!

  • @Defmusicman1
    @Defmusicman1 Рік тому

    Lyrics that actually make sense.

  • @littlegw7170
    @littlegw7170 Рік тому +1

    Norah Jones covering this also worth a look

  • @botabob
    @botabob Рік тому

    Williams was born with a mild undiagnosed case of spina bifida occulta. It might be why he was statuesque

  • @beestonsteve
    @beestonsteve 10 місяців тому

    It's interesting that you talk about innocence and sweetness, and you're not wrong - but there was also a great deal of stuff about sex and death and darkness, just hidden by euphemisms. Sometimes that's more interesting than being blatant about it, although of course sometimes it meant important stuff was hidden away. Either way it's fascinating to see the similarities and differences that 70 years make.

  • @toot0913
    @toot0913 Рік тому

    Ok… it’s called the rock and roll and sexual revolution. That’s what changed. These were simpler times. Plus this is pure country. But Hank Williams is an icon.

  • @lgot123
    @lgot123 Рік тому

    Kennedy was killed in November 1963 and the Beatles came to the US in Feb 64- Ed Sullivan show. And then the Vietnam war, so yeah, somethings happened.

  • @danielhead8123
    @danielhead8123 Рік тому

    Check out his songs lost highway, setting the woods on fire, move it on over

  • @waitingtoderail
    @waitingtoderail Рік тому

    1963-1964 was when the Beatles broke and changed everything.

  • @dougca7086
    @dougca7086 Рік тому +1

    You should react to Murder Most Foul by Bob Dylan. a song mostly about JFK's assassination released in 2020. Bob Dylan's first number one hit when he was about 79 years old!

  • @danielhead8123
    @danielhead8123 Рік тому

    Buddy hollys death killed the innocence in rocknroll but was brought back by the beatles

  • @lathedauphinot6820
    @lathedauphinot6820 Рік тому

    This might surprise you: Bob Dylan wanted to be Hank Williams. There’s a lot of darkness in his music. There was a lot of darkness in his life.

  • @kathybwell
    @kathybwell Рік тому +1

    One of the originals, Hank's sings with plenty of twang in his voice which was popular in the early country. Have you reacted to his son, Hank Williams Jr. His image is not so innocent 😉😁

  • @theDENIMMAN
    @theDENIMMAN 9 місяців тому

    Hey if you're out there might I suggest checking out something by "Gram Parsons"
    He wrote Wild Horses for the Rolling Stones with Keith Richards

  • @danrumble74
    @danrumble74 Рік тому

    You're right about the pop culture changing after Kennedy's assntn. Then, show business became 100% soulless after 2000.

  • @thaddeus1950
    @thaddeus1950 Рік тому

    What happened in 1962 was the the Cuban Missile Crisis we all thought we were gonna die

    • @thaddeus1950
      @thaddeus1950 Рік тому

      I think it pretty much explains the 60’s

  • @gudlisner501
    @gudlisner501 Рік тому

    Straight from the heart. Kris Kristofferson had it right “but if you don’t like Hank Williams, honey you can kiss my ass”

  • @DoctorZebedee
    @DoctorZebedee Рік тому

    Would love to see you do Bridge of Sighs by Robin Trower

  • @bmeggs19
    @bmeggs19 Рік тому

    Also, Lost Highway is a banger

  • @vincentvancraig
    @vincentvancraig Рік тому

    A short excerpt of hank williams lyrics, i LOVE kurt cobain, but he had nothing on hank, hank too was a dark, poetic genius:
    “A jug of wine to numb my mind
    But what good does it do?
    The jug runs dry and still I cry
    I can't escape from you
    These wasted tears are souvenirs
    Of a love I thought was true
    Your memory is chained to me
    I can't escape from you
    There is no end, I can't pretend
    That dreams will soon come true
    A slave too long to a heart of stone
    I can't escape from you” ~~ Hank Williams, “i cant escape from you”.

    • @vincentvancraig
      @vincentvancraig Рік тому

      HUGE influence on bob dylan, that cant be said enough.

  • @bobclark2430
    @bobclark2430 Рік тому

    Syed, as much as you enjoy the lyrics of songs, I would suggest Kris Kristopherson. I see him in the same vein as Dylan and Simon and Garfunkel. Almost any of his songs, but recommend The Pilgram, Billy Dee, Me and Bobby Mcgee.

  • @gforce4063
    @gforce4063 Рік тому +1

    Elvis made the change

  • @sillililli01
    @sillililli01 Рік тому

    Alan Jackson put out a haunting song "Midnight in Montgomery" where he pays tribute to Hank Williams. Throughout the song, he has references to Hank's story/songs. It's a beautiful song done in a true country style that is updated for our time. ua-cam.com/video/ZCvSBVDZTDE/v-deo.html

  • @carolkasiah3288
    @carolkasiah3288 5 місяців тому

    This was done before January 1 of 1952 for I believe that's when he died

  • @mike3020
    @mike3020 Рік тому

    The Hillbilly Shakespeare