If someone back in the 70s told me that in the year 2024 I will be watching two young guys listening to this music, one wearing a Led Zeppelin t-shirt, I would have thought they were a lunatic.
Growing up in the south during the '70s was the golden era for southern rock. So many great bands came out of Florida just for starters. If you want another side of Marshall Tucker check out how much they could kick ass when it came to those southern jams. Give "RAMBLIN' ", live from the Where We All Belong album a spin. It starts out in overdrive and never lets up and, like I've mentioned before, it's got one of the best screams of any song out there. You'll be gasping for air when it's done.
And Toy Caldwell is Southern Rock guitar royalty. His pedal steel work on this track is iconic. He ranks right up there with Duane and Dickey and the Skynard boys for me at least, a high school kid in Alabama picking up guitar in 1974. His soloing was fairly accessible, and such a sweet tone with his thumb and a Les Paul. A BIG influence on the way I approach guitar to this day.
I feel so blessed to have come of age in the early '70's thru the end of the decade. Didn't really realize how lucky we were then, but stuff like this seemed to be coming out almost weekly. It was an incredible time for music.
What I like most about your reactions is how you appreciate all the music from the 60's and 70's that I grew up on. Clearly, there was never a better time for music.
I learned to play "Can't You See" by watching The Marshall Tucker Band from fove feet away in a bar on Cocoa, Florida circa 1989. Nobody else in the bar but my 1st wife and I and another couple for a couple of hours. They chatted with us and were just okain pleasant people even though we were the only one s there. They played thier asses off anyway!
Same.. my all-time favorite MTB tune! The playing is phenomenal, very jazzy in its progression, rambling drums and incredible soloing, not to mention the witty lyrics Andy and Alex will surely love.
Can't you see was their debut single. Jessica was their follow up single. Fire On The Mountain and Heard It In A Love Song were recorded and released later. Phil Walden founded Capricorn Records. He signed some great Southern Rock bands, Marshall Tucker, Allman Bros., Elvin Bishop, Dixie Dreggs, many more.
3 of the best dollars I ever spent was on my first MTB concert ticket in Pensacola FL 1973! What a band they were! That Toy Caldwell on pedal steel guitar. Lap steels just won’t “cry” like a pedal steel. Charlie Daniels on fiddle. Try “This Old Cowboy”, “Silverado”, “24 Hours at a Time”, “Ramblin’” , “Last of The Singing Cowboys”, “Blue Ridge Mountain Skies”, “Fly Like an Eagle”… so much to look forward to!!
Listen to This Ol’ Cowboy. Different but still their vibe. Every time I hear it I am amazed at the range these guys get out of their ‘sound’. Truly great musicians all around.
Pedal steel, slick guitar and flute, vocal by Toy Caldwell and the boys AND YOU HAVE COUNTRY ROCK ..... just a very talented group out of South Carolina . Nice pick, fells - thank you all.
You’ve hit the three big ones now. “Take the Highway” “24 Hours at a Time” “Searchin for a Rainbow” “This ‘Ol Cowboy” are probably the next most popular. And then you could of course choose one of the other countless good songs they have. “In My Own Way” is one of my favorites.
As a teen in the 70's, one of my favorite bands. Doug Gray on lead vocals. Toy Caldwell on the pedal steel, Charlie Daniels guests on the fiddle. And of course Jerry Eubanks with the flute.
I really enjoy your gen discovering music that I’ve heard for so many years that it’s just woven into the warp and the woof of my consciousness. You guys do really good work, and I appreciate you.
"Take The Highway," particularly the live version, is fantastic with the flute playing trading off with the guitar solos! You should hit that, if you haven't heard it yet.
Saw these guys around the time, "Heard it in a Love Song" was released, and they put on a helluva show. Four(!) encores, and for the last two, they brought the opening act (a band called Sea Level) out to jam with them. Good times.
Weird thing about Marshall Tucker was they were Country & Western and pretty much exclusively played on the Roll & Roll radio. No one said a word about it. Kinda like the Eagles who played California closet country at first but always billed as Rock & Roll. Nothing to complain about because they were awesome but definitely a curiosity.
In the early '70s there was a bit of a country/folk/Americana resurgence as a kind-of backlash to the excesses of the psychedelia of the late '60s. This kind-of started IMO with the Byrds, encompassed other progressive groups like Grateful Dead, and then took the entertainment industry on a whole. The pop culture rise of artists like Glen Campbell and Johnny Cash (both hosting highly rated TV shows) and shows like Hee Haw accompanied the countrypolitan movement of Nashville, setting the stage for groups like Marshall Tucker Band, Eagles, Pure Prairie League, Firefall, and even the CDB.
Marshall Tucker in Concert was a different experience than their albums. The songs were much longer and their jams had a more sophisticated Jazz feel, along with their Southern Rock roots.
My pops once sat in with MTB when Marcus Henderson was sick (he still played keyboards but he couldn’t sing or play flute that night.) Great band! Oh, and pops did very well both with the flute and vocals!
They were such a versatile band that could jam for hours. Beyond the Southern Rock/Country sound that you've heard, they could play more jazzy styled music as well. Lesser known songs like Change is Gonna Come and I'll Be Loving You off the Together Forever album are a real departure from what you've hit so far.
Can’t you see and Heard it in a Love Song are more commercial successful but for a lifelong Alabama boy, this is by far my favorite MTB song. Thank you for sharing it.
MTB was one of my favorite bands. Hard to believe we are just getting to this banger. A+ at least. "Carolina Dreams" is my favorite MTB album. For more of the western theme, try "Desert Skies" or "Long Hard Ride".
When I hear that song, I think of Marty Robbins as a Southern rock singer, Great story tellers that we never get to experience in that manner these days.
About four years ago you two guys did a reaction to The Outlaws song "Green Grass And High Tides." They have another good tune named "There Goes Another Love Song." Also, if people like the sounds of Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young they should check out their live '71 double LP/CD "4 Way Street."
If someone back in the 70s told me that in the year 2024 I will be watching two young guys listening to this music, one wearing a Led Zeppelin t-shirt, I would have thought they were a lunatic.
Preach it, fellow old person!
@@chueysmama2622 I’m hella old 😅
My 1st concert was Allman Bros, Marshall Tucker, and The Outlaws.
Am I old enough??
@@marktait2371 Denver, 1974
@@algoribbon9992 If you have to ask, might I suggest some ginkgo biloba or Memantine.
YES! You fit the criteria.
Growing up in the south during the '70s was the golden era for southern rock. So many great bands came out of Florida just for starters. If you want another side of Marshall Tucker check out how much they could kick ass when it came to those southern jams. Give "RAMBLIN' ", live from the Where We All Belong album a spin. It starts out in overdrive and never lets up and, like I've mentioned before, it's got one of the best screams of any song out there. You'll be gasping for air when it's done.
Amie by Pure Prairie League is another guaranteed country/ rock banger ya gotta hear 🔥
Marshall Tucker Band is Southern Rock royalty. Check out Can't You See , & Take the Highway.
they reacted to Can't You See Jun 28, 2021
And Toy Caldwell is Southern Rock guitar royalty. His pedal steel work on this track is iconic. He ranks right up there with Duane and Dickey and the Skynard boys for me at least, a high school kid in Alabama picking up guitar in 1974. His soloing was fairly accessible, and such a sweet tone with his thumb and a Les Paul.
A BIG influence on the way I approach guitar to this day.
Don't forget "Heard it in a love song" One of my favorites.
And "24 Hours at a Time".
They sure are. They should also check out The Outlaws and Molly Hatchet, among many others
I LOVE Marshall Tucker!! My era! 🥰
I feel so blessed to have come of age in the early '70's thru the end of the decade. Didn't really realize how lucky we were then, but stuff like this seemed to be coming out almost weekly. It was an incredible time for music.
It seemed like it would last forever. RIP Music.
Agree 100%! Feel so grateful to have grown up to such amazing music!😊
I'm so glad I came of age in the 70s. I turned 20 in 1978.
Amen, we were spoiled!
@@rebo2610 I turned 18 in 79. We were blessed.
RIP Toy & Tommy Caldwell, a couple of genuine southern boys. Salute!
Saw them at the CAP Centre 1/1/78
These boys grew up in my backyard. I'm from Greenville,SC , Marshall tucker Band was right up the road in Spartanburg, SC. So proud of them
"Can't You See (live version)", "24 Hours At A Time", "Rambling", "Take The Highway", "This Ol Cowboy".....so many great MTB songs
Yes! All the Best
“This Ol’ Cowboy”.. they haven’t done that one yet.
What I like most about your reactions is how you appreciate all the music from the 60's and 70's that I grew up on. Clearly, there was never a better time for music.
In the middle of the disco 70s came these guys to save us all!!!!!
I learned to play "Can't You See" by watching The Marshall Tucker Band from fove feet away in a bar on Cocoa, Florida circa 1989. Nobody else in the bar but my 1st wife and I and another couple for a couple of hours. They chatted with us and were just okain pleasant people even though we were the only one s there. They played thier asses off anyway!
My favorite song for these guys is "This Ol' Cowboy".
Same.. my all-time favorite MTB tune!
The playing is phenomenal, very jazzy in its progression, rambling drums and incredible soloing, not to mention the witty lyrics Andy and Alex will surely love.
OH YES !! I am ftom Spartanburg SC . Marshall Tucker are my home town boys. We are VERY proud of them here. Love this band!!
Southern rock with a flute..genius.
Can picture the song like a movie in my head…amazing
This song is the best of MTB. It really showcases the talents of each member.
I liked this song much better than any other MTB song.
Agree!
I must agree. Fire On The Mountain is my all time favorite MTB song.
Searching for a Rainbow
A great live version of this begins with a long flute solo. It and "heard it in a love song' are my favorites from them.
They were good friends one close friend was their manager and another drove their equipment. Was a great time to be alive.
Can't you see was their debut single. Jessica was their follow up single. Fire On The Mountain and Heard It In A Love Song were recorded and released later.
Phil Walden founded Capricorn Records. He signed some great Southern Rock bands, Marshall Tucker, Allman Bros., Elvin Bishop, Dixie Dreggs, many more.
It's not every day that we hear pedal steel guitar and flute used in the same song.... yet it works !
3 of the best dollars I ever spent was on my first MTB concert ticket in Pensacola FL 1973! What a band they were! That Toy Caldwell on pedal steel guitar. Lap steels just won’t “cry” like a pedal steel. Charlie Daniels on fiddle. Try “This Old Cowboy”, “Silverado”, “24 Hours at a Time”, “Ramblin’” , “Last of The Singing Cowboys”, “Blue Ridge Mountain Skies”, “Fly Like an Eagle”… so much to look forward to!!
Always loved the lyrics to this song. Really evokes some great visuals
Put these guys in the Hall of Fame!
it's a yes for me dog! my southren roots will never make me dislike this song!
This is my favorite song by them definitely in my top 50 of all time
This stuff will never die! Grew up with it and so are you!
Great band! Saw them in Texas Stadium in ‘74 (50 years ago!!!) with Joe Walsh, Allman Brothers and Molly Hactchet and that night kicked ass!!!
My very favorite Marshall Tucker song.🔥 Thanks for reacting to this song.
My Dad listened to Marshall Tucker a lot when I was a kid. They definitely had their own sound. Some great music.
yessss finally! BANGER 🔥
This song tells a great story. Turns out, it sums up HBO's "Deadwood" in about 3.5 minutes. This is one of my all time top 10 fave songs.
You should put 'Take the Highway' on your Marshall Tucker list. It starts out with their familiar sound, then turns into a great guitar jam.
Love this song! Southern rock royalty
They were my musical heroes when I was in college.
Southern Rock hit the country like a hurricane. Lynyrd Skynyrd, Allman Bros, these guys, all hit around the time.
I've listened to this song for all of its 50 years and love it still. Great band. Thanks again, guys. You nailed another one. senior from Toronto
Saw them at Summerfest in Milwaukee, sometime in the early 80's. Geat expeience. Great, and very under-rated band.
One of my all-time favorite songs😊❤❤
Southern Rock royalty...couldn't click play fast enough. I played this album on repeat back in the day.
Listen to This Ol’ Cowboy. Different but still their vibe. Every time I hear it I am amazed at the range these guys get out of their ‘sound’. Truly great musicians all around.
Late great Charlie Daniels on fiddle!
MTB had a lot of vibes.
Totally dig this song. Marshall Tucker Band has just a cool southern rock vibe. Love.
The arrangement of this song, is just about as good as it gets.
This Ol Cowboy and 24 Hours at a Time. Both from the album Where We All Belong.
This ol cowboy is a definite listen to
Pedal steel, slick guitar and flute, vocal by Toy Caldwell and the boys AND YOU HAVE COUNTRY ROCK ..... just a very talented group out of South Carolina . Nice pick, fells - thank you all.
FYI - vocal is Doug Gray. Toy Caldwell did vocal on Can’t You See - peace
When I had my band I play this song for 30 years and love it every time
You’ve hit the three big ones now. “Take the Highway” “24 Hours at a Time” “Searchin for a Rainbow” “This ‘Ol Cowboy” are probably the next most popular. And then you could of course choose one of the other countless good songs they have. “In My Own Way” is one of my favorites.
Take The Highway next guys..trust me. Best road trip song ever
Such an underrated Band. Timeless
As a teen in the 70's, one of my favorite bands. Doug Gray on lead vocals. Toy Caldwell on the pedal steel, Charlie Daniels guests on the fiddle. And of course Jerry Eubanks with the flute.
“TAKE THE HIGHWAY”
“In My Own Way “
Both fantastic Marshall Tucker Band songs‼️
📻🙂
All their songs tell stories! No one mentions how great Doug Gray’s voice is!!!
Love MT!! RIP Tommy, Toy and Tim!! My favorite, This ‘Ol Cowboy, 24 hrs in a day!! ❤️❤️❤️
I was able to see George McCorkle’s last performance less than two weeks before he passed. This band has lost so many.
Still remember playing them on my 8 track in my 1975 Vega! I was so cool.
The decade from roughly 1967 to 1977, produced one great band after another. Most with their own definitive sound.
Graduated in 72, we were spoiled. This was weekly!
I love Marshal Tucker. I still own that album. Saw them perform at my state college in 1976.
MTB is crazy good! Saw them in mid 70’s at Jeppesen stadium on the U of H campus.
"It Takes Time", "Cattle Drive" and "Sing my Blues" - Three great songs from their 10th Album.
LOVE ME SOME MARSHALL TUCKER BAND!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I remember hearing on country radio.
Neville Brothers - Fire on the Mountain. ❤
Marshall Tucker track is great
The Nevillies track is Spellbinding
This is the tune that dragged me into The Marshall Tucker Band. Always my favorite by them.
“Can’t you see” is a must next!
Great song but they covered it already back when.
I really enjoy your gen discovering music that I’ve heard for so many years that it’s just woven into the warp and the woof of my consciousness. You guys do really good work, and I appreciate you.
Hell yeah one of my favorite songs🤟
"Take The Highway," particularly the live version, is fantastic with the flute playing trading off with the guitar solos! You should hit that, if you haven't heard it yet.
Those lead vocals still give me bone shaking chills. The title track is also stunning.
Saw these guys around the time, "Heard it in a Love Song" was released, and they put on a helluva show.
Four(!) encores, and for the last two, they brought the opening act (a band called Sea Level) out to jam with them.
Good times.
I love this so also. It was one of my favorite songs of theirs.
Desert Skies is my favorite Marshall Tucker song
Lap steel, great heart & soul. Terrific. Love this.
Southern Rock tell great stories in their songs. This is a great song, great story
Played that album so much back in the 70's. They were so refreshing to listen to.
I think you'd enjoy their live version of
"24 Hours at a Time" absolutely one of their best!!!
Weird thing about Marshall Tucker was they were Country & Western and pretty much exclusively played on the Roll & Roll radio. No one said a word about it. Kinda like the Eagles who played California closet country at first but always billed as Rock & Roll. Nothing to complain about because they were awesome but definitely a curiosity.
In the early '70s there was a bit of a country/folk/Americana resurgence as a kind-of backlash to the excesses of the psychedelia of the late '60s. This kind-of started IMO with the Byrds, encompassed other progressive groups like Grateful Dead, and then took the entertainment industry on a whole. The pop culture rise of artists like Glen Campbell and Johnny Cash (both hosting highly rated TV shows) and shows like Hee Haw accompanied the countrypolitan movement of Nashville, setting the stage for groups like Marshall Tucker Band, Eagles, Pure Prairie League, Firefall, and even the CDB.
Marshall Tucker in Concert was a different experience than their albums. The songs were much longer and their jams had a more sophisticated Jazz feel, along with their Southern Rock roots.
My pops once sat in with MTB when Marcus Henderson was sick (he still played keyboards but he couldn’t sing or play flute that night.) Great band! Oh, and pops did very well both with the flute and vocals!
Back in the 70s and Oakland California I saw Marshall Tucker band and Santana at the same concert. WHAT A SHOW!
Great southern rock song!
Marshall Tucker Band is a top 5 use of flute band in rock!
I agree with Andy. ❤😂
Dudes, "This Ole' Cowboy" is their best song!
Good ole time southern rock and roll ❤These guy’s are early on
They were such a versatile band that could jam for hours. Beyond the Southern Rock/Country sound that you've heard, they could play more jazzy styled music as well. Lesser known songs like Change is Gonna Come and I'll Be Loving You off the Together Forever album are a real departure from what you've hit so far.
Can’t you see and Heard it in a Love Song are more commercial successful but for a lifelong Alabama boy, this is by far my favorite MTB song. Thank you for sharing it.
1975! Graduation year! Funny how music can just transport you back there.
Yep, graduation year for me too!
Do “Take the Highway” next!!
Each MTB song is a little different yet true to their style just the same. Loved listening to each new song as a teenager.
Totally solid songs from this Southern Rock staple
Haven't heard this song in forever. Thanks!
Progressive Southern Country Jazz Rock.
MTB was one of my favorite bands. Hard to believe we are just getting to this banger. A+ at least.
"Carolina Dreams" is my favorite MTB album. For more of the western theme, try "Desert Skies" or "Long Hard Ride".
When I hear that song, I think of Marty Robbins as a Southern rock singer, Great story tellers that we never get to experience in that manner these days.
Guys, thanks for showing this. My favorite MT. So different from anything your hear anywhere.
24 Hours at a Time live - the BEST of Marshall Tucker!!!!
IN MY OWN WAY, WHERE A COUNTRY BOY BELONGS.
About four years ago you two guys did a reaction to The Outlaws song "Green Grass And High Tides." They have another good tune named "There Goes Another
Love Song." Also, if people like the sounds of Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young they should check out their live '71 double LP/CD "4 Way Street."
Grateful Dead Scarlet Begonias/Fire on the Mountain Live Cornell university!!!
I saw Toy Caldwell in a club in CT. In 1987. He had a blind keyboard player in his band and they kicked ASS😅😊
Take the Highway. Epic!
Running Like the Wind, Take the Highway, 24 Hours at a Time are all great Tucker tunes. Keep diving in. Don’t forget the Outlaws either.
This Ol' Cowboy, 24 Hours at a Time, Blue Ridge Mountain Sky, Long Hard Ride, Ramblin'.
I saw them in 77. I really didn't want to go but my friend did. I ended up really enjoying it.