We've Lost Robbie Robertson

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  • Опубліковано 3 сер 2024
  • Paying my respects to Robbie Robertson.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 835

  • @otisgibbs
    @otisgibbs  11 місяців тому +118

    I was talking to my buddy, Ben about a month ago and he mentioned that we're losing all of our heroes. That started a conversation. Who are the big ones that we still have with us, that might not be so obvious? We kicked some names around and I'm ashamed to admit that I didn't even think of Robbie Robertson. We take a lot of great artists for granted while they're here. Ramblin Jack Elliot is on the top of my list of not so obvious artists that we take for granted. When he passes away, it's gonna be a huge news story, but right now, a local paper might not even write about an upcoming show. Who else do we take for granted right now, but we'll make a big deal about when they pass away?

    • @rdmeenach
      @rdmeenach 11 місяців тому +16

      Steve Forbert comes to mind as being under appreciated and overlooked

    • @robertsettle2590
      @robertsettle2590 11 місяців тому +2

      😊❤

    • @jimmyjambon9206
      @jimmyjambon9206 11 місяців тому +13

      Colin Hay.

    • @kennethhoneycutt4513
      @kennethhoneycutt4513 11 місяців тому +2

      ​ I was not aware of colin hat's Passing away He was a very good artist as well. I loved his album named going somewhere.

    • @caseysmith544
      @caseysmith544 11 місяців тому +11

      People forget that of the members a good number of the second iteration of Kinks are still alive today and almost made an album in 2023, but the Davies brothers one of them was not willing to work with the other. They still have the second and third bassist alive as well as first and second drummer so they could play as the second maybe third iteration As I think most of those members could still play with all three of the Keyboard/Piano players dead from that era and a later Keyboard player recruited in 1989 is still living. Another is that both Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel are still alive. People always assume Art died in the 2000 or early 2010's.

  • @wpawson
    @wpawson 11 місяців тому +8

    Robbie's death has affected me hard. I met him once and he said he knew who I was he said he saw me play lacrosse against the 6 nations when I was 15. He was one of the best. Somewhere Down That Crazy River is his best solo song imo.

  • @rjl1309
    @rjl1309 11 місяців тому +4

    I was lucky enough to work with Robbie on a video back in the late 80's. I left the session, liking the man. ~R.I.P.~

  • @johncopeland3826
    @johncopeland3826 11 місяців тому +93

    My all time musical hero .That's what Robbie Robertson means to me . That intellect , the super sharp street smarts , the exquisite songs and concerts , the originality and uncompromising attitude to his craft and so much more .Boy what a legacy . Deepest sympathies to the immediate Robertson family ...we shall not see his like ever again . RIP Robbie and thankyou for being such a huge influence on my life . From Scotland , prayers and a deep sense of admiration for Mr Robbie Robertson...God Bless .

    • @marcbuehre7660
      @marcbuehre7660 11 місяців тому +4

      I Feel you johncopeland.......my feelings exactly.

    • @aliofly
      @aliofly 11 місяців тому +4

      Beautifully put. RIP Robbie

    • @heathergibson3590
      @heathergibson3590 10 місяців тому +2

      This Irishman shared the sentiment.I loved Robbie😢

  • @tbh9247
    @tbh9247 11 місяців тому +184

    If the ONLY song he ever wrote was "It Makes No Difference..." One of the best songs EVER written.

    • @Kickstart500
      @Kickstart500 11 місяців тому +5

      Agree 💯

    • @sharecroppersmule7361
      @sharecroppersmule7361 11 місяців тому +39

      Rick Danko so nailed it, the emotion
      Off the charts

    • @StONed-yx5qq
      @StONed-yx5qq 11 місяців тому +1

      The best!!

    • @billykay4472
      @billykay4472 11 місяців тому +14

      Brings tears to my eyes every time I hear it…….. such a great song

    • @jeffclement2468
      @jeffclement2468 11 місяців тому +10

      Agreed. And Rick's performance of it in the movie is just breathtaking. 😻😔🌹🙏💙✌

  • @nogunnofear6703
    @nogunnofear6703 11 місяців тому +7

    Had the pleasure meeting and working with Robbie after he left the Hawks and before he joined The Band. At that point in time he kept telling us he would only be in the area for a few weeks because he was working his way up to New York to join a band. We had some good times and good food and music of course. We also had a cold Creek to swim in that he loved. We had no idea of his actual greatness and brilliance we just knew that he was a really nice decent guy and we were all kind of bummed when he left . Of course everyone was extremely happy for him when he became so successful and famous. I was truly sad when I got the news. He was one of the greats and he will always be great. Rest in peace Robbie.

  • @therealinternetelvis
    @therealinternetelvis 11 місяців тому +74

    My parents were regulars at Le Coq d'Or Tavern in Toronto when Ronnie Hawkins and The Hawks were the house band. I grew up hearing stories about Robbie and The Band.
    This ones for Robbie, U will be missed.

    • @KatShotz
      @KatShotz 11 місяців тому +4

      😢indeed. Rip and condolences to his family. The music lives on.

  • @leighgoldstein3119
    @leighgoldstein3119 11 місяців тому +20

    when I listen to Fallen Angel I cannot believe that a true mortal soul could be capable of creating something so beautiful and meaningful. Words cannot describe his art. The lyrics of The Night They drove Old Dixie also may be some of the most incredible lyrics I have ever read....His loss is heartbreaking to me.

  • @bobooten
    @bobooten 11 місяців тому +61

    King Harvest still gives me chills every time I hear it.

    • @PaulReed-lj2ym
      @PaulReed-lj2ym 11 місяців тому +3

      Same here. Lmao

    • @written12
      @written12 11 місяців тому +1

      @@PaulReed-lj2ymyes, that one and quite a few others.

    • @giovanna722
      @giovanna722 11 місяців тому +3

      King Harvest is moody, heartwrenching, captivating.

    • @Wordsmyth8
      @Wordsmyth8 11 місяців тому

      One of my favorite Band songs.

  • @martinriepma5009
    @martinriepma5009 11 місяців тому +142

    Garth Hudson is the last man standing. What a pool of talent we were able to enjoy.
    The joy on Robbie’s face during The Last Waltz is beautiful. Probably not only the joy of making that incredible music with all those stellar musicians, but also the relief of being free of that.

    • @artshaw7079
      @artshaw7079 11 місяців тому +7

      "Last man standing", my thoughts exactly. I had to think for a second and counted down all the bands losses. Robertson, Levon, Danko, Emanuel!!! Uuugh

    • @paultorbert6929
      @paultorbert6929 11 місяців тому +12

      We should all go to Woodstock and CELEBRATE Garth before he is gone…… or take up a “collection” for him…..
      He ain’t in the best health right now……😢

    • @american_cosmic
      @american_cosmic 11 місяців тому +5

      @@paultorbert6929 No he's not. He also lost his wife in the past couple years.

    • @Caperhere
      @Caperhere 11 місяців тому +3

      We’ve heard Robbie say he wanted to end with a celebration. I always thought he meant a party. But I’ve read a few books written by Natives, and a celebration means something entirely different to me now.

    • @donyoung7874
      @donyoung7874 11 місяців тому +7

      Watching him trade leads with Clapton on Further On Up The Road is a highlight for me.

  • @stevevice9863
    @stevevice9863 11 місяців тому +84

    I always thought Robbie's guitar playing on "It Makes No Difference" fit so well with the emotion of the song and with Rick Danko's incredible vocal performance. He was mimicking Rick's vocal delivery with the way he was bending the strings to squeeze out every bit of emotion to make it sound almost like it was crying.
    One living artist that I think is taken for granted is Kris Kristofferson. He wrote so many timeless songs. He almost single handedly elevated the literacy level of country music.

    • @frankd4875
      @frankd4875 11 місяців тому +5

      Man, you're so right about Kristofferson. When I hear Jamey Johnson's cover of For the Good Times, it brings tears to my eyes. "Hear the whisper of the raindrops blowing soft against the window, and make believe you love me one more time. For the good times." That's some brilliant wordsmithing put to music.

    • @andrewz4537
      @andrewz4537 11 місяців тому +4

      His guitar and Rick's voice were perfect together in that song. Soulful++!

    • @terryblankenshipmusic1322
      @terryblankenshipmusic1322 11 місяців тому +2

      Robbie on guitar and Garth on sax on the fade out of It Makes No Difference is pure Rock And Roll Heaven

    • @terryblankenshipmusic1322
      @terryblankenshipmusic1322 11 місяців тому

      800 seat capacity when they played Woodstock , Watkins Glen and Isle of Wright where there were hundreds of thousands of fans there

    • @terryblankenshipmusic1322
      @terryblankenshipmusic1322 11 місяців тому +1

      We went in 2008 and it is still pink and it is finally opened up to stay at our tours or something like that. We also went to a Midnight Ramble At Levon’s House aka The Barn

  • @off-kiltervapors4634
    @off-kiltervapors4634 11 місяців тому +16

    The guitar parts on Ophelia blow me away every time. RIP Robbie.

  • @chadbock5481
    @chadbock5481 11 місяців тому +27

    Robbie Robertson's first solo album is in my top 3 all-time albums. That being said, The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down is my favorite work that Robbie was a part of. I never got to see Robbie but was able to catch Levon Helm and Rick Danko on Ringo's first all-star tour. Needless to say, they were outstanding.

  • @raywood4223
    @raywood4223 11 місяців тому +14

    What feels like deeply American music was written by someone who maybe always viewed it from the edge. I hope native drums with that high pitched call see him off this plane. Goodbye Robbie much love and support to your family and loved ones. I always see that weary smile on the edge of bursting forward with a wry comment that a writer so loves, say it slower . Nobody ever tells you how to get over losing these people that form pieces of our lives.

  • @catarnett661
    @catarnett661 11 місяців тому +4

    In addition to all of the classic Band music, check out Robbie's solo stuff. He could do it all, and he did it with grace and elegance. Big, powerful medicine behind that man. May he rock in power in the Great Sky.

  • @nksanbornski6687
    @nksanbornski6687 11 місяців тому +34

    I was hooked from Big Pink. Many have passed but this really hurts. RIP Robbie. 🇨🇦😭❤✌

  • @kristofer603
    @kristofer603 11 місяців тому +14

    ROBBIE inspired me as a teenager to save money to buy my 1st Telecaster...Brown Natural finish...Rosewood fingerboard...Everything about Him was and is a Huge influence on me...A Real Bigg Brother.

  • @thomasminarchickjr.7355
    @thomasminarchickjr.7355 11 місяців тому +36

    These comments are respectful and caring. I love that about Otis’ crowd. This isn’t the case on other forums. He did so much in his life. He helped change music in a big way. The influence and impact of The Band’s first 2 albums on music is incalculable. They influence me the Beatles, especially their early solo stuff like Ram, Wild Life and even George’s stuff. I hope he and Levon are brothers again

  • @gregmock6808
    @gregmock6808 11 місяців тому +10

    I was buying some banjo strings at a guitar shop and the young metal kids working there were working on an old acoustic guitar when I went up to pay and looking at the lyrics taped on the side of that old guitar. They had no idea what it was and I looked at it and said, that's the Weight by the Band...they had no idea what I was talking about and I felt my age once again.

  • @netgoat
    @netgoat 11 місяців тому +24

    This was the memorial I was waiting for.

  • @lawrencejhutchinson
    @lawrencejhutchinson 11 місяців тому +22

    Immense contribution to rock music: listen to Robbie's guitar on John Hammond's Coming Home, Dylan's Leopard Skin Pillbox Hat and the Before The Flood version of All Along The Watchtower, and King Harvest by The Band, his wonderful vocals on Out of the Blue on The Last Waltz, his songwriting on the amazing It Makes No Difference featuring Rick Danko's wonderful voice, the solo tracks Somewhere down the crazy river, fallen angel, and broken arrow, and Rod Stewart's wonderful version of Broken Arrow.

  • @kipwyatt9649
    @kipwyatt9649 11 місяців тому +25

    My daughter and her husband bought a house in Woodstock. On my first visit we went to Big Pink. I was excited to see a piece of music history - and really happy to see a band unloading their instuments...more music for Big Pink!

    • @christy7698
      @christy7698 11 місяців тому +2

      It has always been my dream to go check out "Big Pink" and, for that matter, to visit New York, in general!

  • @jessehaskell1397
    @jessehaskell1397 11 місяців тому +4

    Robertson’s guitar solo on Ronnie Hawkins “Who do you Love” from 1963 is stunning. Ahead of it’s time

  • @rogerbranton1752
    @rogerbranton1752 11 місяців тому +31

    Trust you, Otis to give such a thoughtful & caring tribute!

  • @madeirafonseca6383
    @madeirafonseca6383 11 місяців тому +54

    Thanks for letting us know. I just watched an interview with him this morning. He was such a gentleman; he had no unkind words to say about anyone. Men like him provided the soundtrack for our lives for decades. May he rest in peace.

  • @fldrummerman
    @fldrummerman 11 місяців тому +8

    I saw the band in person 3 times. Once with Dylan. Twice in a very small venue. I'm so thankful. The Bands music was the best.

  • @cynergy4
    @cynergy4 11 місяців тому +41

    I've seen The Last Waltz about 100 times. Used to have it on VHS. I also loved when he went back to his roots and collaborated with other Native American artists. Wonderful stuff! Rock In Peace Robbie, thanks for the music!

    • @benp4877
      @benp4877 11 місяців тому +2

      Same. At least 100x

    • @JamesCampbell-up1ju
      @JamesCampbell-up1ju 11 місяців тому +1

      I got you at least a 1000 times for me. Ive had the waltz on DVD for twenty years and I still love watching it

    • @cynergy4
      @cynergy4 11 місяців тому

      @@JamesCampbell-up1ju I saw it in the local theater where they had midnight showings, countless times. Had it on VHS way before DVD's, and now watch parts of it frequently on UA-cam. A hundred times was a conservative estimate on my part

    • @katherinea.rodgers8366
      @katherinea.rodgers8366 11 місяців тому +1

      I have on DVD now. TCM showed it and I saved it.

  • @cliffordjohnson5602
    @cliffordjohnson5602 11 місяців тому +10

    I live in China and when my son was only 4-5 years old(we named him Danko)he would spend hours in front of UA-cam with my strat playing air-guitar to the last waltz. So this music ain’t going anywhere, RIP Robbie and thank you so much for the music.

  • @darrellkinkade9205
    @darrellkinkade9205 11 місяців тому +3

    Saw Easy Rider as a 10th grader at the theater when it first came out. The scene w/ "The Weight" playing was profound & has always stuck w/ me!

  • @strong.fit.active
    @strong.fit.active 11 місяців тому +31

    Got to go with the Night They Drove Old Dixie Down. RIP Robbie, another one of our musical icons is gone. What a timeless body of work they created.

    • @joblo6394
      @joblo6394 11 місяців тому

      Had to be mentioned.

    • @jcruisioso5975
      @jcruisioso5975 11 місяців тому

      Absolutely. I'm with you. You can see that damn war from a totally different view, with that one song. A senseless war , that should have never been fought . Owning humans is too crazy to imagine. Young men dying for the greed of old, rich men. Some things never change.

  • @Spaceman1968
    @Spaceman1968 11 місяців тому +4

    I loved Robbie, Levon and the band. They put out some great music for sure!

  • @michaeldickson5432
    @michaeldickson5432 11 місяців тому +10

    Saw them at Watkins Glen, but we were so far away from the stage. A week later they played with the Dead at Jersey Stadium. I was upfront for that one. And was there for the Dylan and the Band tour in 1974. Distinctly remember the final song which was “like a Rolling Stone“ - they turned all the house lights on. The juxtaposition of that and the line “you’re invisible now” struck me pretty profoundly.

  • @charlesodell7898
    @charlesodell7898 11 місяців тому +15

    Otis, Carny was an OK movie, but an off-the-chain soundtrack. The album is a must-have. Robbie was a musical hero of mine. You are right. Robbie was a top-shelf songwriter and an excellent guitarist. His solos were precise, unorthodox and dangerous. He will be greatly missed.

  • @johnherfurth8513
    @johnherfurth8513 11 місяців тому +4

    I saw The Band in Toronto about 1974. Linda Ronstadt was the opening act. Their set was pretty much Rock of Ages. Fabulous!

  • @johnwitten4095
    @johnwitten4095 11 місяців тому +35

    This hit hard when I heard it yesterday. The Band was up there with the Beatles and this was another group where the whole was much much greater than the sum of the individual parts. I was fortunate enough to see them three times and was present in Winterland for The Last Waltz. That was a night I will never forget. Thanks Robbie for your enormous contribution to music and to the world.

    • @aliofly
      @aliofly 11 місяців тому +1

      That’s so cool, how does the film measure up to what it was like on the actual night?

    • @johnwitten4095
      @johnwitten4095 11 місяців тому +5

      The movie was pretty accurate although the live concert went on quite a bit longer (nearly 4 hours if I recall) and not every song played in concert made its way onto the movie. I felt so fortunate to be able to attend. I had a good friend who was living in San Francisco at the time and the second I heard about the ticket sale timing for the event, I called my friend and told him he had to stand in line and get us tickets. It's not like I had to twist his arm or anything and it was a very special evening.@@aliofly

    • @katherinea.rodgers8366
      @katherinea.rodgers8366 11 місяців тому

      Oh! How lucky you are. I can't even remember why I didn't go. I am quite O.L.D.

    • @aliofly
      @aliofly 11 місяців тому

      @@johnwitten4095 that’s incredible! And also amazing you can sit and watch the film any time and be transported back there. Thank you for replying

    • @MylesFCorcoran
      @MylesFCorcoran 11 місяців тому +1

      @@aliofly While I enjoyed the film and, I suppose, it is almost important, it was a photo of a beautiful flower at best. When it came out I was quite disappointed.
      My wife and I were at the show. Like other events of those years, for us, it was the people that attended that were most wonderful.
      Sure, the stage was jamming with the best artists - we loved them. But the crowd! Absolutely rockin love.
      So, I was very disappointed that Scorsese blew off any crowd scenes. The pure star fn only goes so far with me.
      We danced all night in the back of Winterland.
      I bumped into Jerry Brown, our governor at the time, and had the hubris to go up to Dylan and give him a note. I had done an etching of him that I wanted to give him.
      Of course, he never got back to me 😎.

  • @robertfallows1054
    @robertfallows1054 11 місяців тому +12

    Whispering Pines always hits me. I’m 71 and Robbie’s death really hit me. I was huge Band and Dylan fan. I remember when Big Pink came out. I was hooked but never saw them live. His solo career was also amazing. There are songs on those solo albums that are so good. And incorporating his Native American roots. Amazing… to repeat myself

    • @sattwa2
      @sattwa2 11 місяців тому

      Whispering Pines🙏

    • @donnamaccrossan1358
      @donnamaccrossan1358 11 місяців тому

      I am 72 and grew up with The Band and it really hit me hard too because he died on the same day my Dad did, August 9. Today I am listening to my CD by The Band "Anthology Volume 1" I have been listening to '"I Shall Be Released" on repeat over and over again which is my favorite by them.

  • @pamelabrown202
    @pamelabrown202 11 місяців тому +12

    "Whispering Pines" is probably my favorite song by the Band; Robbie and Richard Manuel co-wrote it I believe. It's such a haunting and beautiful song.

  • @debchristenson1870
    @debchristenson1870 11 місяців тому +2

    I knew Robbie Robertson both as a musical hero and a grandfather to a young man that I taught. Both roles are a part of who he was--legendary to those who came behind him.

  • @nklzcyn
    @nklzcyn 11 місяців тому +1

    I was introduced to Robbie by a mutual acquaintance at a special screening of The Last Waltz in L.A. in 2002. He was gracious when I went total fanboy on him. He said that he hoped that I liked his re-mix of the film’s soundtrack. Are you kidding?! I died on the spot and went straight to guitar hero heaven. What a gracious and humble man he was.
    Two weeks later, our mutual buddy delivered a copy of the Band’s box set, autographed by Robbie, to me. WTF!!! What a man. What a player.
    I count myself very fortunate to have attended well over a dozen Band concerts, starting with their first appearance at the Fillmore East and was blown away when they backed Dylan on the 1974 tour. They played with such fire!
    My favorite guitar solo of all time is the outro for To Kingdom Come. Nobody ever played like that in rock history, before or since - ask Eric Clapton.😊
    RIP Robbie.

  • @Thinman63
    @Thinman63 11 місяців тому +4

    Robbie's guitar solo on To Kingdom Come is so good. The opening lick just grabs you. And the rest of it follows along so perfectly. Robbie guested on The Call's Reconciled album on the song The Morning. It's nothing but attitude. By the way, The Call LOVED The Band. I saw Garth sit in with them at a show back in 1988. Crazy cool. Robbie and The Band are pure American classics.

  • @scottkidwellmusic9175
    @scottkidwellmusic9175 11 місяців тому +9

    Fair winds and following seas, Robbie.
    Thank you for sharing your gift.
    You are missed 🙏🏻🤍

  • @marianfrances4959
    @marianfrances4959 11 місяців тому +10

    I've always felt so proud of him. We've all shared an amazing time in music history. We are the lucky ones...Love and Peace to everyone...👍😎🇨🇦🙏💙❤

  • @michaelshainline4377
    @michaelshainline4377 11 місяців тому +23

    I love "Acadian Driftwood." I understand it is at least partially accurate in telling the story of the Cajuns. It ties Canada and Louisiana together, and I like how the singers of The Band take turns with different verses (which they do on many songs). The instruments are also authentic on the recording. Great lyrics, great composition, and great performance. The Roches and Shawn Colvin are among those who have covered it nicely. I have botched it several times at open mics.

    • @MrMdblues
      @MrMdblues 11 місяців тому +2

      If I met a Martian and only had one song with which to explain who the “Band” was, I would play “Acadian Driftwood” for the reasons you mention; they all sing a verse and come together on the chorus. Beautiful brotherhood.

    • @TR-yi8up
      @TR-yi8up 11 місяців тому +3

      The late, great Byron Berline providing one of the best fiddle parts of all time

    • @chrismiles8822
      @chrismiles8822 11 місяців тому +1

      Agreed. Acadian Driftwood is sublime tale of human migration apropos for 2023.❤

    • @daleray9890
      @daleray9890 11 місяців тому +1

      Even if AD is not totally historically accurate - but it's pretty reasonable, and as Otis mentioned, it was the feel of the music. And it's a story. It triggered my intellectual curiousity, and I invite others to read about these people's saga. It bookends will with the McGarragle's Jaques Et Gilles. I always wondered if they were influenced by AD.

  • @Bill_Jones.
    @Bill_Jones. 11 місяців тому +2

    I was privileged enough to see The Band in concert, and watching Robbie playing filled me with my first case of guitar envy. Fly on, Fallen Angel and keep it ready for us.

  • @AP-gb3eh
    @AP-gb3eh 11 місяців тому +3

    Loved this man my entire life over 60 years 💔Thank you Robbie and the guys for the Band. Thank you Robbie for The Red Road Ensemble ,Thank you for the other music and for inspiring all others to make music 👏👏👏👏 Rest in Peace .

  • @JCSteel2112
    @JCSteel2112 11 місяців тому +2

    The Last Waltz is probably my favorite concert film; when Neil comes out to play Helpless....it brings me to tears every single time.

  • @dougwhite7584
    @dougwhite7584 11 місяців тому +3

    Hi Otis, as usual great video. -I first saw the Band not yet knowing, or having yet embraced them as the totally unique melding of musical brotherhood they became to me later. They were at that time backing Bob Dylan on his first electric American Tour at Boston Garden. Having been a huge Dylan fan at the time i remember saying (maybe too many times) , " Can you believe how effing good he (Dylan) sounds?". Later on after Big Pink and the 2nd Album came out I came to realise who the Band was. I got to to see them live about 4 or five times. There were so many facets to the Band performing live that i'm almost at a loss of words where to begin. -Levon was certainly a big key in that he brought the unifying of the various voice style or rather the authentication of the kind of southern Midwest Appalachian flavor to Robbies always brilliant songs. By some cosmically inspired inflluence, they were all were joiined at the hip as realised and performing as a band. When a song featured the various members voices, (and there were many) it always harkened back to some indescribable center as uniquely the Band. I believe they were the real life inspiration for the tongue in cheek characters of the Traveling Willburys. Except of course they got there first and are the real source. The musical center was always Robbie though. Thats where I believe Bob's description of the mathmatical guitar player lies. Even though all the members were completely diverse, they still were defined in their musical identities as the Band. At the center of the Brotherhood though was always Robbie. God speed Robbie.. Thanks Otis, Peace and Love, -doug

  • @gthgth1769
    @gthgth1769 11 місяців тому +5

    Thank you for your eloquent and heartfelt thoughts on Mr. Robertson, they are good to hear.

  • @doughill8475
    @doughill8475 11 місяців тому +7

    So many wonderful songs, and not just the biggies. Some people have mentioned King Harvest (Has Surely Come), but some great ones that don't get mentioned very often: Unfaithful Servant, Rockin' Chair and Whispering Pines (co-write with Richard Manuel).

  • @kendipietro6855
    @kendipietro6855 11 місяців тому +23

    The self-titles Robbie Robertson album from the 1980s was an incredible piece of work. Every song is its own shade of genius. American Roulette and Hell's Half Acre are to of my favorite songs of all time.

    • @doughill8475
      @doughill8475 11 місяців тому +2

      Yes, totally agree, great album, and American Roulette is a classic song that too few people have heard. Fallen Angel, the song that leads off the album, is apparently about Richard Manuel.

    • @ZionForman
      @ZionForman 11 місяців тому

      love that album

    • @frederickvanpelt6393
      @frederickvanpelt6393 11 місяців тому +1

      Somewhere down the crazy river

    • @written12
      @written12 11 місяців тому

      I’ll have to check that out. Thank you for the recommendation.

    • @bwana-ma-coo-bah425
      @bwana-ma-coo-bah425 11 місяців тому

      not a bad track any where on that album.

  • @patlarou71
    @patlarou71 11 місяців тому +5

    I saw them in the early 80's in Ann Arbor without Robbie, and the Cate Brothers opened. Richard Manuel was still with us then. Even without Robbie it was magical to hear those voices live!

    • @doughill8475
      @doughill8475 11 місяців тому +1

      Richard Manuel -- one of the most soulful voices ever. So missed.

    • @clintonorman2859
      @clintonorman2859 11 місяців тому

      I saw them in the same period in Fayetteville Arkansas

  • @teresathomley3703
    @teresathomley3703 11 місяців тому +4

    The great Robbie Robertson- there are no words. God bless him, God bless his family and his scores of fans. A songwriter and a songwriter's guitar player. He will be missed.

  • @grumpysnail81
    @grumpysnail81 11 місяців тому +3

    He was an absolute genius. I'm just grateful that he existed. The Band were perfection. It makes me sad to know that there's never going to be any new music that will ever come close to the stuff that they made. RIP Robbie, Levon, Rick and Richard🙏🏼

  • @lenny656
    @lenny656 11 місяців тому +12

    Agreed that The Last Waltz is the best concert DVD. Bought my first DVD player when that came out. Saw The Band at Watkins Glen Summer Jam 50 years ago. By the time they came on I had worked my way very close to stage left. Thanks for all of your posts. This one is greatly appreciated. From one Hoosier to another.

  • @johnchaney9849
    @johnchaney9849 11 місяців тому +3

    Otis, you eulogized him perfectly! I was a huge Neil Young fan - and that’s why I watched “The Last Waltz.” After I saw the concert, I became a huge fan of The Band.

  • @eralc12
    @eralc12 11 місяців тому +2

    Saw the Band in the The Festival Express train tour across Canada, in Calgary. Awesome

  • @ub1953
    @ub1953 11 місяців тому +2

    Passing of Robbie just makes me more aware of how fortunate to have lived and appreciated icons like him; but also being 10 yrs his junior that it's getting to be about that time

  • @AndyMurdzek
    @AndyMurdzek 11 місяців тому +4

    Thanks for the thoughtful commentary on one of the really important people in our music. Eulogies are so often anything but. It’s a shame we don’t have a Mark Twain (“Rumors of my death have been greatly exaggerated”) moment here because I think Mr Robertson would have been touched by your words. And what a heartbreaking year for those of us who love great soulful guitar players. David Lindley. Jeff Beck. And now Robbie. A strong reminder to go out and hear the musicians you care about now. Just in case. I believe the cancelled show you mention would have been the version of The Band with Jim Weider playing guitar but I’m not sure. I agree with you about the wonders of The Last Waltz but I think their other most notable performance is the Rock of Ages concert with all those great horn players doing Allen Toussaint charts. Your comment about the hard rock guys contaminating the petri dish is absolutely priceless. All the best to you.

  • @jlm8699
    @jlm8699 11 місяців тому +3

    Oh Robbie...RIP
    Thanks for the whole deal...
    Thinking about Robbie is listening to his voice in interviews and in certain songs his voice is just tremendous with so much character..
    His voice was intoxicating..
    Definitely one of the pioneers of rock and roll gone..
    Last Waltz... Neil Young looks over at Robbie and a wink
    ” we got it now Robbie...”

  • @andypendley3876
    @andypendley3876 11 місяців тому +3

    Well said, Mr. Gibbs. Robbie and the Band are pillars of my musical journey.

  • @keenosaabi4530
    @keenosaabi4530 11 місяців тому +3

    i got home from viet nam, april 19, 1969. i saw the band at the filmore that night. a night a i will never forget.

  • @PeterLindelauf
    @PeterLindelauf 11 місяців тому +5

    Fallen Angel came on CBC radio one evening not long after the album release. Only song I can think of that made me stop dead in my tracks to listen to the last note. So long, Robbie. Thanks for all of the songs.

  • @beaujeff4622
    @beaujeff4622 11 місяців тому +1

    I saw the Band in Tuscaloosa in 1970 when I was in High School , they were phenomenal , best concert I ever went to. I noticed they didn't dance around or stuff like that . Told my dad about it the next day and he said 'Probably because they could play"words to remember.

  • @davidkopec9442
    @davidkopec9442 11 місяців тому +2

    The Last Waltz is the best concert movie ever.
    Robbie’s playing always served the magnificent catalog of The Band, plus he could go toe to toe with Clapton.
    Only saw the non Robbie / Richard Manuel version in the early 90s. They were great fun at the Beacon Theater ( early 94)
    I love every song on the first two albums.

  • @ConglomerationCat
    @ConglomerationCat 11 місяців тому +10

    Hey Otis, I wanted to take time out to say thank you. I've been lately feeling trapped at my job due to the pendulum mood swings that fluctuate 5 days of the week. For someone who was a child of the 70's and a teenager of the 80's, I was born and raised to acknowledge and interact with people. To make conversation and most importantly, listen. With all these musical icons dropping off at a startling rate, my work environment isn't what it used to be. Meaning that at one time, you were politely asked how you were. And you could reply at one time with hey, I just heard Tom Petty passed away and you could automatically connect with someone that knew of him or of course heard his music. Lately with Gordon Lightfoot, David Crosby, etc slipping away, most of the people I work with don't even have a clue who I'm talking about. So it feels sometimes isolating and a little lonely. And you're kind of stuck to your own feelings of loss. I find your channel and I literally smell the coffee as the first few seconds pass...and I'm already feeling like I belong in your circle of honest conversation. It's a calming, centering ora that you deliver. It makes me feel to a degree that it's kind of like therapy. Each "session" I get gives me light and encouragement. Keep up the great work you do Otis. It makes a huge difference and it sure makes me feel a lot better. Cheers.

  • @zendixie
    @zendixie 11 місяців тому +4

    Back in the 80’s , not sure of the year, the remaining members of The Band played a venue in Charlotte NC. It was a great show. I knew where the band entrance was so we walked back there and waited for them to come out. It was a night my wife and I will never forget. Richard and Garth seemed very shy but Levon and Rick made up for it. I even got pictures with my cheesy Polaroid which they were nice enough to sign. I wish I could post them here. The guy on guitar was introduced as Levon’s cousin. He did a great job and I’m pretty sure he’s still playing. Last I heard about Garth is that he’s in a care facility. There were so many great people in that group. Otis you are correct that we will not see that kind of group again.

  • @kortt
    @kortt 11 місяців тому +16

    damn, a true pioneer and genius. Imagine the jam session going on in heaven.

    • @PaulReed-lj2ym
      @PaulReed-lj2ym 11 місяців тому

      Jam session in heaven, love to hear it.

  • @johngetman1816
    @johngetman1816 11 місяців тому +8

    Another great one pierces the veil. Rest In Peace Robbie Robertson. ✌️❤️⚡️

  • @aknuthatch
    @aknuthatch 11 місяців тому +2

    I saw Dylan & The Band on January 3, 1974 at Chicago Stadium - It was the opening concert of Dylan's first tour in 8 years - It was also my 21st birthday - That was back when you had to buy tickets through the mail - I believe the tour sold out, coast to coast, 21 cities I believe, in 2 days - Tons of people couldn't get tickets - I got really lucky - I ordered my tickets from Alaska and figured my chances were slim - But at the time there was a daily non stop flight from Anchorage to Chicago and I got four tickets - Most memorable concert I've ever seen

  • @cpome7
    @cpome7 11 місяців тому +9

    Lovely video, Otis.
    My wife and I drove once from Los Angeles to Hudson, NY to see a Todd Snider show. Really. It was 2013, so Big Pink wasn't hard to find with GPS. We didn't approach the building. We looked at it for a bit, took a picture and sheepishly drove away.
    I've just realised my story about Tony Soprano's house is exactly the same.
    Thanks for sharing your thoughts today. It was a really open-hearted tribute.
    All the best,
    Mike.

  • @moondawg3693
    @moondawg3693 11 місяців тому +2

    Love ya Robbie, my mom was born in Scotland in 1928 a found The Band in the late 60's and she loved their music more than I can say.
    After a few drinks she would start singing, soon the entire family and friends would join in.
    I took this to my kids and they will hopefully give this gift to their's.
    Thanks Robbie for what you did to my family, pure and beautiful.

  • @gregmock6808
    @gregmock6808 11 місяців тому +6

    The old school guys like Robbie came up playing with Levon which is like Keith Richards playing with Charlie Watts in that they didn't play to click tracks...they could stretch tempos and play behind the beat or ahead of the beat with great feel.

  • @estenray5385
    @estenray5385 11 місяців тому +19

    He was someone who had a subliminal effect on many thousands of people! Not in an overt way but always there in the background. Somehow influencing the feel and timbre of our era. His music and its effect was in a nutshell sublime.

  • @terryblankenshipmusic1322
    @terryblankenshipmusic1322 11 місяців тому +2

    I saw Carney and I liked it , Robbie’s contribution to the music of the 20th century is absolutely huge , but you can’t just say Robbie , you gotta add Levon , Rick , Richard and Garth , that music came from them , RIP Robbie I hope you guys are making music in Heaven together again

  • @dougrobison1156
    @dougrobison1156 11 місяців тому +1

    Yep, Sad day RIP Robbie. I only saw him live once, but it was the penultimate show at Winterland in SF: The Last Waltz. Front row of balcony 10 feet from stage left, Wow what a show. All that talent, but Robbie shined brightly. My favorite song is Somewhere Down the Crazy River.

  • @bruinsfan8278
    @bruinsfan8278 11 місяців тому +3

    When i heard the bad new i hopped in my car and put in the Band and Dylans Live Before The Flood CD, made me cry, RIP Robbie Robertson .

  • @user-vl8qw8hp1g
    @user-vl8qw8hp1g 11 місяців тому +1

    A few years ago, my husband gave me "The Last Waltz" DVD for Christmas. I had heard about the show, and I knew it was recorded for a movie, but I had never seen it in its entirety. The music is phenomenal! The interviews with the guys are fantastic! Now that we have lost Robbie Robertson, I might have to pull it out and watch it again. I sincerely hope that he and Levon Helm were able to make peace with one another before Levon left us. Robbie went to see Levon before he passed and implied that they were on good terms again. I hope Levon, Rick, and Richard met Robbie on the other side with smiles and hugs all around!

  • @jimmyjambon9206
    @jimmyjambon9206 11 місяців тому +11

    When you can feel the artist feeling it. For me that's the greatest connection to a musician that can be had by a patron/fan.

  • @Seydlitz99
    @Seydlitz99 11 місяців тому +4

    Robbie wrote the best song for strippers in Canada. when i was young and went to those places. the girls would have 3 songs to dance too. Two fast songs and one slow one at the end. "Somewhere down the crazy river, was very popular for the 3rd song. Oh, those crazy memories.

  • @dave-uu4no
    @dave-uu4no 11 місяців тому +12

    Another legend of rock n roll has left spaceship earth safe travels and thank you for your timeless art.

  • @naturalimmunity3040
    @naturalimmunity3040 11 місяців тому +1

    RIP Robbie Robertson. - Rattlebone was one of my favorite songs he shared.

  • @lbshore
    @lbshore 11 місяців тому +6

    The first show I ever saw was Bob Dylan and The Hawks in 1965 when I was 12 years old. Talk about setting the bar high. I saw The Band at the Felt Forum in 1969 and it was like a party they put on for New York City. Pure joy. Robbie Robertson was an icon, completely unique, who carved out a place for himself in the annals of music that will stand out forever. Really a unique talent. I just wish he had been kinder to Levon.

    • @hannejeppesen1809
      @hannejeppesen1809 2 місяці тому

      I don't think Robbie was unkind to Levon. Levon didn't want The Band to stop touring, but Robbie couldn't handle it anymore, he was dealing with 3 heroin addicts, he was married with 3 small children. I think he was more ambitious than the other guys, Levon didn't mind touring and playing in different venues, some not so nice, but Robbie wanted to move on, can't blame him. Levon and the other guys made lots of money (Barney Hoskins biograhpy of The Band) much was wasted on drugs. According to Joe Forno who managed the Band, sans Robbie, from Richard's suicide to 1994, Levon's motto was "don't let your bank account dictate your lifestyle". He spend huge amount on fancy hotels etc. He acted in several movies and still had 20 percent publishing writes for songs from The Band. Forno advanced him quite a bit of money, and when tried to get it back Levon said "I appreciate all you have done for me, and you deserve to get paid, but I just can't afford it". Then he blames Robbie for his problems. I love Levons singing and drumming, but he was bad at managing money, even his own dad said so.

    • @lbshore
      @lbshore 2 місяці тому

      @@hannejeppesen1809 No doubt that's all true. And I really don't know much about the details of their finances or relationship. But it seems to me that whatever Levon was looking for from Robbie, whether justified or not, he could have given him with very little difficulty and made Levon's life a little easier towards the end. After making that kind of music and history together, it seems so trivial to leave a bad taste over money.

    • @hannejeppesen1809
      @hannejeppesen1809 2 місяці тому

      That would be the same as giving a drunk a drink, Levon never displayed that he learned to handle money. I have had money trouble and overcome them, I have friends that have had money trouble, some never learn the lesson or take responsibility. If I had won the lottery there would be some friends I would help and others I would not, or just minimal. Don't get me wrong I love Levon's singing and drumming, but his bitterness towards Robbie is a turn off. Besides after what Levon wrote in his book about Robbie, I doubt Robbie would be inclined to help him.@@lbshore

    • @hannejeppesen1809
      @hannejeppesen1809 2 місяці тому

      I'm a huge fan of Robbie's, he had a all, looks, charisma, talent so I'm probably a little prejudice. I do love all The Band members, but Robbie and Rick is my favorites.@@lbshore

    • @lbshore
      @lbshore 2 місяці тому

      @@hannejeppesen1809 They were both enormously talented. But neither one of them would have been able to do it without the other. It's just sad that it ended badly. At least John and Paul had apparently made their peace.

  • @jhamptonjr
    @jhamptonjr 11 місяців тому +1

    Hundreds of thousands if not millions of bands, but only one band! Rest in peace Robbie.

  • @williamperkins7318
    @williamperkins7318 11 місяців тому +5

    The quote you reread where Robbie talked about the many musicians that passed always touched me. The moment i heard it, i thought of the Grateful Dead, wishing they headed his words.
    I saw and then got to hang out with Rick Danko back then, the closest i got to seeing The Band.
    "Before The Flood" is one of the best live albums lost to history. It is the album that got me listening and respecting the lyrics of Bob Dylan. I think it got buried when The Last Waltz came out.
    "Stop Making Sense" is right there with "The Last Waltz". But it lacks the background intimacy.
    Its not the best Band song, but "Life is a Carnival" makes me smile and sing along every time i hear it.

    • @jeffclement2468
      @jeffclement2468 11 місяців тому +1

      Yep. The "Heads" movie was the first thing I thought of when he brought that up. Very well done, but a whole different uh...animal. 😻😎✌

    • @aliofly
      @aliofly 11 місяців тому

      Agree Stop Making Sense is right up there alongside The Last Waltz. What was Rick like to hang out with if you don’t mind me asking?

  • @branthomas1621
    @branthomas1621 11 місяців тому +4

    Hi Otis, thanks for sharing this sad news. My immediate thoughts on Robbie Robertson take me to the basement tapes, the Last Waltz concert and documentary but there is also one song which stands out as a masterpiece - The song Dirge from Dylan's Planet Waves. Apparently the song was originally called "Dirge for Martha" I wonder who she was? Anyway I have always felt that his playing on that track is incredible.

  • @jhamptonjr
    @jhamptonjr 11 місяців тому +1

    I had known about him since I was a kid but didn't really pay much attention until in the mid 80s he came out with showdown at Big sky. The tone of the album the subject matter and the delivery was just so powerful I went back and started listening to everything he'd ever done. Yeah we're definitely going to miss him! Rest in peace Robbie!

  • @chetcalhoun613
    @chetcalhoun613 11 місяців тому +2

    Thanks for doing this video Otis. I always like The Bands version of The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down. A great performance in the Last Waltz movie…a really great film. The Weight, Up on Cripple Creek, and Stage Fright are some of my favorites. RIP Robbie.

  • @jameshauer8554
    @jameshauer8554 11 місяців тому +1

    Nicely said, Otis. Since I'm 64 years old, I am not embarrassed to say that The Band and their sound influence my music attitude and the sound I try to present as a solo acoustic performer. Bob Dylan was my inspiration for playing and singing (I thought, hell, if he can sing, then so can I), but that also exposed me to The Band. The song 'It Makes No Difference" makes me tear up every time I hear a recording or watch a video of the The Band playing it, but I dig your description of 'The Weight' and its cultural significance. I was in a dive bar (what else) in Taipei Taiwan in ~2005. Two Canadian guys started playing The Weight and I couldn't help myself and sat there singing along. When the song ended one of them said to me, "wow, you knew every f*****g word, man!" He then handed me his guitar and said help yourself...after about 45 minutes, the bartender yelled out, "Christ Jim, would ya give us a break from The Grateful Dead!" Anyway, The Band will forever be up there for me due to the rustic, yet well layered, sound they produced. I aspire as Taiwan's "Cosmic Americana" troubadour to keep it going. Peace and and always, thanks for the thoughtful words.

  • @tomkelly3896
    @tomkelly3896 11 місяців тому +2

    He lived a great life.....way better than most of us...rip brother

  • @MylesFCorcoran
    @MylesFCorcoran 11 місяців тому +2

    I saw them a few times. Including at Woodstock and The Last Waltz.
    But
    It was in a Volkswagen hippie van that had picked up my friend Brandon and I, who were hitchhiking to California from Long Island NY, somewhere in Utah, with music from Big Pink blasting, the hippie full van singing every word, again, that I hold most fondly. August 1970.
    Yes - we were harmonizing The Weight as we crossed the Nevada California border in the night.
    Incredible.
    Ps - Brandon and I were robbed at gun point in San Francisco within 24 hours of arriving there. And yet: Life is good.
    Peace Love and Understanding.

  • @jl5464
    @jl5464 11 місяців тому +19

    Thank you for this, Otis! Much love from Detroit ❤ rest easy Robbie, thank you for the music

  • @magicalpilgrim
    @magicalpilgrim 11 місяців тому +11

    Thx for another great conversation Otis…Robbie was one of the greats..saw him w/Dylan in 1974 in Seattle…unforgettable guitar work backing up Dylan cause even then you really weren’t sure where he was going…intro to It Makes No Difference is what I first heard in my head when the news came if his passing..be in the love and the light Robbie , thx so very much..

    • @tvcdboombox1
      @tvcdboombox1 11 місяців тому +2

      I was at one of the 1974 Dylan/The Band shows in Seattle also. Great show.

  • @radiokajw
    @radiokajw 11 місяців тому +16

    I just bought Carny on DVD recently when Robbie’s Twitter account posted it’s anniversary. Robbie co-wrote it and co-produced it as well besides acting as one of the leads! His life resembles the traveling carnival, so the movie is interesting and poetic in that way. Definitely fun to watch him act, and Jodie as a budding Hollywood youngster in a provocative role is also a kick.
    Thank you for the video! Robbie’s passing is a tough loss personally. He without a doubt changed my life.

    • @deadbeatjack2584
      @deadbeatjack2584 11 місяців тому +3

      I am a huge fan of Carny, I went half of my life not even knowing that movie existed... What a cult classic.

    • @hannejeppesen1809
      @hannejeppesen1809 4 місяці тому

      The movie is good, although not great. However, Robbie is so good looking in it that if you are a women with an eye for good looking men, you probably don't care much about the story, you just can't take your eyes off Robbie.@@deadbeatjack2584

  • @David_Richard_241
    @David_Richard_241 11 місяців тому +6

    I am really disconnected, evidently. This is the first I've heard of it. What a writing and arranging genius, not to mention the voice. The solo stuff he did over the years just kicked my behind. Timeless stuff over the years. I just heard "Broken Arrow" randomly come on in my car yesterday. Yep, we're losing these folks.

  • @mattiewilcox8463
    @mattiewilcox8463 11 місяців тому +3

    Rest in Peace Robbie 🙏😇. The Band Just the Best !!! Inspired so many great musicans. Listening to The Band at this moment ... Wonderful !!!

  • @dorothytucker9291
    @dorothytucker9291 11 місяців тому +1

    I love Shine Your Light, beautiful song brings tears to my eyes. We did lose a great musician.

  • @bradparker9664
    @bradparker9664 11 місяців тому +1

    Huge fan of The Band, and as a guitarist, a big Robbie Robertson fan here. One of my favorite moments in The Last Waltz was when Clapton is opening "Further on Up The Road," and at the end of one of his 12 bar turnarounds, this was in the days before strap locks, but the strap came off the top of his Strat. He turned, yelled "Robbie!", and without missing a beat, Robbie took over the intro while EC got his strap fixed, and he played beautifully while Clapton was fiddling with that strap and getting it on the peg. Tremendous professionalism. A very tasteful and respectful piece with this, Otis. Well done, kind sir.

  • @Sawdusted-v4e
    @Sawdusted-v4e 11 місяців тому +3

    I saw the Band with Dylan in '76 at the Capital Ctr outside DC. . A truly transformative experience!

  • @climbtibet
    @climbtibet 11 місяців тому +1

    Still in shock - ain’t nobody ever gonna fill those shoes. Prayers to friends and family and fond remembrances of all the great work he did. Greatest of dudes 💔

  • @davidfulginiti5985
    @davidfulginiti5985 11 місяців тому +4

    Otis, in the 60s I traded a Hendrix album for music from big pink and I never looked back! My wife and I saw the band in 1975 @ the spectrum in phila - - Wow! It's tough to give you one song, but if i'm pressed it's -----it makes no difference ------------------------------Otis again I needed that!