love southern rock. I have seen and listened too The Outlaws 38 Special Charlie Daniels The Allmans etc all in their hey day. Cant you See by The Marshall Tucker Band for me is the best song in that genre. Fire on the mountain is not far behind. Rip Toy and Tommy Caldwell. Great band . Canada loves Maeshall Tucker.
That could only have been possible if The Allman Brothers hadn't preceded them by several years. As it was, It was The Allman Brothers who influenced everybody else...
@@obbor4 I don't recall referring to the chronological formation of the respective bands. I commented on rhe Marshall Tucker Bands immense influence on the particular genre and how very underrated they were. Google them and read their "Wikipedia". Just because someone was on stage first isn't necessarily a proclamation of being "the leader of the band". Thank you for reading my comments 😊
These guys aren't "Southern Rock". They are Country Rock in the vein as bands like Poco, the Eagles, REK, etc. This later became "Modern Country" which lineage is very easy to see. Case & point "Amarillo by Morning" by George Strait. It could easily have been written by MTB
Can't You See would rock your world !! Take it from an old southern rocker from South Carolina. Over the years I've met all of them...all are great guys...most of the original members have passed RIP
Such an upbeat song from 1977,the decade of great music. This is what you call enjoyable listening and very well done. Another band worth a listen is PURE PRAIRIE LEAGUE singing AMIE.
There's not actually anybody in the group named Marshall Tucker. The story as I read it somewhere was they were sitting around in an empty warehouse of some kind of building that they were using as a rehearsal space. trying to come up with a band name, and one of them noticed a key chain hanging from a door that had the name "Marshall Tucker" on the tag. (Some stories say he saw the name on a door. I don't know which version is true). Anyway he suggested "The Marshall Tucker Band", not knowing that he was a real person. The real Marshall Tucker was a blind piano tuner who used the building to repair and retune old pianos. The good thing is, he had no problem with them using his name without his permission and even said he wished them great success.
Speaking of bands, have you listened to "The Band"? They were the back up band for so many legendary artists, Bob Dylan most notably. There is a movie about their last tour called The Last Waltz. You can find songs such as The Weight featuring the Staple singers and Mannish Boy featuring Muddy Waters as well as many other great artists, Joni Mitchell, Van Morrison, Bob Dylan etc. Start with The Weight, and you won't be disappointed.
You will not only get great flute playing from Jerry Eubanks, but sax as well. I was in a record shop in Mobile Alabama, summer 73, waiting on the release of The Allman Brothers' "Brothers and Sisters". The guy working was a good friend and surfing buddy, he asked me if I wanted to go to Pensacola that Saturday night to see The Marshall Tucker Band. I'd never heard of them, as they were just getting started, but he told me they were on Capricorn (record label in Macon that had The ABB, Wet Willie, and other southern favorites) and he had heard the early release stuff and said it was great. Wellllllll, that was the best $3.00 I ever spent! They tore the roof off, and I've been listening since! I'll give you some "deep cuts" from them......"This Old Cowboy" "Ab's Song" "See You Later, I'm Gone" "Desert Skies" "Silverado" "Long Hard Ride" Give this great band some time, you won't be sorry!
It'll be a wonderful thing for you to enjoy songs like this for the rest of your life....and, 30 or 40 years from now, you'll turn youngsters on to this very kind of music from my generation......"Hey, young man, listen to this Marshall Tucker song"..... :-) :-) :-)
Wow! Never thought I’d ever see someone react to this band and this song. Love this song. The flute is so on point. Thanks. Fire on the mountain is really good too.
I saw the Marshall Tucker Band at a Heart Association Benefit Concert with Fleetwood Mac and Kenny Loggins at Wildcat Stadium at the University of Arizona in, I believe, 1977. I love this band. Us Crispy Critters in Arizona then were definitely not into disco in those days. Thank you for sharing.
1977. I’m 24, sitting front row right in front of the monster speakers for this concert in my small town college basketball arena. Lord have mercy!! I still own the Carolina Dreams album.
Your ear to ear smile and bobbing head tell me you love this great old timey love song. I was a 70s teenager and can tell you i had the time of my life with all the different music available. It was a smorgasboard! Loved it and great to see you loving it too. Love from locked down (til Feb 18th) East Coast of England. Isn't that great piano? x
When I was a kid (I’m 56) we each had to pick an instrument and take lessons, practice an hour a day, perform, and sing in the church choir, and a lot of my friends had the same rules. So we all read music, play at least one instrument, and know how to sing. Creativity was encouraged. That doesn’t seem to exist anymore. A computer helps keep records, but it has no soul. A musician translates what’s in his head through his instrument. It’s a physical art. Marshall Tucker Band is another band full of musicians.
As a white boy in the' 70 s ,I heard All the groups, bands you mentioned LIVE at USC colesium!! Makes me feel alive all over again!! '76 I was 17.Great Music Times!! Earth,Wind nFire !! Trouble Funk!! Eagles, Wow!! Good Job ,young man! Good job!!
All the Southern Rock groups are gona have at least a few slow and easy songs. You need to check out Poco, Firefall, Doobie Brothers, The Eagles all west coast coutry,jazz rock early before 80s Chicago, ELO ( Electric Light Orchestra ), Bad Company.
Another one of those legendary southern rock bands that you'll rarely, if ever, find a bad song in their entire catalog. Played in the shadow of the Allman Brothers Band & Lynyrd Skynyrd a lot in the early 70's, but a mega-talented band in their own right. The thundering thumb of Toy Caldwell.
One of my top 5 of all time! I'm one of those who grew up in the 60's & 70's, have seen them 5 times & was even in the audience for the live version of Can't you See. My Dad was also a professional musician and played over a dozen instruments & flute was my favorite too. A great deeper cut is I should Have Never Started Loving You. Thank you for recognizing that the music of my time really was incredible, raw, real & passionate. They make up a big part of the soundtrack of my life.
Marshall Tucker Band's flute player is Jerry Eubanks. The most unique thing about them is the use of a flute, which is an instrument you don't hear very often in most popular music genres, and is especially unorthodox for a rock band.
These guys were still touring a few summers ago. Must be humbling for them to play small time gigs since they used to play at giant stadiums, but it sure was sweet to hear this song kicking back under a shade tree in my hometown park.That flute part is so great !
Spot On ! I absolutely love to hear a flute. I remember hearing Traffic back in the 1970's and hearing how they melded different instruments such as a flute into their music.
I saw them in the late 90s and they were awesome even tho Toy was not with them. The dude playing the flute was the hardest working member of the band because he played the keys as well. 👍👍
One of the reasons why music today sounds different is the fact that the culture has changed. Back in the 1960s, 1970s and through the early 1980s, there was an innocence and optimism in the culture. Americans had a sense they were a free people, living in a country that was the envy of the world. Kids would start up garage bands and would jam and have fun. Teachers encouraged creativity. There was not the fear of censorship. Also, during this time, you did not have all the technology and the internet to distract you from doing creative things. If you were good enough, eventually, someone would notice you and you'd get a break. Nowadays, people record their own music and say, "Hey, I have a new album out. You can order it online from my website." The music may be mediocre, but in the artist's mind, they've "made it." Learning to play an instrument is hard work. Using computer technology to slap together a bunch of songs with minimal lyrics is easy. Finally, the older music was blues based. You also had gospel and folk elements in the earlier music. All three types of music came from the common people expressing their emotions, feelings, and thoughts about life's experiences. Their songs were not products to be sold, but songs that taught us something about the human condition.
Thank you for the reaction. This was real. Pure music. You r right - People actually played instruments. That is why the 60’s guys could jam out on the organ - they took 5 years of piano lessons from mrs vonchirsky. They actually could play instruments
I was born in 1961, but I also like jazz, along with swing and big band music of the 1930s and 1940s, blues, cajun country, southern country southern rock , bluegrass folk, music of the 50,, 60 70 , 80 disco j pop music just about anything except metal opera, classical .
I was excited when I saw the thumbnail. Love this song and the flute. I love instruments. How they sound, look and how they are made. I like stories of the history of some instruments. Especially violins.
This was one of my big sister's favorite songs. And this was back in the cassette tapes days. I made her tapes all the time and almost always put this song on them. She died 20 years ago of breast cancer at 47, on New Year's Eve. Which made me think of another song I also put on every tape for her-- check out Eric Clapton's "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot." Love, love, love your reactions!
What Up WB, This might be the greatest band of all time, I'll suggest, CHANGE GONNA COME and WHERE A COUNTRY BOY BELONGS, they have one of the best live albums, WHERE WE ALL BELONG, when we were about 15, me and a brother of mine took a bus to the Boston Garden to see them, from Springfield, Mass, 1977, when I was 16, I thumbed 60 miles to Tanglewood to see the Allman Bros., Tucker toured with the Allman's for 4 years.
I remember my brother when we were kids had a 16 piece drum set and three of his buddies would come over with their guitars and bass guitar and just rock our basement or our garage. They played at the Local Youth Center, Friday and Saturday night to entertain the kids in the township. It was a beautiful time in my life It drove my mother nuts but, that’s a price she had to pay for us kids having a good time. LOL
There is REAL music being made today, very much in this vein and that of the Allman Brothers- you need to check out The Marcus King Band, from Spartanburg, SC- same hometown as The MTB. Marcus is I think 24 now, but the quintessential old soul who can blaze on guitar, has a raw, smoky voice , and a band on par with any of the greats! Check out "Rita Is Gone", "Virginia" or "The Well"- and live is the way to go!
@@ginnywhat5777 I really don’t think so. I have no memory of ever writing this on UA-cam before. I could maybe check my email history but I do not think it was me.
@@ginnywhat5777 I just checked my UA-cam history within my email and no it was not me. We’re up to two or three because someone else in this thread heard it the same way I did. Very funny!
Well the singing started and I’ve got chills all over my body, thank you young man this is some beautiful music. I’m 60 years old and still get chills when I hear this stuff.
Great band. Hope you do Fire on the Mountain. Tells the story of a gold miner. You are so right, a real person, playing a real instrument, putting real emotion into it. You can never bring electronics alive, but an instrument warms up in your hands or with your breath and comes to life. I play my grandmothers piano, her wedding gift from my grandfather. My brother bought an electronic piano, he couldn't feel the difference, but a real wood and string piano has it's own life.
You'll never go wrong picking any band that recorded at Capricorn Studios. The Allman Bros Marshall Tucker Wet Willie Freddy Jones Band Get down in the country of Tucker. Check out 'Too Stubborn'.
I had the pleasure of seeing The Marshall Tucker band at the House of Blues, in Myrtle Beach. Unfortunately, it was after Toy Caldwell passed away. It was a great show though. I agree with what you’re saying about your instruments. Without the instruments you do lose the soul.
Hey there- another great Southern rock band! They have a large catalog to explore. Allman Brothers, Marshall Tucker Band, & Lynyrd Skynyrd are like the triumvirate of Southern Rock! Hey, if you want to hear the flute in rock music, you have to check out Ian Anderson with Jethro Tull, if you haven't already.
Nobody is giving Wet Willie any southern band love! Those guys got crazy funky in concert! That live "Drippin' Wet" album just might be the best party album of all time! Jimmy Hall is a BEAST!
MTB incorporated blues, jazz, western, etc., into their Southern Rock. Loved MTB. Anything off of the platinum "Carolina Dreams" album is good imo. Of course you can't leave out "Searchin' For A Rainbow", "Fire On the Mountain", or the hard driving "24 Hours At A Time". MTB was a favorite of mine.
Absolutely love Marshall Tucker"can't you see","this ol cowboy","fire on the mountain","searchin for a rainbow"and"24 hours at a time" ☮️
"Losin' You" as well.
Also, Take the Highway ☮🖤🤘
Also ....Desert Skies....
I don;t always listen to Marshall Tucker Band but when I do ,so do my neighbors !
Can't you see is a southern anthem.
We like it up here in the north too!! (NY)
Love the Marshall Tucker Band. Fire on the Mountain, Can't You See, Searchin' for a Rainbow are some of their bigger hits.
Ditto!! What she said ☮️
love southern rock. I have seen and listened too The Outlaws 38 Special Charlie Daniels The Allmans etc all in their hey day. Cant you See by The Marshall Tucker Band for me is the best song in that genre. Fire on the mountain is not far behind. Rip Toy and Tommy Caldwell. Great band . Canada loves Maeshall Tucker.
Marshall Tucker Band was one of the most underrated "southern rock" bands. The Allman Brothers and The Doobie Brothers learned a lot from these guys.
That could only have been possible if The Allman Brothers hadn't preceded them by several years. As it was, It was The Allman Brothers who influenced everybody else...
@@obbor4 I don't recall referring to the chronological formation of the respective bands. I commented on rhe Marshall Tucker Bands immense influence on the particular genre and how very underrated they were. Google them and read their "Wikipedia". Just because someone was on stage first isn't necessarily a proclamation of being "the leader of the band". Thank you for reading my comments 😊
These guys aren't "Southern Rock". They are Country Rock in the vein as bands like Poco, the Eagles, REK, etc. This later became "Modern Country" which lineage is very easy to see. Case & point "Amarillo by Morning" by George Strait. It could easily have been written by MTB
Can't You See would rock your world !! Take it from an old southern rocker from South Carolina. Over the years I've met all of them...all are great guys...most of the original members have passed RIP
i am from spartanburg they are great guys.
Such an upbeat song from 1977,the decade of great music. This is what you call enjoyable listening and very well done. Another band worth a listen is PURE PRAIRIE LEAGUE singing AMIE.
Love this group check out. Can’t you see. They traveled with Skynyrd in the 70s great band
I heard they stared out with "The Outlaws", maybe he should listen to "Green Grass and High Tides" too.
@
WILBURN REACTIONS - Sir, you are my favorite music review channel!! Keep up the great work!!
There's not actually anybody in the group named Marshall Tucker. The story as I read it somewhere was they were sitting around in an empty warehouse of some kind of building that they were using as a rehearsal space. trying to come up with a band name, and one of them noticed a key chain hanging from a door that had the name "Marshall Tucker" on the tag. (Some stories say he saw the name on a door. I don't know which version is true). Anyway he suggested "The Marshall Tucker Band", not knowing that he was a real person. The real Marshall Tucker was a blind piano tuner who used the building to repair and retune old pianos. The good thing is, he had no problem with them using his name without his permission and even said he wished them great success.
The Marshall Tucker Band is a gold mine of great music. Ramblin, Fire on the Mtn., Can’t you See.....so many more!
Your comments just earned you a subscriber!!!!! Real music by real people and instruments!!!
I appreciate your appreciation!~
Speaking of bands, have you listened to "The Band"? They were the back up band for so many legendary artists, Bob Dylan most notably. There is a movie about their last tour called The Last Waltz. You can find songs such as The Weight featuring the Staple singers and Mannish Boy featuring Muddy Waters as well as many other great artists, Joni Mitchell, Van Morrison, Bob Dylan etc. Start with The Weight, and you won't be disappointed.
Love the band Rick...Levon...Garth... Richard... Robertson
One of my favorite songs, Southern rock at it’s best!👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻❤️☮️✌🏻🎸🎹🎼
Cant You See, Take the Highway, Hillbilly Band, Ab's Song, Ramblin', My Jesus Told Me So. All great songs, all from their 1st album. Can't be wrong.
You are on a roll. What a great song. Now and forever!!
Another fantastic band!!!👍✌😎
Can't you see!! Gotta do that one!!!
You will not only get great flute playing from Jerry Eubanks, but sax as well. I was in a record shop in Mobile Alabama, summer 73, waiting on the release of The Allman Brothers' "Brothers and Sisters". The guy working was a good friend and surfing buddy, he asked me if I wanted to go to Pensacola that Saturday night to see The Marshall Tucker Band. I'd never heard of them, as they were just getting started, but he told me they were on Capricorn (record label in Macon that had The ABB, Wet Willie, and other southern favorites) and he had heard the early release stuff and said it was great. Wellllllll, that was the best $3.00 I ever spent! They tore the roof off, and I've been listening since! I'll give you some "deep cuts" from them......"This Old Cowboy" "Ab's Song" "See You Later, I'm Gone" "Desert Skies" "Silverado" "Long Hard Ride" Give this great band some time, you won't be sorry!
It'll be a wonderful thing for you to enjoy songs like this for the rest of your life....and, 30 or 40 years from now, you'll turn youngsters on to this very kind of music from my generation......"Hey, young man, listen to this Marshall Tucker song"..... :-) :-) :-)
Wow! Never thought I’d ever see someone react to this band and this song. Love this song. The flute is so on point. Thanks. Fire on the mountain is really good too.
from right here in Spartanburg, SC baby - we call them "The Home Team"
Look like you enjoyed this. So did we.
Love them
The day and age of Marshall Tucker, Allman Brothers, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Blackfoot, Molly hatchet southern rock was just unbelievable.
feel good music, sing along music, same as cant you see, but yet so sad...................
Southern rock goodness. Kind of a musical cousin to Allman Brothers. Great musical talent.
I saw the Marshall Tucker Band at a Heart Association Benefit Concert with Fleetwood Mac and Kenny Loggins at Wildcat Stadium at the University of Arizona in, I believe, 1977. I love this band. Us Crispy Critters in Arizona then were definitely not into disco in those days. Thank you for sharing.
One of the founders of Southern Rock.
You hit the nail on the head. Real musicians making music without computers. No pitch correction, no snapping rhythm to a grid.
1977. I’m 24, sitting front row right in front of the monster speakers for this concert in my small town college basketball arena. Lord have mercy!! I still own the Carolina Dreams album.
One if my top 5 favorite songs of any genre of all time
Absolutely right about the soul not being in the music anymore. I've been saying that for years. Great reaction, your so honest and real.
Fire on the mountain and can't you see
Marshall Tucker Band, "Can`t You See" 9/10/1973 Grand Opera House live.
Love this group. They are from a couple towns over from where i live.
Walkin' and Talkin' hot little number with killer vocals
Blackfoot - Highway Song
Your ear to ear smile and bobbing head tell me you love this great old timey love song. I was a 70s teenager and can tell you i had the time of my life with all the different music available. It was a smorgasboard! Loved it and great to see you loving it too. Love from locked down (til Feb 18th) East Coast of England. Isn't that great piano? x
My favorite road riding tune. Just a great song. Love it.
When I was a kid (I’m 56) we each had to pick an instrument and take lessons, practice an hour a day, perform, and sing in the church choir, and a lot of my friends had the same rules. So we all read music, play at least one instrument, and know how to sing. Creativity was encouraged. That doesn’t seem to exist anymore. A computer helps keep records, but it has no soul. A musician translates what’s in his head through his instrument. It’s a physical art. Marshall Tucker Band is another band full of musicians.
As a white boy in the' 70 s ,I heard All the groups, bands you mentioned LIVE at USC colesium!! Makes me feel alive all over again!! '76 I was 17.Great Music Times!! Earth,Wind nFire !! Trouble Funk!! Eagles, Wow!! Good Job ,young man! Good job!!
All the Southern Rock groups are gona have at least a few slow and easy songs. You need to check out Poco, Firefall, Doobie Brothers, The Eagles all west coast coutry,jazz rock early before 80s Chicago, ELO ( Electric Light Orchestra ), Bad Company.
Another one of those legendary southern rock bands that you'll rarely, if ever, find a bad song in their entire catalog. Played in the shadow of the Allman Brothers Band & Lynyrd Skynyrd a lot in the early 70's, but a mega-talented band in their own right. The thundering thumb of Toy Caldwell.
Wow, your honesty at the end was just too much. I subscribed. Hope others do to. Peace.
If you lovin' that flute, their song Take The Highway will blow you away.
I agree with you about real instruments and live vocals with no reverb and no auto tune.
One of my top 5 of all time! I'm one of those who grew up in the 60's & 70's, have seen them 5 times & was even in the audience for the live version of Can't you See. My Dad was also a professional musician and played over a dozen instruments & flute was my favorite too. A great deeper cut is I should Have Never Started Loving You. Thank you for recognizing that the music of my time really was incredible, raw, real & passionate. They make up a big part of the soundtrack of my life.
Fire on the mountain, can’t you see, searching for a rainbow
Marshall Tucker Band's flute player is Jerry Eubanks. The most unique thing about them is the use of a flute, which is an instrument you don't hear very often in most popular music genres, and is especially unorthodox for a rock band.
“Can’t you see” please! My favorite♥️
Preach on brother this is exactly my point I make with all young folks
These guys were still touring a few summers ago. Must be humbling for them to play small time gigs since they used to play at giant stadiums, but it sure was sweet to hear this song kicking back under a shade tree in my hometown park.That flute part is so great !
👏👏👏👏👏 Bravo on your commentary! 👍 Another great song by MTB is Take the Highway! ☮🖤🤘
Spot On ! I absolutely love to hear a flute. I remember hearing Traffic back in the 1970's and hearing how they melded different instruments such as a flute into their music.
Johnny Winter and Edgar Winter (live) Tobacco Road.
Definitely have a sound all their own.
Amen brother this music is real! The piano, flute, base guitar, the jazz drums wow amazing music. And the voices of the chorus!
I saw them in the late 90s and they were awesome even tho Toy was not with them. The dude playing the flute was the hardest working member of the band because he played the keys as well. 👍👍
This band was all over MTV when they first aired videos. They would play their entire live show from New Jersey a few times a month.
My first concert in 1977! Still love this song! Thanks Chod!
One of the reasons why music today sounds different is the fact that the culture has changed. Back in the 1960s, 1970s and through the early 1980s, there was an innocence and optimism in the culture. Americans had a sense they were a free people, living in a country that was the envy of the world. Kids would start up garage bands and would jam and have fun. Teachers encouraged creativity. There was not the fear of censorship. Also, during this time, you did not have all the technology and the internet to distract you from doing creative things. If you were good enough, eventually, someone would notice you and you'd get a break. Nowadays, people record their own music and say, "Hey, I have a new album out. You can order it online from my website." The music may be mediocre, but in the artist's mind, they've "made it." Learning to play an instrument is hard work. Using computer technology to slap together a bunch of songs with minimal lyrics is easy. Finally, the older music was blues based. You also had gospel and folk elements in the earlier music. All three types of music came from the common people expressing their emotions, feelings, and thoughts about life's experiences. Their songs were not products to be sold, but songs that taught us something about the human condition.
Thank you for the reaction. This was real. Pure music. You r right - People actually played instruments. That is why the 60’s guys could jam out on the organ - they took 5 years of piano lessons from mrs vonchirsky. They actually could play instruments
Can't You See (Grand Opera House) version.
I was born in 1961, but I also like jazz, along with swing and big band music of the 1930s and 1940s, blues, cajun country, southern country southern rock , bluegrass folk, music of the 50,, 60 70 , 80 disco j pop music just about anything except metal opera, classical .
Good words brother. Real music, real instruments, real musicians.
I agree so much, the instruments make the song. I love an added violin or flute or bagpipes etc.
I was excited when I saw the thumbnail. Love this song and the flute. I love instruments. How they sound, look and how they are made. I like stories of the history of some instruments. Especially violins.
This was one of my big sister's favorite songs. And this was back in the cassette tapes days. I made her tapes all the time and almost always put this song on them. She died 20 years ago of breast cancer at 47, on New Year's Eve. Which made me think of another song I also put on every tape for her-- check out Eric Clapton's "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot." Love, love, love your reactions!
What Up WB, This might be the greatest band of all time, I'll suggest, CHANGE GONNA COME and WHERE A COUNTRY BOY BELONGS, they have one of the best live albums, WHERE WE ALL BELONG, when we were about 15, me and a brother of mine took a bus to the Boston Garden to see them, from Springfield, Mass, 1977, when I was 16, I thumbed 60 miles to Tanglewood to see the Allman Bros., Tucker toured with the Allman's for 4 years.
I remember my brother when we were kids had a 16 piece drum set and three of his buddies would come over with their guitars and bass guitar and just rock our basement or our garage. They played at the Local Youth Center, Friday and Saturday night to entertain the kids in the township. It was a beautiful time in my life It drove my mother nuts but, that’s a price she had to pay for us kids having a good time. LOL
Green Grass and High Tides...The Outlaws. Will blow your mind
Ramblin' Live, Doug really showcases his voice.
"Bring back real music." Agreed!
There is REAL music being made today, very much in this vein and that of the Allman Brothers- you need to check out The Marcus King Band, from Spartanburg, SC- same hometown as The MTB. Marcus is I think 24 now, but the quintessential old soul who can blaze on guitar, has a raw, smoky voice , and a band on par with any of the greats! Check out "Rita Is Gone", "Virginia" or "The Well"- and live is the way to go!
Flute was in most of their songs Jerry Eubanks was his name
Never been a big MTB fan, but always love seeing people diacover them, but I can't deny they had aa a band.
I always thought they were singing , “purty little love song”
Michael Henry lol, “yur” not the only one.
@@leannewilson7184 Lol , well done. 😁
@@ginnywhat5777 I really don’t think so. I have no memory of ever writing this on UA-cam before. I could maybe check my email history but I do not think it was me.
@@ginnywhat5777 I just checked my UA-cam history within my email and no it was not me. We’re up to two or three because someone else in this thread heard it the same way I did. Very funny!
Me too!!
Well the singing started and I’ve got chills all over my body, thank you young man this is some beautiful music. I’m 60 years old and still get chills when I hear this stuff.
Glad you dont cut in on the song. You're in for a treat with this music.
Great song!!!
I got to see them before the world stopped. They KILLED.
Needless to say they're a lot older now (aren't we all?)
They have some great songs , live Can't You See is awesome as are most of them. Great choice to start. We told you he played the flute lol
Excellent southern rock band.
Still got the 8- track in my 73 bird. Still runs great, still playing great. Original speaks.
Great band. Hope you do Fire on the Mountain. Tells the story of a gold miner. You are so right, a real person, playing a real instrument, putting real emotion into it. You can never bring electronics alive, but an instrument warms up in your hands or with your breath and comes to life. I play my grandmothers piano, her wedding gift from my grandfather. My brother bought an electronic piano, he couldn't feel the difference, but a real wood and string piano has it's own life.
Desert Skies by MTB is a great escape into music.
Glad to see you enjoying this song. One of my favorites.
You'll never go wrong picking any band that recorded at Capricorn Studios.
The Allman Bros
Marshall Tucker
Wet Willie
Freddy Jones Band
Get down in the country of Tucker. Check out 'Too Stubborn'.
I had the pleasure of seeing The Marshall Tucker band at the House of Blues, in Myrtle Beach. Unfortunately, it was after Toy Caldwell passed away. It was a great show though. I agree with what you’re saying about your instruments. Without the instruments you do lose the soul.
Hey there- another great Southern rock band! They have a large catalog to explore. Allman Brothers, Marshall Tucker Band, & Lynyrd Skynyrd are like the triumvirate of Southern Rock!
Hey, if you want to hear the flute in rock music, you have to check out Ian Anderson with Jethro Tull, if you haven't already.
Firefall also rocks the flute!
Nobody is giving Wet Willie any southern band love! Those guys got crazy funky in concert! That live "Drippin' Wet" album just might be the best party album of all time! Jimmy Hall is a BEAST!
How about Pat Travers? Live version of Boom Boom out go the lights! Thank you sir.
MTB incorporated blues, jazz, western, etc., into their Southern Rock. Loved MTB. Anything off of the platinum "Carolina Dreams" album is good imo. Of course you can't leave out "Searchin' For A Rainbow", "Fire On the Mountain", or the hard driving "24 Hours At A Time". MTB was a favorite of mine.
Wow, I have not heard this song in decades.
Can’t you See is a must. Try some MTB and Charlie Daniels Volunteer Jam.
React to ‘ Can’t You See live in New Jersey. Amazing guitar solo. The guitarist was known as “The Thumb”.
You’ll understand when you watch it. 🤟
The snare was keeping the beat and the bass was playing around it. Great choice.
PREACH.
While not a fan of traditional country music I do like this band.